Japan is urged to consider F-35 jets
By Demetri Sevastopulo in Washington
Published: May 14 2007 22:53 | Last updated: May 14 2007 22:53
Japan should consider buying the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter instead of the more advanced F-22 Raptor if Tokyo wants a fleet of next-generation fighter jets, says the top Pentagon acquisitions official.
“[The F-22] was never considered for export when it was designed, developed and built,” Kenneth Krieg, the under-secretary of defence for acquisition, technology and logistics, told the Financial Times.
The Raptor is the most advanced of the latest family of fighters, known as fifth generation, in production for the US Air Force. “I have supported the position that says the fifth-generation aircraft for an export market...is the Joint Strike Fighter and not the F-22.”
The comments from the head of procurement at the Pentagon follows heavy lobbying of the Bush administration by Japan for the Raptor last month. Japan is expected to choose a replacement fighter for its ageing fleet of F-4 Phantoms next year. Its air force favours the F-22, which is built by a Lockheed Martin-led consortium.
But Tokyo is also considering Lockheed’s F-35, which is already on order with a number of foreign air forces, including the UK and Italy. Tokyo will also assess Boeing’s F-15 and F-18 and the Eurofighter Typhoon.
Current US law prohibits export of the F-22 and the US has previously rebuffed an approach by Australia, another strong US ally, for the aircraft.
While some administration officials support providing the close US ally with the F-22, others, including Mr Krieg, are concerned about sharing sensitive technology. But he acknowledges he is only one part of the decision-making process. “The extent to which there is a debate and a discussion happening above me, that discussion happens,” he said. Some officials are also wary about antagonising China by selling Japan the F-22, by far the most capable fighter.
Fumio Kyuma, the Japanese defence minister, raised the F-22 issue during recent meetings in Washington with Robert Gates, the US defence secretary. Thomas Schieffer, US ambassador to Tokyo, recently said he hoped Japan would end up with a new fleet that combined the JSF and the F-22.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007