U.S. planemaker Boeing said
local defence contractors might build F/A 18 Super Hornets
under licence if Japan chose to buy the next-generation fighter
jet.
The comment came after the U.S. aerospace giant, along with
Lockheed Martin and a consortium of European countries,
submitted bids to produce Japan's next mainstay combat aircraft
in a deal that could be worth up to $8 billion.
Japan, which is facing a resurgent China and its growing
military as well as threats from North Korea, plans to decide
this year how it will replace its current fleet of ageing F-4
Phantom fighters with about 40 new combat
airplanes.
Phillip Mills, Director of Boeing's Japan FX Capture Team, said
Japanese makers could supply about three quarters of Super
Hornet components if Japan opted for the fighter
jet.
There has been great interest in how much of next-generation
fighter jet-related jobs will be outsourced to the Japanese
industry, which has been battered by gradual but consistent
shrinkage of the defence budget.
"If you came to the Boeing production line, everything you saw
Boeing doing in St Louis would be available or is available for
Japan industry to do," Mills told Reuters in an
interview.
"It's clear that we are going to be somewhere in the 75 percent
area," Mills added, referring the percentage of F-18 component
production that the company could outsource to Japanese
makers.
Japanese fighter jet and aeroplane components makers include
top defence contractor Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Kawasaki
Heavy Industries and IHI.
Boeing's F/A 18 Super Hornet is set to compete against Lockheed
Martin's F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and the Eurofighter Typhoon
made by a consortium of European countries for the
contract.
Mills said the high rate of planned outsourcing to Japanese
companies, competitive pricing and ability to deliver on time
give Boeing a competitive edge against the
competition.
"The lower risk and affordability and licensed production we
are offering is, I think, as good as they are going to get so
all and all we are feeling pretty good about it," he
said.
"We've offered an extremely fair and competitive price for not
only initial aircraft but also for licensed production
aircraft." said Mills.
He declined to specify the offer price.
Kazuya Sakamoto, professor at Japan's Osaka Univesity, said the
Lockheed Martin F-35's stealth, or radar-evading, capability
gives it an advantage over the competition, although its cost
overruns and schedule slips have cast doubts over its
prospects.
Fighter jets' stealth capability has drawn heavy attention in
Japan since China, which has a long-running territorial dispute
with Japan, in January confirmed it had held its first test
flight of the J-20 stealth fighter jet.
Mills said Boeing's multi-role Super Hornet comes with a
stealth capability, but the rival F-35 is
"stealthier".
Lockheed Martin, the world's biggest defense contractor, which
also submitted its proposal to Japan earlier on Monday said the
F-35 stealth jets would deliver "unmatched cost-effective
capability for Japan's defense, now and well into the
future".
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