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US will sell 50 F-35 fighter jets to UAE, White House tells Congress: Reuters

UAE and Iran have good relation. Iran Su-30SM + UAE F-35A > Turkey F-16C. This will be proven in Libya battle.
What? UAE's number one enemy is Iran. Both Iran and Turkey want to mingle in Arab affairs and control the Arab countries in the middle east after the US leaves the region. **** them both!
 
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What? UAE's number one enemy is Iran. Both Iran and Turkey want to mingle in Arab affairs and control the Arab countries in the middle east after the US leaves the region. **** them both!

Maybe in the past, but now their common enemy is Erdogan Ottoman expansion.
 
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Good I thought just 12 or 24 but still not enough
It was 24 initially..but with F-18 Growler..Now the UAE chose 50 of the same platform..I guess it was important for Usrael too.. because it knows nothing about the Growler capabilities// at least it know the F-35..HaHa!
 
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When the Saudis do recognise Israel most Islamic states will do the same or fall in line

or rush and open there own channels to Israel lol

only thing stoping Pakistan’s is our Kashmir issue has Un resolution just like on thePalestinians we are there for bound to it’s implementation to honour it not to weaken Kashmir resolution
 
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Selling to India shows how much you care. :sarcastic:
What was it Spyder and spice missiles?
he's right though. Its in Israel's interest that Azerbaijan succeeds, since it's Israel's closest ally in the region and from where Israel has military facilities. So Azerbaijan is of strategic importance for Israel in the region( probably Israel's closest ally in the region and Muslim world). Reason has been supporting them militarily even during this war. WIN-WIN for both sides. :cheers:
When MBS becomes king KSA will recognize Israel. MBS is very secular.
If it will serve Saudi interests why not? countries should be run based on national interests, not some religious ideology or whatever. So i see no reason they shouldn't if it will serve their interests more. if it won't then the current status quo is reasonable for them. INTERESTS SHOULD ALWAYS TRUMP EVERYTHING ELSE. :)
 
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Congress has 30 days to oppose the deal..if there is no objection ..it will be a done deal..
 
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Fail to understand why UAE has extreme obsession with such expensive piece of metal. They have one of best F16 in the region. UAE cost will be alot more then US armed forces orders. Plane cost $44,000 flying 1 hour, this cost will be lot more for other countries.



F-35 Costs Drop for Building Jets But Rise for Operating Them
By
Anthony Capaccio
May 29, 2020, 3:00 AM CDT
  • Pentagon estimates development, procurement will decline 7.1%
  • Report projects long-term operation, maintenance rising 7.8%
F-35 Lightning II fighter jets at Hill Air Force Base, Utah.

F-35 Lightning II fighter jets at Hill Air Force Base, Utah. Photographer: Ronald Bradshaw/U.S. Air Force


The Pentagon’s costliest program, Lockheed Martin Corp.’s F-35, is starting to look a little less expensive, with the latest estimate for development and procurement down 7.1% to $397.8 billion.



Less encouraging for the lawmakers who craft defense budgets and for taxpayers: Operating and maintaining the fleet for 66 years is projected to cost $1.182 trillion, a 7.8% increase over the estimate from the Pentagon’s F-35 office last year, according to the Defense Department’s annual assessment of the jet obtained by Bloomberg News.



The lower acquisition estimate produced by the F-35 program office is the latest in a string of good news that also includes improved on-time delivery of aircraft, the elimination of all flaws that were considered life-threatening to pilots and a steady reduction since 2018 in the number of potentially mission-crippling software deficiencies.



The Selected Acquisition Report, which hasn’t been released to the public, also said the F-35 program anticipates sales over time of 809 aircraft to international partners, up from the 764 projected last year.

Cumulatively, the improvements might protect the F-35 from pressure to cut defense budgets as the federal deficit balloons due to spending for the Covid-19 pandemic. The Pentagon is already projecting mostly flat budgets through 2025.

Even under the current budget forecast, the Pentagon report discloses that previous plans to buy 94 F-35s in fiscal 2022 will be reduced by nine. The blueprint then calls for buying 94 each year in fiscal 2023 and 2024 and 96 in fiscal 2025. Those are up from the 79 requested for fiscal 2021.

The report was prepared in December before the coronavirus pandemic crippled the global economy. Lockheed announced last week that Covid-19 impacts will temporarily slow F-35 production because of subcontractor parts delays and that the Bethesda, Maryland-based company might fail to deliver as many as 24 of a planned 141 jets this year.

Earlier: Lockheed Slows F-35 Production on Covid-Related Parts Delays

More than 500 of a potential 3,200 F-35s for the U.S. and allies already have been delivered and will have to be retrofitted as flaws are fixed, at a cost of as much as $1.4 billion. The F-35 is in the final stages of intense combat testing to demonstrate it’s effective against the most advanced Russian, Chinese and Iranian threats.

Lockheed spokesman Brett Ashworth said the report “highlights our ability to work with our partners to produce the world’s most advanced fighter at the cost of legacy aircraft” the F-35 is intended to replace. Brandi Schiff, a spokeswoman for the Pentagon’s F-35 program office, declined to comment on the report before its release.


The Pentagon assessment says that updating its numbers based on actual production performance data by Lockheed and its subcontractors, rather than projections, resulted in the reduction in acquisition cost estimates. For example, the “unit flyaway cost” of an F-35 for the Air Force’s version of the fighter, not including the engine, declined by $12.1 million to $57.4 million. The Air Force plans to purchase 1,763 jets, the most of the U.S.’s planned 2,456 aircraft. The Marine Corps version dropped to $72.1 million from $80 million, and the Navy model fell to $72.3 million from $79.5 million.

