Perilous Times
Israel's Barak approves U.S. F-35 fighters purchase
JERUSALEM | Sun Aug 15, 2010 10:51am EDT
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak approved in
principle on Sunday the purchase of 20 U.S.-built radar-evading stealth
fighters in a deal worth $2.75 billion, defense ministry officials said.
The F-35 warplanes are expected to be delivered between 2015 to 2017,
an Israeli defense official said.
Israeli leaders have spoken of arch-foe Iran potentially developing a
nuclear weapon by mid-decade, suggesting that the F-35s would not be
used for any preventive action, but rather to bolster the country's
deterrence.
A ministry statement said Barak "approved in principle the
recommendations of the Israel Defense Forces and the Defense Ministry
to move ahead" with the purchase.
The stealth fighter, made by Lockheed Martin Corp, "will afford Israel
continued air superiority and maintain the technological edge in our
region," the statement quoted Barak as saying.
The defense official said Israel planned to buy initially 20 planes,
estimating the total price tag at $2.75 billion, to be covered by an
annual U.S. defense grant of $3 billion.
Officials predicted final approval of the deal could be given by the
end of September by a panel of Israeli government ministers.
Israel would be the first foreign country to sign an agreement to buy
the F-35, or Joint Strike Fighter, outside the eight international
partners that have helped to develop the plane.
The deal has been in negotiations since September 2008, when the
Pentagon first approved the sale of 25 fighters with an option for more
in the coming years.
The F-35 is designed to avoid detection by radar and could play a role
in any Israeli effort to knock out what it regards as the threat to its
existence posed by Iran's nuclear program. Tehran denies Western and
Israeli allegations that it is trying to produce atomic weapons.
Defense Ministry Director-General Udi Shani said incorporation of
Israeli technologies into the F-35 had played a role in Barak's
decision to buy the aircraft.
Israel, widely assumed to have the Middle East's sole nuclear arsenal,
also had considered a cheaper option -- the purchase of a modified
version of Boeing's F-15 fighter, an aircraft it already deploys.
(Additional reporting by Dan Williams, Writing by Ori Lewis)