The US Military spends billions on weapons and equipment every year, and can’t even repair some of the most critical components when they break.
They can’t fix it because the maintainers aren’t capable, it is because the Pentagon doesn’t own the data that makes repairs possible. This is also known as "right-to-repair."
This video breaks down the military “right-to-repair” fight: what it actually means (technical data, software tools, and repair permissions), how the Pentagon got here, and why it’s becoming a real readiness problem . We’ll look at examples tied to modern systems like the F-35 and the Navy’s Littoral Combat Ship, plus the kind of “simple fix, huge bill” moments that have sparked backlash inside the Pentagon and on Capitol Hill.
We also explain why Congress tried to push right-to-repair language into the FY2026 defense authorization bill — and why the final version largely stripped those provisions out.
Subscribe for more military gear, strategy, and what the Pentagon’s decisions mean for the people who actually have to use this stuff.
Recorded on: March 12th, 2026
Written by: David Roza
Edited by: Savvy
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