AP. 24 October 2001. Pentagon to Announce $200B Contract.

WASHINGTON -- The Pentagon this week awards its richest contract in
history -- at least $200 billion -- for a fighter jet designed to reach
supersonic speeds, land vertically, and meet the varied needs of the Air
Force, Navy, and Marines.

For five years, Boeing Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp. have been
designing, engineering, and testing their entries in a competition that
will have military, business, and economic consequences for decades to
come.

The winner will be announced Friday. Lockheed is considered the
favorite.

"It's huge for us," said John Kent, a spokesman for Lockheed's Fort
Worth, Texas-based division Lockheed Martin Aeronautics, which would
make the planes.

The Pentagon has said it wants up to 3,000 Joint Strike Fighter jets
over the next 40 [!] years.

The plane is designed to replace the Air Force's F-16 and A-10, the
Navy's F/A-18 and the Marine Corps' AV-8B Harrier, and be used by
Britain's Royal Air Force and Navy, which want 150 of the planes.

To do that, the plane must be able to take off quickly, land vertically
and on carrier decks, throw off radar and provide all the high-tech
cockpit gadgetry demanded by modern warfare.

"It is a revolutionary aircraft," Boeing spokesman Chick Ramey said.
"There's a lot of technologies here that have never been done before, a
lot of manufacturing techniques we'll use that will never have been done
before."

Boeing's test model, dubbed the X-32, is more compact than Lockheed's
X-35. The X-32 has a gaping air intake on the front and dual lift
nozzles underneath that power the vertical landings and short takeoffs.
The X-35 achieves its short takeoffs and vertical landings with a single
thruster and a lift fan at the top of the plane.

Both models have smooth, curved shapes and special materials to allow
them to thwart radar. Up to now, only Air Force jets have had stealth
technology. The Joint Strike Fighter will "bring stealth to the masses,"
Kent said.

Lockheed has publicized more of its plane's capabilities, which include
taking off after just 500 feet. By comparison, the Air Force's F-16
takes about 2,000 feet to get airborne. Both Boeing and Lockheed's
planes can land vertically.

"It is incredible to watch. It's not often you see a supersonic plane
hovering. Not ever, because it's never been done before," Kent said
[seemingly unaware just how 'incredible' it might be to be standing
below one].

Chicago-based Boeing says the contract would mean 3,000 jobs in Seattle
and another 3,000 engineering jobs and 2,000 production jobs in St.
Louis. Lockheed Martin, based in Bethesda, Md., has said it will add as
many as 9,000 jobs at its Fort Worth factory, which currently employs
11,000.

Leaders in both cities have said their local economies will be greatly
affected -- either positively or negatively -- depending on who wins the
contract.

The Clinton administration considered splitting the contract between the
companies, but the Pentagon this year decided it was more cost-effective
to choose just one.

Both companies have been waging an advertising war to try to influence
the Pentagon's decision.

Both have published ads [!] in Washington newspapers, with Boeing
touting its "experience to maximize value and minimize risk," while
Lockheed boasts its test models have "exceeded all expectations."

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews
with continuing coverage of WWIII


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