<i>Reuters, 03.24.04, 6:18 PM ET
By Jim Wolf
WASHINGTON, March 24 (Reuters) - The U.S. senator with the most say over federal budget priorities vowed Wednesday to "save" Lockheed Martin Corp.'s (nyse: LMT - news - people) $71 billion F/A-22 fighter jet program which the Air Force calls critical, notably to counter China's growing clout.
"As far as I'm concerned, we're going to save the F/A-22," Sen. Ted Stevens, an Alaska Republican, said at a defense panel session of the Appropriations Committee that he chairs.
"This system is needed," he said of the aircraft designed to replace the F-15C as the top U.S. air-to-air fighter.
Critics have urged the program be killed or cut in favor of cheaper alternatives, including remotely piloted aircraft and the much cheaper Joint Strike Fighter being developed by Bethesda, Maryland-based Lockheed.
Potential adversaries are pursuing "capabilities that threaten the dominance we enjoy today," Air Force Secretary James Roche said in prepared remarks to the panel. He mentioned China alone by name in this section of his remarks.
Beijing has purchased "significant numbers" of advanced surface-to-air missiles, he said, citing a risk of wider proliferation.
"China has also purchased, and is developing, advanced fighter aircraft that are broadly comparable to the best of our current frontline fighters," Roche added.
Chief of Staff Gen. John Jumper introduced to the panel three U.S. F-15 pilots who recently flew against Russian-built SU-30 fighters and other advanced warplanes during exercises with the Indian Air Force.
Results of those war games would be presented to the committee in closed session, Jumper said, adding that he expected lawmakers would find them "very interesting."
Separately, the Air Force's chief weapons buyer, Marvin Sambur, said four F/A-22s flying test missions against eight F-15Cs had "killed" them all before the F-15Cs could launch a single missile.
Sambur told a Senate Armed Services panel that the Pentagon's top acquisition official, Michael Wynne, had all but cleared the F/A-22 to enter the next phase of its operational testing next month.
The Air Force has agreed to buy 22 more F/A-22 fighters from Lockheed for less than $110 million per airframe, not including the engines, Sambur said. He said the declining "flywaway" price, which does not include the development costs, would let the Air Force buy at least 277 F/A-22s by 2013.
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