None of that resolves the projected long-term trillion-dollar burden of operating and sustaining the fleet through 2077.

Outlining the stakes, then-acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said in March 2019 that “this is the largest program in DoD history and the cost of sustainment is about the same cost as nuclear modernization.”

In the new report the F-35 program office said that it “remains committed to and continues pursuing multiple efforts to drive down” those costs.


 
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What? UAE's number one enemy is Iran. Both Iran and Turkey want to mingle in Arab affairs and control the Arab countries in the middle east after the US leaves the region. **** them both!


fak you, American will never leave the middle east as long ther are Arabs they can fak... :p:
 
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Maybe their Israelis will fly f35s for Emiratis who can just about drive their flashy cars
 
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he's right though. Its in Israel's interest that Azerbaijan succeeds, since it's Israel's closest ally in the region and from where Israel has military facilities. So Azerbaijan is of strategic importance for Israel in the region( probably Israel's closest ally in the region and Muslim world). Reason has been supporting them militarily even during this war. WIN-WIN for both sides.

False. Israel has no military facility in Azerbaijan. Nor will Turkey allow Azerbaijan to host an Israeli base considering Turkey wants Jerusalem back.
 
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Fail to understand why UAE has extreme obsession with such expensive piece of metal. They have one of best F16 in the region. UAE cost will be alot more then US armed forces orders. Plane cost $44,000 flying 1 hour, this cost will be lot more for other countries.



F-35 Costs Drop for Building Jets But Rise for Operating Them
By
Anthony Capaccio
May 29, 2020, 3:00 AM CDT
  • Pentagon estimates development, procurement will decline 7.1%
  • Report projects long-term operation, maintenance rising 7.8%
F-35 Lightning II fighter jets at Hill Air Force Base, Utah.

F-35 Lightning II fighter jets at Hill Air Force Base, Utah. Photographer: Ronald Bradshaw/U.S. Air Force


The Pentagon’s costliest program, Lockheed Martin Corp.’s F-35, is starting to look a little less expensive, with the latest estimate for development and procurement down 7.1% to $397.8 billion.



Less encouraging for the lawmakers who craft defense budgets and for taxpayers: Operating and maintaining the fleet for 66 years is projected to cost $1.182 trillion, a 7.8% increase over the estimate from the Pentagon’s F-35 office last year, according to the Defense Department’s annual assessment of the jet obtained by Bloomberg News.



The lower acquisition estimate produced by the F-35 program office is the latest in a string of good news that also includes improved on-time delivery of aircraft, the elimination of all flaws that were considered life-threatening to pilots and a steady reduction since 2018 in the number of potentially mission-crippling software deficiencies.



The Selected Acquisition Report, which hasn’t been released to the public, also said the F-35 program anticipates sales over time of 809 aircraft to international partners, up from the 764 projected last year.

Cumulatively, the improvements might protect the F-35 from pressure to cut defense budgets as the federal deficit balloons due to spending for the Covid-19 pandemic. The Pentagon is already projecting mostly flat budgets through 2025.

Even under the current budget forecast, the Pentagon report discloses that previous plans to buy 94 F-35s in fiscal 2022 will be reduced by nine. The blueprint then calls for buying 94 each year in fiscal 2023 and 2024 and 96 in fiscal 2025. Those are up from the 79 requested for fiscal 2021.

The report was prepared in December before the coronavirus pandemic crippled the global economy. Lockheed announced last week that Covid-19 impacts will temporarily slow F-35 production because of subcontractor parts delays and that the Bethesda, Maryland-based company might fail to deliver as many as 24 of a planned 141 jets this year.

Earlier: Lockheed Slows F-35 Production on Covid-Related Parts Delays

More than 500 of a potential 3,200 F-35s for the U.S. and allies already have been delivered and will have to be retrofitted as flaws are fixed, at a cost of as much as $1.4 billion. The F-35 is in the final stages of intense combat testing to demonstrate it’s effective against the most advanced Russian, Chinese and Iranian threats.

Lockheed spokesman Brett Ashworth said the report “highlights our ability to work with our partners to produce the world’s most advanced fighter at the cost of legacy aircraft” the F-35 is intended to replace. Brandi Schiff, a spokeswoman for the Pentagon’s F-35 program office, declined to comment on the report before its release.


The Pentagon assessment says that updating its numbers based on actual production performance data by Lockheed and its subcontractors, rather than projections, resulted in the reduction in acquisition cost estimates. For example, the “unit flyaway cost” of an F-35 for the Air Force’s version of the fighter, not including the engine, declined by $12.1 million to $57.4 million. The Air Force plans to purchase 1,763 jets, the most of the U.S.’s planned 2,456 aircraft. The Marine Corps version dropped to $72.1 million from $80 million, and the Navy model fell to $72.3 million from $79.5 million.

None of that resolves the projected long-term trillion-dollar burden of operating and sustaining the fleet through 2077.

Outlining the stakes, then-acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said in March 2019 that “this is the largest program in DoD history and the cost of sustainment is about the same cost as nuclear modernization.”

In the new report the F-35 program office said that it “remains committed to and continues pursuing multiple efforts to drive down” those costs.


Did you fail to understand why 809 aircraft are sold to international partners..
 
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