Air Force Names Partners for New Bomber--Update
08 Mars 2016 - 12:01AM
Dow Jones News
By Doug Cameron
The U.S. Air Force on Monday identified the seven main partners
alongside lead contractor Northrop Grumman Corp. on the
multibillion-dollar B-21 bomber program, potentially providing
decades of work on one of the Pentagon's highest priorities.
Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James said the Pratt &
Whitney unit of United Technologies Corp. would provide the engines
for the proposed long-range bomber. Northrop Grumman recently
resumed work on developing the plane after Boeing Co. and Lockheed
Martin Corp. dropped a protest after losing the main contract
The Air Force awarded the main contract to Northrop Grumman last
October and has been under pressure from some lawmakers to identify
other companies involved and to boost the transparency of the
highly classified program as it tries to steer funding for the
plane through Congress.
Analysts estimate the Pentagon will have to spend $80 billion to
$120 billion to develop and build a fleet of at least 100
radar-evading bombers, designed to deliver weapons and other
systems deep into enemy territory.
Ms. James identified three specialists in building aircraft
structures and other systems on the team: a unit of UK-based GKN
PLC, Spirit AeroSystems Inc. and Orbital ATK Inc. Rockwell Collins
Inc., which makes a variety of avionics, and electronic warfare
specialist BAE Systems Inc. were also named alongside closely held
Janicki Industries Inc., which makes in composite materials.
Pratt & Whitney had been widely tipped by analysts as the
engine supplier. It already builds engines for the Lockheed-built
F-35 combat jet after beating out General Electric Co., which
initially self-funded a rival power plant.
The bomber program has remained highly classified, and Ms. James
said all of the partners were required to have cybersecurity plans
in place to protect their work on the plane.
The B-21 is eventually expected to be equipped with nuclear
weapons, and Ms. James said the program budget should be included
alongside a new Navy submarine in a special fund for modernizing
the U.S. nuclear arsenal if the Pentagon opts to take that
route.
The Pentagon faces a so-called bow-wave of funding next decade
as it boosts output of the F-35, the B-21, a Boeing-made refueling
tanker and the new submarine, alongside new intercontinental
missiles and support systems.
Write to Doug Cameron at doug.cameron@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 07, 2016 17:46 ET (22:46 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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