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Granger says Trump’s plan to pit F-18 vs. F-35 ‘doesn’t make sense’

Rep. Kay Granger speaking in front of an F-35 fighter jet at Lockheed Martin Aeronautics in 2015 as the first plane was rolled out for Norway.
Rep. Kay Granger speaking in front of an F-35 fighter jet at Lockheed Martin Aeronautics in 2015 as the first plane was rolled out for Norway. Star-Telegram archives

President Donald Trump wants Boeing’s Super Hornet fighter to compete against Lockheed Martin’s next generation F-35 jet. But that idea “doesn’t make sense” to U.S. Rep. Kay Granger.

Boeing’s F/A-18E/F Super Hornet and Lockheed Martin’s stealthy F-35 are vastly different fighters with distinctive roles in America’s arsenal, according to the Fort Worth Republican, who is chairwoman of the Defense Appropriations subcommittee.

“The F-18 and Joint Strike Fighter are completely different,” said Granger, who took over the subcommittee last month, in an interview. “The F-35, there’s not another plane like it. You can’t compare it to the F-18.”

As a fifth-generation fighter, the F-35 is stealthier and equipped with more advanced radar, sensors and communications systems than Boeing’s “fourth generation” Super Hornet, which was designed primarily for aircraft carrier operations.

And the bulk of the Pentagon’s F-35 purchases — 1,763 out of a total 2,443 — are planned by the Air Force, not the Navy.

Nevertheless, with Trump vowing to simultaneously build up the military and reduce taxes without widening the deficit, he has repeatedly singled out the Pentagon’s most expensive weapons system, one which had been plagued by cost overruns and questions about its technical progress, for closer review.

In a December posting on Twitter, then President-elect Trump said, “Based on the tremendous cost and cost overruns of the Lockheed Martin F-35, I have asked Boeing to price-out a comparable F-18 Super Hornet!”

(President Trump) getting involved in that turned out to be a good thing. He said, ‘we want to lower the price’ and then Lockheed did lower the price because they are going to build them faster.

U.S. Rep. Kay Granger

He followed that up in the days before his inauguration by calling the Pentagon’s F-35 program manager, Air Force Lt. Gen. Chris Bogdan, twice to ask questions about both aircraft. Boeing Chief Executive Officer Dennis Muilenburg was listening in on speaker phone during the second call Jan. 17.

Navy version

Translating Trump’s request into action, Pentagon chief James Mattis asked Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work to oversee a review that “compares F-35C and F/A-18E/F operational capabilities and assesses the extent that F/A-18E/F improvements” can be made in order to “provide a competitive, cost effective, fighter aircraft alternative.”

The F-35C is the Navy model of the jet and the easiest to target because it’s not scheduled to be operational until August 2018 at the earliest. The service plans to buy 260 carrier models of the plane; the Marine Corps will buy 80 of the Navy model and 340 of a version capable of short takeoffs and vertical landings, according to the Congressional Research Service.

Any shift to favor Chicago-based Boeing would help the defense contractor achieve what it couldn’t when the company lost its bid for the $379 billion Joint Strike Fighter program in October 2001. The Super Hornet is built in St. Louis and the Missouri congressional delegation lobbies each year to keep that assembly line in operation.

Granger praised Trump’s public involvement late in the negotiations of the most recent and largest contract for the F-35, which she said may have contributed to what the Pentagon said was $728 million in savings over the previous contract and hastened a conclusion to talks that had dragged on for more than a year.

‘Nail-biter’

“His getting involved in that turned out to be a good thing,” she said. “He said, ‘We want to lower the price’ and then Lockheed did lower the price because they are going to build them faster,” Granger said. “I also thought it was positive that the president knows now all the things that go into the pricing of that.”

Although “it turned out very well,” it “was sort of a nail-biter for a while,” she said.

Lockheed subsequently said the new contract, covering another 90 F-35s, would reduce costs by $728 million and lead to 1,800 more jobs in Fort Worth. Lockheed employs about 14,000 workers in west Fort Worth, including 8,800 who work on the F-35 program.

The new workers are expected to be hired through 2020, as production of the fighter jet increases.

Lockheed has been working to reduce costs in the program. In an interview on CNBC on Wednesday, Janet Nash, Lockheed’s vice president of F-35 production, said the company is boosting the use of robotics in an effort to bring down costs.

“We want an $80 million jet. We have to take labor out of the aircraft build process and we have to make that process more efficient without any reduction in quality,” she said.

Granger said while she won’t be involved “in the decision making at all” stemming from the Mattis assessment, she will certainly be reviewing it. “I think the review will turn out very well for us, for the F-35.”

With Lockheed building the F-35 in her district, Granger said she knows her decisions on the defense panel will be under scrutiny.

As a leader on the appropriations defense panel, Granger has minded her district’s interests. She successfully fought in 2012 to keep eight C-130 transport planes based at Naval Air Station Fort Worth instead of being moved to Montana, as Pentagon officials had proposed, according to a Bloomberg Government profile.

Still, “I have to be careful when I start talking about Lockheed’s planes because I am not the chair of Lockheed,” she said.

Granger said she can balance the needs of her constituents with the overall needs of the country. Asked whether she’d mete out “tough love” to Lockheed if needed, Granger said, “I just have to do it.”

Staff writer Steve Kaskovich contributed to this report, which includes material from Star-Telegram archives.

This story was originally published February 22, 2017 at 9:26 AM with the headline "Granger says Trump’s plan to pit F-18 vs. F-35 ‘doesn’t make sense’."

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