U.S. Air Force awards contracts to
Boeing, Northrop for ICBM replacement
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[August 22, 2017]
By Mike Stone
(Reuters) - The U.S. Air Force has awarded
Boeing Co and Northrop Grumman Corp separate contracts to continue work
on the replacement of the aging Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic
missile system, the Pentagon said on Friday.
Though the award for the new Ground-Based Strategic Deterrent (GBSD)
comes amid rising tensions with North Korea, the Air Force had asked the
defense industry last summer for proposals to replace the aging ICBM
system and its nuclear cruise missiles as the military moved ahead with
a costly modernization of its aging atomic weapons systems.
"The Minuteman III is 45 years old. It is time to upgrade," Air Force
Chief of Staff General David Goldfein said in a statement on Monday.
Northrop Grumman was awarded $328 million, and Boeing $349 million over
the three-year contract.
The relatively small award is a milestone that would allow Boeing and
Northrop to continue parallel detailed development and prototyping for
the Minuteman replacement. The Pentagon's office of Cost Assessment and
Program Evaluation (CAPE) has said the total could cost the United
States $85 billion. The Air Force has estimated $62 billion.
Lockheed Martin Corp, Northrop and Boeing were all competing for the
contract which is needed to perform the three-year technology maturation
and risk reduction (TMRR) phase of Minuteman replacement.
A Lockheed representative said the company was "disappointed" and looked
"forward to a debrief about the selection."
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The Boeing logo is seen at their headquarters in Chicago, in this
April 24, 2013 file photo. REUTERS/Jim Young/File Photo
Boeing's Strategic Deterrence Systems Director, Frank McCall, said
in a statement, "Since the first Minuteman launch in 1961, the U.S.
Air Force has relied on our technologies for a safe, secure and
reliable ICBM force." Boeing provided the Minuteman III missile for
the current ground-based nuclear ICBM system.
Northrop Grumman's chief Wes Bush said in a statement, "We look
forward to the opportunity to provide the nation with a modern
strategic deterrent system that is secure, resilient and
affordable."
Secretary of the Air Force Heather Wilson said, "We are moving
forward with modernization of the ground-based leg of the nuclear
triad."
Modernization of the U.S. nuclear force was expected to cost more
than $350 billion over the next decade. The United States plans to
replace its aging systems, including bombs, nuclear bombers,
missiles and submarines. Some analysts estimated the cost at $1
trillion over 30 years.
"Our missiles were built in the 1970s. Things just wear out, and it
becomes more expensive to maintain them than to replace them,"
Wilson said.
(Reporting by Mike Stone; Editing by Tom Brown and Diane Craft)
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