- Sputnik International, 1920
World
Get the latest news from around the world, live coverage, off-beat stories, features and analysis.

Israeli Committee Approves Procurement of F-35 Jets, KC-46 Refueling Aircraft

© Israeli Air ForceThe first F-35I Adir test aircraft outside of the US landed at the Israeli AF Flight Test Center at Tel-Nof AFB on Nov. 11, 2020. It will be used to develop and test advanced capabilities that Israel alone is allowed to add to its fleet of F-35I fighters.
The first F-35I Adir test aircraft outside of the US landed at the Israeli AF Flight Test Center at Tel-Nof AFB on Nov. 11, 2020. It will be used to develop and test advanced capabilities that Israel alone is allowed to add to its fleet of F-35I fighters. - Sputnik International, 1920, 16.02.2021
Subscribe
Israel's Channel 12 reported earlier this month that Washington set a two-week deadline for the anticipated $2.74 billion US-Israel arms deal. Failure to reach an agreement would have resulted in Jerusalem losing priority in American assembly lines.

An Israeli official confirmed Tuesday that the ministerial committee for military acquisitions has approved a contentious new arms deal that includes a new squadron of US-made F-35 fighter jets from Lockheed Martin, KC-46 aerial refueling and strategic military transport aircraft by Boeing, and various advanced missiles and bombs.  

“A ministerial procurement committee has approved the purchase of a new F-35 squadron, four new refueling planes, and a large quantity of munitions,” an unnamed Israeli official told Reuters
© Photo : U.S. Air ForceA KC-46 tanker refuels an A-10 aircraft during testing
Israeli Committee Approves Procurement of F-35 Jets, KC-46 Refueling Aircraft - Sputnik International, 1920, 16.02.2021
A KC-46 tanker refuels an A-10 aircraft during testing

Israel's Finance Ministry initially cited budgetary concerns and opposed the bill, but they were ultimately overruled on the matter, which was supported by Israeli Minister of Defense Benny Gantz.

Funding for the $2.74 billion deal will come in part from the $3.8 billion of US military aid given to Israel each year. Many opposed to the deal highlighted that the up-front payment will result in high-interest charges from American banks. 

“The bottom line is that it’s either paying about NIS 8 billion right here and now or paying additional interest… in another decade, which the Defense Ministry will pay for with dollars from the aid budget,” Amir Eshel, director-general of the Israeli Ministry of Defense, told reporters in November, as reported by The Times of Israel. 

The estimate later approved by the government was worth ~NIS 9 billion. 

“It doesn’t add up to me that the State of Israel right now — at the peak of a budgetary deficit — would take NIS 8 billion and put it in America. There are other techniques to solve this,” he added. 

Eshel also highlighted that the Israeli Defense Force's current fleet of F-35 fighter jets, as well as approximately 100 of its F-15s, have been procured under similar arrangements. 

With Israeli approval received, the deal must now be laid out in a notification memo addressed to US Congress. 

News of Israel's F-35 procurement comes alongside new engine concerns plaguing the joint strike fighter program in the US.

Citing the F-35 program office, DefenseNews reported last week that the F135 Heavy Maintenance Center at Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma has encountered issues processing Pratt & Whitney F135 engines due to scheduled depot maintenance. 

Furthermore, facility maintainers have discovered “premature distress of rotor blade coatings” with a "small number" of engine power modules. 

The two issues present a "serious readiness problem" for the joint strike fighter program, according to a US defense official who spoke with the outlet.  

Newsfeed
0
To participate in the discussion
log in or register
loader
Chats
Заголовок открываемого материала