A Southern California aerospace facility tied to Lockheed Martin’s F-35 fighter jet program is under renewed scrutiny after a massive chemical leak displaced tens of thousands and reignited debate over military manufacturing near residential neighborhoods.
A Southern California chemical leak that forced the evacuation of as many as 50,000 residents is now intensifying scrutiny of the sprawling global defense supply chain behind America’s F-35 fighter jet program and its growing role in international conflicts involving Israel.
The incident centers on a GKN Aerospace facility in Garden Grove, California, where a 7,000-gallon tank containing methyl methacrylate — a highly flammable industrial chemical used in aerospace manufacturing — ruptured last week, triggering emergency evacuation orders across portions of Orange County.
The facility manufactures transparency canopies for Lockheed Martin’s F-35 stealth fighter jets, a key component of the world’s most advanced multirole combat aircraft. Federal contracting data reviewed by advocacy groups and independently analyzed by multiple outlets indicate that the company has received millions in defense-related subcontracting revenue associated with the F-35 program.
The leak has rapidly evolved from a localized industrial emergency into a broader political and geopolitical flashpoint, linking domestic environmental safety concerns with global debates over military exports, defense contracting, and the war in Gaza.

