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  • House Votes to Let Allies Buy Top U.S. Fighter

    House Votes to Let Allies Buy Top U.S. Fighter
    Sending Such Technology Abroad Raises Concerns

    By Renae Merle
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Saturday, July 1, 2006; D01

    The House has recommended lifting a ban on international sales of the
    nation's most advanced fighter, the F-22 Raptor, a potential boon to
    _Lockheed Martin Corp._ if allies such as Japan begin buying the
    expensive plane to upgrade their air forces.

    On a voice vote after an 11-minute debate, House members on June 20
    tacked onto the defense appropriations bill an amendment repealing a
    nine-year-old prohibition on overseas sales of the plane.

    The ban was put in place to keep the Raptor's high-tech systems out of
    the hands of foreign governments. But with U.S. military orders for
    the jet lagging, members of Congress and some top staffers in the Air
    Force have become concerned that Bethesda-based Lockheed may shut down
    the plane's production line in coming years.

    The $70 billion fighter program is one of Lockheed's largest,
    employing more than 4,500 workers in Georgia and Texas and bringing in
    hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenue. The Pentagon has
    steadily lowered the numberof F-22s it planned to purchase from the
    750 it thought it needed to face off against the Soviet Union nearly
    20 years ago down to 183. As with the older F-16 -- a fighter Lockheed
    continues to sustain through overseas sales -- foreign purchases could
    keep the Raptor in business.

    The amendment allowing overseas sales was offered by Rep. Kay Granger
    (R-Tex.), whose district in Fort Worth includes a plant that makes the
    midsection of the aircraft, with a total of 2,640 jobs associated with
    the Raptor.

    "I believe this provision of this bill is no longer necessary to
    safeguard our technology," Granger said on the floor of the House.

    Lockheed executives and Air Force officials declined to comment.

    Prospects of passage in the Senate, which will not take up its
    appropriations bill until next month, are unclear, though that chamber
    traditionally has been more tolerant of allowing international
    involvement in military programs.

    Sen. John W. Warner, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee,
    appeared willing to support foreign sales of a modified version of the
    Raptor.

    "My own advice is that we should consider manufacturing a model of
    that aircraft that would meet our requirements with regard to
    technology transfer, a model that would be foreign sales only," Warner
    said in an interview. "That aircraft, even if modified for foreign
    sales, would be a magnificent aircraft, believe me."

    He noted that the military has had to make similar accommodations for
    foreign sales of other U.S. aircraft, including the F-16 and F-15.

    Even if the ban is lifted, any overseas sales of the plane would have
    to be vetted by the Departments of Defense and State under the Arms
    Export Control Act.

    Lockheed and some in the Air Force began making a case for overseas
    sales of the fighter early this year as the Pentagon lowered the
    number of planes it would buy to 183 to save $10 billion over the next
    few years. Until that point, Lockheed had expected to sell about 381
    planes to the U.S. government. The reduction prompted Lockheed to say
    it would have to close the F-22 production line by 2011.

    Any specific sale is likely to face concerns about the export of
    technology that is still considered sensitive. Congress has continued
    funding the plane, despite its increasing cost, in part because the
    Raptor's technology was considered worth sustaining. While Lockheed's
    other fighter jet, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, was developed to be
    exported, the Raptor wasn't.

    The company has delivered 74 Raptors so far at a cost of $361 million
    each.

    The cost is about three times the original estimate, according to the
    Government Accountability Office. The planes are scheduled to be put
    into combat service early next year, following years of fine-tuning
    and training.

    During the brief floor debate, the original author of the overseas
    sales ban, Rep. David R. Obey (D-Wis.), said he was "significantly
    uncomfortable" with lifting it.

    "I am certainly not convinced that we have reached the point where we
    ought to remove these restrictions," he said.

    Selling the aircraft overseas also undermines one of the original
    justifications for the aircraft, skeptics say.

    "The original justification for creating the F-22 was that we had
    already sold our most advanced fighter technology to so many countries
    that we needed a more advanced fighting capability. Now we're in that
    trap again by selling the F-22 abroad," said Jennifer Porter-Gore,
    spokeswoman for the Project on Government Oversight, a watchdog
    group. "This is when our national security interests collide with
    those of the defense industry."

    Given its expense, the fighter may have a limited audience.

    "This is an extremely high-performance fighter. Few air forces around
    the world are going to need it. Fewer will be able to afford it," said
    Gordon M.

    Adams, professor of the practice of international affairs at George
    Washington University.

    Lockheed and the Air Force see a potential market among the United
    States' closest allies, including Japan, Australia and Britain,
    according to industry insiders and analysts. For example, Japan is
    expected to begin replacing soon its fleet of about 100
    F-4s. Excluding development costs that the Pentagon paid early in the
    program, the price of the plane drops to between $150 million and $183
    million, or even less for a stripped-down model, they said.

    Foreign sales could also help defray some of the cost of the plane to
    the U.S. military and keep the production line going while the Air
    Force and Lockheed make their argument for more purchases to the next
    administration,said Loren Thompson, a consultant for Lockheed who also
    has close ties to the Air Force.

    © 2006 The Washington Post Company
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