Posted on Mon, Mar. 15, 2004
GAO Tells Pentagon to Make F/A 22 Case
JOHN J. LUMPKIN
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon needs to make a case to keep the F/A-22 fighter program in the face of vastly increased costs and technical problems, congressional investigators say.
The General Accounting Office, an arm of Congress, said in a report that the military can now afford only 218 of the planes within a $36.8 billion spending cap. The Air Force originally planned to buy 750 but has since reduced the number to 277 - which it still says it can afford once it makes the program more efficient.
The F/A-22 Raptor, intended primarily as a stealthy replacement for the F-15 Eagle, was built to shoot down other planes. Unlike its predecessor, the F/A-22 can fly at supersonic speeds for long ranges.
The plane was conceived 18 years ago, at the end of the Cold War, but critics note the U.S. military's current generation of fighters have been more than a match for every air force and air defense network it has faced in the wars since.
The Air Force is also trying to make the F/A-22 more useful by giving it the ability to attack ground targets. But that is making it even more expensive, to the tune of $11.7 billion, and adds significant technical challenges, the GAO says. Some of that money has already been spent.
The first combat-ready planes are supposed to hit the skies next year, and the military is supposed to decide by December whether to continue with full production of the plane. Later this month, the Pentagon will determine whether to advance the plane to a more rigorous phase of testing.
Prime contractor Lockheed Martin Corp. is making Raptors at a low rate for testing, and President Bush's proposed 2005 budget includes $4.7 billion for the program, which would include the purchase of 24 fighters.
The plane has had problems with its tail fins, canopy and computer software, the report notes. Its avionics computer processors are obsolete, and changing to new ones necessary for the plane's expanded role will cost years and hundreds of millions of dollars, the report says.
The report calls on the Pentagon to submit to Congress a detailed justification of the program before its December decision whether to go ahead with full production. The Pentagon responded in a letter to GAO that it intends to look at the program in already scheduled reviews.
The new concerns come at a time that the Pentagon has shown a willingness to cancel some big-ticket weapons systems, particularly the Army's Crusader artillery gun and Comanche scout helicopter.
Several watchdog groups reacted to the GAO report by calling for the cancellation of the F/A-22.
"There's no place for weapons without a mission like the F/A-22 given the current budget squeeze. Our military's transformation cannot happen until we let go of these Cold War weapons," said Eric Miller with the Project on Government Oversight, in a statement.
ON THE NET
GAO report:
http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d04391.pdf