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Inside the Air Force - 3/6/2009
PENTAGON SEEKS F-22A COST PROPOSALS TO EXTEND PRODUCTION INTO FY-10 The Pentagon has asked Lockheed Martin to submit proposals for the production of additional F-22As in fiscal year 2010, a move designed to give the Obama administration a range of options in deciding next month whether to cease or extend production of the Air Force’s marquee fighter. John Young, the under secretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics, on March 3 told Air Force Secretary Michael Donley to ask the F-22A prime contractor to prepare by March 15 two cost estimates: One covering the manufacture of the four aircraft for which advance materials were purchased over the last few months -- and one covering an additional batch of 20 aircraft. “In order to keep the F-22A production line viable until the department completes its final review of the fiscal year 2010 defense budget, I direct the Air Force request Lockheed Martin Corporation provide not-to-exceed cost proposals for procurement of four F-22A aircraft and, separately, for procurement of 20 F-22A aircraft,” Young wrote. InsideDefense.com obtained a copy of the memo. Young -- a Bush administration appointee who is expected to remain in place until his successor is confirmed by the Senate -- also asked the Air Force “to make every effort to extend the validity of the current options for 16 F-22A aircraft until mid-April 2009, in order to allow the department time to finalize” the FY-10 budget request. The request comes just days after Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz said he had asked Defense Secretary Robert Gates to consider buying more F-22As than the 183 in the current plan. Schwartz last week declined to say exactly how many additional aircraft he requested, but Adm. Michael Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has said the Air Force would like to buy 243 F-22As -- an additional 60 aircraft. Gates is expected to render a decision on the fate of the fighter program next month as part of a series of “hard choices” that are expected to be included in the Pentagon’s FY-10 budget proposal. Gates has said he believes 183 F-22As are sufficient to meet foreseeable requirements. More broadly, the defense secretary has strongly advocated shifting some funding slated for conventional combat capabilities to efforts that bolster the military’s ability to conduct irregular operations. The FY-10 budget request prepared by the Pentagon last fall does not include funding for additional Raptors, according to senior Pentagon officials. Young estimated in November 2008 that buying another 20 F-22As in FY-10 would require an additional $3 billion. Rob Fuller, a spokesman for Lockheed Martin, confirmed the Air Force has asked for a new F-22A pricing scheme. The Office of the Secretary of Defense, which in 2004 slashed the Air Force’s plans to buy 381 F-22As, maintains that when combined with a larger force of F-35 Joint Strike Fighters, a 183-aircraft fleet will give U.S. forces a robust strike- fighter inventory. Congress allocated $523 million in FY-09 -- the current fiscal year -- for the advance procurement of F-22A aircraft. The FY-09 Defense Authorization Act directed that no more than $140 million of these funds be spent until the president certified to Congress why either continued production or termination was in the national interest. That certification was due March 1. Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell told reporters at the Pentagon on March 5 that a decision on the way forward for the F-22A program will be conveyed to lawmakers in the FY-10 budget request, which is due to be delivered to Congress late next month. To the frustration of F-22A supporters in Congress, the Pentagon last fall availed itself of only $50 million to purchase long-lead items for four additional aircraft. On Nov. 10, 2008, Young signed an acquisition decision memorandum that directed the Air Force to begin procurement of Lot 10 of the stealth fighter, for four aircraft. That memo allowed the service to obligate up to $50 million for the program and to negotiate an option to buy long-lead items for an additional 16 aircraft. |
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Snip.
