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Senate votes to end F-22 production

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

From the New York Times:

The Senate voted 58-40 on Tuesday to strip $1.75 billion for seven more F-22 fighters from a military spending bill, handing President Obama a crucial victory in his efforts to reshape the military’s priorities.  

The victory came after the president had placed his political capital on the line by repeatedly threatening to veto the $679.8 billion spending bill if it included any money for the planes.

The F-22, the world’s most advanced fighter, had become a flashpoint in a larger battle over the administration’s push to shift more of the Pentagon’s resources from conventional warfare to fighting insurgencies.

The plane’s supporters, who ranged from hawkish Republicans to Democrats close to organized labor, also voiced concern over the possible loss of high-paying manufacturing jobs at a time when the economy is in turmoil.

Georgia U.S. Sens. Saxby Chambliss and Johnny Isakson, both Republicans, had urged colleagues not to cut funding for the fighter jets, which undergo final assembly here in Georgia. A Lockheed-Martin spokesman tells CL simply, “We will support the U.S. government’s final decision on the F-22 program.”

(Courtesy Lockheed-Martin)

Is the F-22 really dead?

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

F-22 RAPTOR: Voted "Best Advanced Fighter Jet Partially Manufactured in Cobb County" by CL readers in 2008.

Is the made-in-Marietta, $361 million-a-pop F-22 Raptor fighter jet really dead?

Headline writers seem to think so.

From the AJC: Pentagon plans to ax F-22 project

From the Christian Science Monitor: Pentagon budget kills F-22

From The Examiner: Marietta made F-22 Raptor killed by DoD

These obituaries were prompted by yesterday’s announcement from the Pentagon that it plans to buy just four additional jets between now and 2011 before shutting down production. So far, 140 F-22s have been built.

I have a strong feeling obits for the F-22 are premature.

Fat weapons projects — particularly ones that employ thousands of people in dozens of congressional districts — have an uncanny ability to not die.

(more…)

Morning Newsdome

Friday, February 27th, 2009

>> CHANGE: The new administration lifts the ban on photographing military coffins’ arrivals, letting the families of the fallen decide if they want them photographed.

>> SURPRISE!: The recession didn’t go away overnight. The economy just keeps shrinking and rapidly so.

>> Clint Eastwood says down with political correctness. The whole easily-offended schtick is putting comedians out of a job.

>> PENDING EGG SHORTAGE?: Nope, just a continued intelligence shortage affecting mostly the political populace. If comedians weren’t so busy being politically correct, they could’ve thought of a much better joke involving the first black president and watermelons.

>> Lesson learned by Facebook: Don’t piss off social network users. They know how to wield an online mob like nobody’s business.

>> Obama administration puts its Robin Hood plans in action with new tax cuts and increases.

>>STOP THE PRESS: Colorado’s oldest daily newspaper says goodbye in the classiest, and most stirring, of ways.

(Photo by Joeff Davis)