Biden to visit Alabama Lockheed plant, highlight Javelin missiles
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[May 03, 2022]
By Steve Holland and Mike Stone
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden
heads to Alabama on Tuesday to visit a Lockheed Martin Co facility that
manufactures the anti-tank Javelin missile, putting the spotlight on a
weapon that has helped Ukraine fight Russia's invasion.
Biden will use the visit to press Congress to approve his proposed $33
billion assistance package for Ukraine, including more than $20 billion
in military aid, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday.
Biden will "remind people in the country of why we're fighting, why
we're supporting the Ukrainians in this war, the type of equipment and
the type of assistance we are providing from the United States .... and
why it is urgent to get this funding across the finish line," she said.
Aid to Ukraine has not been a subject of the usual partisan bickering
among lawmakers. But $20 billion is a huge jump and any legislative
proposal can fall victim to political polarization in Washington. Biden,
a Democrat, is visiting a state that has backed Republican presidential
candidates for decades to avoid that outcome.
The United States has rushed $3.4 billion worth of weapons to Ukraine
since Russia invaded on Feb. 24 including howitzers, anti-aircraft
Stinger systems, Javelins, ammunition and body armor.
Demand for Javelin missiles remains high as the war shifts from around
Kyiv, where they were used to stop Russian tanks from advancing on the
capital, to an artillery battle in Ukraine's east.
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Service members of the Ukrainian Armed Forces fire a Javelin
anti-tank missile during drills at a training ground in an unknown
location in Ukraine, in this handout picture released February 18,
2022. Ukrainian Joint Forces Operation Press Service/Handout via
REUTERS /File Photo
So far the United States has sent more then 5,500
Javelin systems to Ukraine, the Pentagon said. According to a Sunday
bulletin from Ukrainian officials, 1,026 Russian tanks have been
destroyed.
"They're asking for more obviously," Jim Taiclet, Lockheed's chief
executive, said of Ukraine's aims at an Atlantic Council seminar on
Friday. The company is trying to expand production capacity at its
Troy, Alabama facility and elsewhere, he said.
Raytheon Technologies and Lockheed jointly produce Javelins, while
Raytheon makes Stingers.
Lockheed said its Troy facility employs 600, helps manufacture five
types of missiles and is the only final assembly plant for the
Javelin system, capable of producing 2,100 per year.
Lockheed has been investing to ramp up Javelin production, and may
use its own funds to expedite contracts to subcontractors. But
supply chain concerns complicate any ramp up.
The Pentagon is monitoring the U.S. stockpile of these weapons and
their components on a daily basis.
(Reporting by Steve Holland and Mike Stone in Washington; Editing by
Heather Timmons and Cynthia Osterman)
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