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Senate panel wants to cut F-35 2nd engine
WASHINGTON - A Senate subcommittee on Tuesday included no money in its 2011 budget proposal for an alternate engine to power the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.
The appropriations panel sided with the White House and opposed counterparts in the House of Representatives by recommending the most expensive weapons system ever, being developed by a global team led by Lockheed Martin Corp, proceed with a single engine system.
The panel also proposed that the full committee cut production by 10 planes to 32 radar-evading aircraft in its $680.9 billion spending plan that included $157.7 billion to help cover costs of wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and fund counter-terror programs.
"The recommendations that we make to the (full) committee include what some may consider tough measures," said Appropriations Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye. "We consider them prudent."
Pentagon officials project the F-35 will cost up to $382 billion over the next two decades.
The White House has threatened to veto the spending package if it contains a second engine program, a years-long saga the Obama administration considers wasteful.
The defense appropriations subcommittee in the House approved $450 million for the second engine program in July.
Both engines, if built, are worth up to $100 billion in business, according to industry estimates.
Pratt & Whitney, a unit of United Technologies Corp, builds the main F-35 engine. General Electric Co and Britain's Rolls Royce are vying for the second engine.
Supporters of the alternate engine believe added competition will reduce costs and improve performance.
News Headlines
WASHINGTON - A Senate subcommittee on Tuesday included no money in its 2011 budget proposal for an alternate engine to power the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.
The appropriations panel sided with the White House and opposed counterparts in the House of Representatives by recommending the most expensive weapons system ever, being developed by a global team led by Lockheed Martin Corp, proceed with a single engine system.
The panel also proposed that the full committee cut production by 10 planes to 32 radar-evading aircraft in its $680.9 billion spending plan that included $157.7 billion to help cover costs of wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and fund counter-terror programs.
"The recommendations that we make to the (full) committee include what some may consider tough measures," said Appropriations Committee Chairman Daniel Inouye. "We consider them prudent."
Pentagon officials project the F-35 will cost up to $382 billion over the next two decades.
The White House has threatened to veto the spending package if it contains a second engine program, a years-long saga the Obama administration considers wasteful.
The defense appropriations subcommittee in the House approved $450 million for the second engine program in July.
Both engines, if built, are worth up to $100 billion in business, according to industry estimates.
Pratt & Whitney, a unit of United Technologies Corp, builds the main F-35 engine. General Electric Co and Britain's Rolls Royce are vying for the second engine.
Supporters of the alternate engine believe added competition will reduce costs and improve performance.
News Headlines