UK's Boeing P-8 purchase
gets US tick of approval
25 MARCH, 2016 - BY: JAMES
DREW - WASHINGTON DC
The UK has moved a step closer to filling a
maritime patrol void left by the retirement of the Nimrod MR2 in 2010 after
being approved by the US State Department to acquire nine torpedo-carrying
Boeing P-8A Poseidons for the Royal Air Force.
Estimated to be worth $3.2
billion, the deal is unlikely to face opposition from Congress during the
30-day notification period as the advanced, radar-carrying submarine and
surface ship hunter is already being exported to Australia and India.
The US Defense Security
Cooperation Agency announced approval of the pending foreign military sale on
25 March, just four months after British Prime Minister David Cameron announced
the P-8A plan as part of a £178 billion ($270 billion) investment in new
military hardware.
Nimrod
MR2
The Ministry of Defence opted to
sole-source the nation’s lapsed maritime patrol need to the Boeing 737-based
P-8 over European and Asian alternatives, such as a C295-based solution put
forward by Airbus Defence & Space and the Kawasaki P-1.
Since
divesting the Nimrod and abandoning its intended replacement, the BAE
Systems Nimrod MRA4, the UK has retained its airborne maritime patrol and
reconnaissance competency by embedding RAF crews with Australian, Canadian, New
Zealand and American forces.
A Nimrod replacement “has
remained the United Kingdom’s highest priority
unfunded requirement,” DSCA notes.
If the acquisition in finalised,
the top-tier contractors will be: ViaSat, GC Micro, Rockwell Collins, Spirit AeroSystems, Raytheon,
Telephonics, Pole Zero, Northrop Grumman, Exelis, Terma, Symmetrics, Arnprior
Aerospace, General Electric and Martin Baker.
Boeing 737-based P-8A
US Navy
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