US unveils f-47 jet with unmatched edge

President Donald Trump rolled out the F-47, Boeing’s shot at the world’s first sixth-generation fighter jet, from the White House, calling it a beast nothing can touch. “I’m thrilled to announce the Air Force is moving forward with this at my direction,” he said, grinning beside a slick rendering—five years of secret test flights now breaking cover. A Boeing line worker might puff out his chest, knowing his hands built the future.
This isn’t just another plane—the F-47 packs stealth that blinds radar, AI brains, and hypersonic fangs, all while sipping fuel at supersonic clips without afterburners. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth pitched it as a steel promise—America’s air dominance locked tight, with drones from Anduril and General Atomics riding shotgun. Air Force Chief David Allvin dubbed it peace through strength, a high-flying shield for a shaky globe.
Boeing’s legacy—F-15s, F/A-18s—gets a glow-up here, outpacing the F-35’s stealthy reign with Israel and others. Steve Parker, Boeing’s defense honcho, said they’ve poured record cash into this, ready to deliver a jet that rewrites the sky. A carrier pilot might squint at the horizon, sensing the game’s changed—and it’s America’s move.