我早就猜到的。。。F-22,再来12架。。。

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F-22 Funds Approved in Wee-Hours Vote
By william matthews
Published: 17 Jun 2009 17:04 Print |  Email

It hasn't flown in combat yet, but the F-22 stealth fighter prevailed in a life-or-death battle in an early-morning vote June 17 by the House Armed Services Committee.

A vote early June 17 by the U.S. House Armed Services Committee means that the Pentagon will pay for work to begin in 12 more F-22 jets, even though Defense Secretary Robert Gates wants the program to end. (SENIOR AIRMAN ZACHARY WOLF / U.S. AIR FORCE) After more than 16 hours of squabbling over the 2010 defense budget, weary committee members voted 31-30 at 2:30 a.m. to keep the F-22 program alive by making a $369 million down payment on 12 more planes.

Related Topics
Americas
Air Warfare
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates had intended to end F-22 production at 187 fighters, but House lawmakers overruled him.

The $369 million would buy advance procurement parts to begin production on a dozen new fighters. Ultimately, the planes would cost about $2.8 billion.

The advance procurement money would be taken from funds budgeted for Energy Department cleanups at nuclear weapons sites, a House aide said.

Although it is the Air Force's most advanced and most expensive fighter, the F-22 has never been flown in combat, a point Gates has stressed repeatedly in appearances before Congress.

When he announced April 6 that he wanted to end F-22 production, Gates said, "For me, it was not a close call. … The military advice that I got was that there is no military requirement for numbers of F-22s beyond the 187."

In the past, the Air Force has said it needed 381 F-22s. More recently it lowered the number to 243 until Gates put a 187-plane cap on the program.

But the fighter is popular in Congress, where it is praised as providing the Air Force with a high-tech advantage over potential foes, and is prized for creating jobs. Plane maker Lockheed has emphasized that the F-22 program employees 25,000 workers directly and another 90,000 in companies that produce F-22 parts in 44 states.

The amendment to save the F-22 was introduced by Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah.

"We would liked to have funded a full buy of 12 aircraft," an aide to Bishop said. But Armed Services Committee Chairman Rep. Ike Skelton prohibited amendments that would add to the overall cost of the defense budget.

Bishop was able to shift $369 million for the F-22s from defense environmental cleanups at sites that are projected to be ahead of schedule or are at risk of not being able to spend money allocated for 2010, the aide said.

It's enough to keep the F-22 production line from shutting down, but Bishop and others on the committee believe the Air Force needs more than 12 additional F-22s, he said.

While the Armed Services Committee was saving future F-22s, the full House approved spending $600 million to buy the final four planes that Gates wants. Money for those planes is included in a $106 billion "emergency supplemental" bill used to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Language in that bill prohibits using the F-22 money to shut down the F-22 production line, and it permits the Defense Department to consider building a less capable version of the F-22 for sale overseas.

The war-funding bill thwarts Gates' efforts to end another aircraft program, the C-17 cargo plane.

Gates said the 205 C-17s that are already in the fleet or under construction are enough, and he included no money in the 2010 defense budget for additional C-17s. But the House and Senate added $2.7 billion to war-funding bill to buy eight C-17s and seven smaller C-130J cargo planes.

The additional C-17s are "pure pork," said Christopher Hellman, a defense budget analyst for the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. Buying more C-17s "can only be characterized as a jobs program."

And C-17 maker Boeing has done just that. In February the company boasted that C-17 production sustained 30,000 jobs in 43 states, with concentrations in California, Texas, Missouri and Connecticut.

F-22 Funds Approved in Wee-Hours Vote
By william matthews
Published: 17 Jun 2009 17:04 Print |  Email

It hasn't flown in combat yet, but the F-22 stealth fighter prevailed in a life-or-death battle in an early-morning vote June 17 by the House Armed Services Committee.

A vote early June 17 by the U.S. House Armed Services Committee means that the Pentagon will pay for work to begin in 12 more F-22 jets, even though Defense Secretary Robert Gates wants the program to end. (SENIOR AIRMAN ZACHARY WOLF / U.S. AIR FORCE) After more than 16 hours of squabbling over the 2010 defense budget, weary committee members voted 31-30 at 2:30 a.m. to keep the F-22 program alive by making a $369 million down payment on 12 more planes.

Related Topics
Americas
Air Warfare
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates had intended to end F-22 production at 187 fighters, but House lawmakers overruled him.

The $369 million would buy advance procurement parts to begin production on a dozen new fighters. Ultimately, the planes would cost about $2.8 billion.

The advance procurement money would be taken from funds budgeted for Energy Department cleanups at nuclear weapons sites, a House aide said.

Although it is the Air Force's most advanced and most expensive fighter, the F-22 has never been flown in combat, a point Gates has stressed repeatedly in appearances before Congress.