Interesting read. Those ****ing stupid congressional and senatorial dumb-asses should get off their collective backsides and remove the cost cap they imposed on the F-22 development/procurement spending and not only allow the purchase 381 F-22's (which is far below the actual needed number). But allow the multi-year procurement of up to the original stated number of 750; they also need to amend that idiotic export ban law on the F-22 and allow certain trust worthy countries who can afford the F-22 to buy it. Those countries a the UK, Australia, Israel, Japan and South Korea. |
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On Mar 8, 8:10 am, Ed Rasimus wrote:
UK is credible, but may not be financially able. Australia looks like a customer. Taiwan? Probably not. S. Korea? Unlikely right now, but could change rapidly. Israel? Definite candidate. Western European NATO? Depends on trends in governments...both theirs and ours. India? Who knows. Emerging S. American capitalist democracy? Too far down-stream to predict. All of these are notable for the lack of a need for a pure air to air fighter and a lack of airfields near to the spots they're likely to drop bombs so all of them would be better off with JSFs. -HJC |
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In message , Ed Rasimus
writes UK is credible, but may not be financially able. The COEIA in 1995 put the F-22 clearly top of the tree in capability, but even at the prices then estimated it simply wasn't available in adequate numbers compared to the alternatives; and the combat modelling included numbers flying as a factor. The Raptor was outstanding when it met the enemy, but the vignettes modelled ended up with too many Red raids getting through without being intercepted when a (constant-budget) force had F-22s: while Typhoon at that point was "half as good" (the JOUST modelling put its exchange rate against a 'son of Flanker' at 4.5 to 1, compared to 9:1 for F-22 in the same conditions - a gross oversimplification of some careful work, but a handy headline number) but was available in sufficient numbers to actually meet and beat Red in the scenarios seen. I recall saying a decade ago that while Raptor was excellent, it was expensive enough that only the US could afford a usefully-sized force and even that wasn't certain... indeed I remember suggesting - in jest at the time - that the US might end up with fewer F-22s than the UK were getting Typhoons. -- The nation that makes a great distinction between its scholars and its warriors, will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools. -Thucydides pauldotjdotadam[at]googlemail{dot}.com |
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On Mar 8, 11:06 am, Ed Rasimus wrote:
On Sun, 8 Mar 2009 11:22:17 -0700 (PDT), hcobb wrote: On Mar 8, 8:10 am, Ed Rasimus wrote: UK is credible, but may not be financially able. Australia looks like a customer. Taiwan? Probably not. S. Korea? Unlikely right now, but could change rapidly. Israel? Definite candidate. Western European NATO? Depends on trends in governments...both theirs and ours. India? Who knows. Emerging S. American capitalist democracy? Too far down-stream to predict. All of these are notable for the lack of a need for a pure air to air fighter and a lack of airfields near to the spots they're likely to drop bombs so all of them would be better off with JSFs. -HJC Actually all of them are notable for the fact that their military requirements are almost exclusively defensive and NOT offensive power projection. Their most likely application is defending against attack from the air. Correct me if I'm wrong, but the last superlative Air Superiority Fighter developed by the US on the scale of ambition of the F-22 was the F-15. A good bean-counter could likely give you the cost of deploying and operating the F-15 fleet from pening the requirement to now. Let me toss out that cost at $50 billion, lot's of beans (?). Next part is harder. What is the $ value having the F-15 fleet provide? It's more than it's combat record, because having them is a deterrence and provides a sense of *subjective* security. The many aware (US) taxpayers that frequent this group, might ask, what if the F-15 fleet never existed? Would it have made a difference? Because the answers are so subjective, your responses (opinions) cannot be wrong, so go at it. Ken |
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Paul J. Adam ha scritto:
while Typhoon at that point was "half as good" (the JOUST modelling put its exchange rate against a 'son of Flanker' at 4.5 to 1, compared to 9:1 for F-22 in the same conditions - a gross oversimplification of some careful work, but a handy headline number) Whose imply that the # of the Raptor should be at least half that of # of Typhoon of the major foreign (to US) airforce (or coalized airforce) ? Anyway. even assuming that the major typhoon-equipped foreign airforces clash with USAF, there are not few logistic problems to resolve prior of starting the dogfighting ![]() ![]() The key issue is that all these things, embargo, classified thingies, lack of an export version, etc. has given the monopoly of the 5th generation fighter a/c market to the... 4th generation and half Typhoon ! Best regards from Italy, Dott. Piergiorgio. |
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On Mar 8, 3:54*pm, "dott.Piergiorgio"
wrote: Paul J. Adam ha scritto: while Typhoon at that point was "half as good" (the JOUST modelling put its exchange rate against a 'son of Flanker' at 4.5 to 1, compared to 9:1 for F-22 in the same conditions - a gross oversimplification of some careful work, but a handy headline number) Whose imply that the # of the Raptor should be at least half that of # of Typhoon of the major foreign (to US) airforce (or coalized airforce) ? Anyway. even assuming that the major typhoon-equipped foreign airforces clash with USAF, there are not few logistic problems to resolve prior of starting the dogfighting ![]() ![]() The key issue is that all these things, embargo, classified thingies, lack of an export version, etc. has given the monopoly of the 5th generation fighter a/c market to the... 4th generation and half Typhoon ! Best regards from Italy, Dott. Piergiorgio. Or the Sukhoi.... |
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dott.Piergiorgio wrote:
ha scritto: they also need to amend that idiotic export ban law on the F-22 and allow certain trust worthy countries who can afford the F-22 to buy it. Those countries a the UK, Australia, Israel, Japan and South Korea. Trouble is, that seems that some sekrit are unremovable (that is, at the airframe level, and will be a real PITA put together a credible export version.... On your list of "trusted countries" I can understand only the Japan, SK is too "frontline", giving F-22 to Israel means more destabilizing an already destabilized area, Australia, why ? I don't see hostile Australia has problems with a little place called China. Andrew Swallow airforces around Oz whose needs the advanced capabilities of the F-22 (if we discard the ominous shades behind JMSDF Hyuga...). Remains only UK as a credible ally for the F-22, if not for the severe issues in the UK defence budget, already more than strained.... Best regards from Italy, Dott. Piergiorgio. |
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