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Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Tue Aug 11, 2015, 02:37 PM Aug 2015

A Secret U.S. Bomber Is Set To Exit The Black Budget's Shadows And Enter The Public Eye

The U.S. Air Force’s newest bomber is poised to emerge from the shadows of the Pentagon’s so-called black budget.

As soon as this month, the government will pick Northrop Grumman Corp. or a Lockheed Martin Corp.-Boeing Co. team to lead the Long-Range Strike Bomber program. It’s a decision that will expose the multibillion-dollar program to Washington adversaries long before the jet sees combat in the 2020s or beyond.

Black budget projects are used to protect classified and secret government programs, such as advanced weapons systems and intelligence operations, from public disclosure. Once the award is made public, some of the details will also emerge, though not all.

“The budget environment could make this a unique debate in Congress because the overall budget looks very uncertain,” said Todd Harrison, senior fellow at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. “There will be a lot of questions about funding and how the priority of the LRS-B program is placed above others.”

The contract award may offer a rare glimpse at a major weapons system entering the public spotlight. Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James is grappling with how much to reveal about the highly classified aircraft, suggesting that she’ll discuss funding and acquisition but not “the crown jewels — the technical capabilities.”

more...

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-08-11/the-top-secret-pentagon-project-that-had-its-own-super-bowl-commercial

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A Secret U.S. Bomber Is Set To Exit The Black Budget's Shadows And Enter The Public Eye (Original Post) Purveyor Aug 2015 OP
Refresh my memory... bananas Aug 2015 #1
Interesting chart at the site packman Aug 2015 #2

bananas

(27,509 posts)
1. Refresh my memory...
Tue Aug 11, 2015, 05:11 PM
Aug 2015

From the article:

Black projects are so closely held that the military won’t confirm their existence beyond a title in a budget document. The B-2 bomber’s public rollout in 1988 followed years of hush-hush development. And the most-secret U.S. intelligence agency, the National Reconnaissance Office, wasn’t acknowledged until 1992, more than three decades after it was set up.

The long-range bomber is something of an exception; its broad outlines and basic five- and 10-year budgets have been disclosed. Given the history of defense cost overruns, the Pentagon faces widespread skepticism over its advertised price of $55 billion for a 100-jet fleet, or $550 million each.


Wasn't the B-2 publicly revealed by the Defense Secretary when Carter announced he was cancelling the B-1? Carter was criticized by Republicans for cancelling the B-1, so oops! the Secretary of Defense "accidently" leaked the B-2 program.

And wasn't the B-2 an open secret before that? That's why there wasn't much fallout from the leak - if Republicans criticized it, they would just look uninformed.

 

packman

(16,296 posts)
2. Interesting chart at the site
Tue Aug 11, 2015, 10:19 PM
Aug 2015

[URL=.html][IMG][/IMG][/URL]

As the costs go up, less planes ordered which makes the costs go up per plane which makes the pentagon order less which makes the cost go up. JESUS H. CHRIST - what a racket.

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