When he announced April 6 that he wanted to end F-22 production, Gates said, "For me, it was not a close call. … The military advice that I got was that there is no military requirement for numbers of F-22s beyond the 187."

In the past, the Air Force has said it needed 381 F-22s. More recently it lowered the number to 243 until Gates put a 187-plane cap on the program.

But the fighter is popular in Congress, where it is praised as providing the Air Force with a high-tech advantage over potential foes, and is prized for creating jobs. Plane maker Lockheed has emphasized that the F-22 program employees 25,000 workers directly and another 90,000 in companies that produce F-22 parts in 44 states.

The amendment to save the F-22 was introduced by Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah.

"We would liked to have funded a full buy of 12 aircraft," an aide to Bishop said. But Armed Services Committee Chairman Rep. Ike Skelton prohibited amendments that would add to the overall cost of the defense budget.

Bishop was able to shift $369 million for the F-22s from defense environmental cleanups at sites that are projected to be ahead of schedule or are at risk of not being able to spend money allocated for 2010, the aide said.

It's enough to keep the F-22 production line from shutting down, but Bishop and others on the committee believe the Air Force needs more than 12 additional F-22s, he said.

While the Armed Services Committee was saving future F-22s, the full House approved spending $600 million to buy the final four planes that Gates wants. Money for those planes is included in a $106 billion "emergency supplemental" bill used to pay for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Language in that bill prohibits using the F-22 money to shut down the F-22 production line, and it permits the Defense Department to consider building a less capable version of the F-22 for sale overseas.

The war-funding bill thwarts Gates' efforts to end another aircraft program, the C-17 cargo plane.

Gates said the 205 C-17s that are already in the fleet or under construction are enough, and he included no money in the 2010 defense budget for additional C-17s. But the House and Senate added $2.7 billion to war-funding bill to buy eight C-17s and seven smaller C-130J cargo planes.

The additional C-17s are "pure pork," said Christopher Hellman, a defense budget analyst for the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. Buying more C-17s "can only be characterized as a jobs program."

And C-17 maker Boeing has done just that. In February the company boasted that C-17 production sustained 30,000 jobs in 43 states, with concentrations in California, Texas, Missouri and Connecticut.
{:3_95:}美国人可能还会再买12架 F-22。。也许可能更多。。
这些议员很笨阿。
盖茨的想法才是有远见的,现在停产F-22A,积攒钱,等2015开始买F-22B。
ertert 发表于 2009-6-18 16:24
笨蛋,改型也是F-22的生产线,生产线都关了还有什么改型?
空军作战部长和国会联手玩添油战术???
感觉盖兹是不是收了共军的好处了

有谱的东西都想砍了
储存技术的后果有可能变成下一个米格公司
“空气”IA 发表于 2009-6-18 16:32
您猜对了,上个月我才代表党代表人民送了239元人民币!
赶紧把VF0造出来是正经,1打10跟玩儿似的。
9# 青之六


ls是想打UFO吧。。。。。。
贵宾故意写错的。
VF-0是太空堡垒ZERO里统合军一方的机体。由于VF1的发动机进度赶不上采用了传统的燃气涡轮发动机……好吧我错了。
青之六 发表于 2009-6-18 19:02


中毛是不是该立马合作把SV-51给弄出来?
dark_knight 发表于 2009-6-18 16:29
你最聪明,你知道F-22的生产线如何关的?介绍一下。
不知道会怎么样
一唱一和忽悠你们玩呢!!
美帝的话能信的话,耗子药都可以当补药吃了!!
一唱一和忽悠你们玩呢!!
美帝的话能信的话,耗子药都可以当补药吃了!!
大家块看啊,ertert教主出来啊@!  当初信誓旦旦说要退出超大那个!当初信誓旦旦说10B是ps图的那个!  大家块出来参观啊!
VF-0算啥?俄罗斯联合以色列联合德国把SV-51弄出来VF-0就给我好好趴着吧!!!!

大家块看啊,ertert教主出来啊@!  当初信誓旦旦说要退出超大那个!当初信誓旦旦说10B是ps图的那个!  大家块出来参观啊!
zhangtianyin 发表于 2009-6-19 12:14

丢不起的人啊,讨论不过。就用换下版主的帐号,换上马甲来。
我可从没说过什么信誓旦旦退出超大。
我每天登录帐号,然后还退出呢,一年不下300遍,满意了不?
大家块看啊,ertert教主出来啊@!  当初信誓旦旦说要退出超大那个!当初信誓旦旦说10B是ps图的那个!  大家块出来参观啊!
zhangtianyin 发表于 2009-6-19 12:14

丢不起的人啊,讨论不过。就用换下版主的帐号,换上马甲来。
我可从没说过什么信誓旦旦退出超大。
我每天登录帐号,然后还退出呢,一年不下300遍,满意了不?