SEOUL-(IDB) :
Lockheed Martin’s F-35 faces the distinct possibility of being the first to be eliminated in the ongoing bidding for Korea’s next generation fighter
program. The weakest point against the latest U.S. aircraft is that its
price may go up significantly because it is still in development.
The Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA), the arm of the
Ministry of National Defense, has told the three candidates to meet the
required price of 8.3 trillion won ($7.45 billion) or face an early
exit. The bidding is scheduled to resume on Aug. 12 through 16.
Currently, F-35 is vying against Boeing’s F-15 Silent Eagle and the
European Aeronautic Defense and Space Company (EADS)’s Eurofighter
Tranche 3 Typhoon.
“When any of three bidders meets the procurement price, DAPA will
evaluate all three fighter jets,” DAPA Spokesman Baek Youn-hyeong said
at a briefing.
“But despite finishing first in the evaluation, a firm whose bid exceeds the budget will not be signed for the F-X contract.”
He added that a runner-up or a third place has a chance to secure a deal if either of comes to within the given budget.
The U.S. government is unable to guarantee a fixed price because the
stealth jet is being tested, so there is speculation that the Lockheed
side might sharply push its cost down in the new round of the bidding to
win the deal.
But DAPA said that it is highly unlikely. “If a participant places an
inappropriate price to take a contract, it can become a problem
afterward, based on the laws of international contracts,” Baek said.
At this point, what the F-35 can do seems to just wish the bidding to
be called off and DAPA to increase the budget, as the agency said if
there is no entry with price within the project budget after the
resumption of the bidding, it will review other options including
increasing the budget.
The DAPA announcement is likely to be a major blow to the F-35, which
has basked in spotlight as a shoo-in in the competition on the back of
its low-observable technology, or a stealth capability, despite its
highly-projected price tag.
The U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency said in April that a
potential foreign military sale (FMS) of 60 F-35 stealth jets and
associated equipment, parts, training and logistical support, would cost an estimated 12.4 trillion won.
In addition, the U.S. Department of the Air Force,
participating in the bidding on behalf of Lockheed Martin under the FMS
program, reportedly placed bids ranging from 10 trillion won to 12
trillion won, while Boeing, which sold a total of 60 F-15K Slam Eagles
through the first two phases of the F-X requirement, was closest to the
DAPA budget with its bid being just 3 percent higher.
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