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【国际共运】【sad story】【敌在华强北】五角大楼放弃禁止在F35上使用中国零件的禁令

整理时间:2014-01-08 06:22 来源:www.vimiy.com 作者:编辑 点击:

【楼主】2014-01-06 09:31

» 五角大楼放弃禁止在F35上使用中国零件的禁令
    http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/01/03/us-lockheed-f-idUSBREA020VA20140103
    http://www.cctvdream.com.cn/bbs/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=525036&extra=page%3D1
    
    原文摘要
    为了保证F-35的生产,五角大楼再次声明放弃禁止在美国武器上使用中国制零件的法律
    ,尽管有官员宣称对中国的间谍行为和军事建设表示忧虑。
    
    根据五角大楼的文件显示,五角大楼负责采购工作的副部长Frank Kendall允许两家F-3
    5的零件供应商诺斯洛普·格鲁门和霍尼韦尔使用中国制造的雷达磁性组件、起落架组
    件和其他硬件。如果禁令生效,这两家公司可能面临违反联邦法律的指控,F-35的生产
    计划将会面临更多的延误。
    
    原文:
    
    Exclusive: U.S. waived laws to keep F-35 on track with China-made parts
    BY JOHN SHIFFMAN AND ANDREA SHALAL-ESA
    WASHINGTON Fri Jan 3, 2014 3:45pm EST
    
    (Reuters) - The Pentagon repeatedly waived laws banning Chinese-built components on U.S. weapons in order to keep the $392 billion Lockheed Martin Corp F-35 fighter program on track in 2012 and 2013, even as U.S. officials were voicing concern about China's espionage and military buildup.
    
    According to Pentagon documents reviewed by Reuters, chief U.S. arms buyer Frank Kendall allowed two F-35 suppliers, Northrop Grumman Corp and Honeywell International Inc, to use Chinese magnets for the new warplane's radar system, landing gears and other hardware. Without the waivers, both companies could have faced sanctions for violating federal law and the F-35 program could have faced further delays.
    
    "It was a pretty big deal and an unusual situation because there's a prohibition on doing defense work in China, even if it's inadvertent," said Frank Kenlon, who recently retired as a senior Pentagon procurement official and now teaches at American University. "I'd never seen this happen before."
    
    The Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, is examining three such cases involving the F-35, the U.S. military's next generation fighter, the documents show.
    
    The GAO report, due March 1, was ordered by U.S. lawmakers, who say they are concerned that Americans firms are being shut out of the specialty metals market, and that a U.S. weapon system may become dependent on parts made by a potential future adversary.
    
    The waivers apply to inexpensive parts, including $2 magnets, installed on 115 F-35 test, training and production aircraft, the last of which are due to be delivered in May 2014. Lawmakers noted that several U.S. companies make similar magnets.
    
    Kendall said the waivers were needed to keep production, testing and training of the Pentagon's newest warplane on track; avert millions of dollars in retrofit costs; and prevent delays in the Marine Corps' plan to start using the jets in combat from mid-2015, according to the documents. In one case, it would cost $10.8 million and take about 25,000 man-hours to remove the Chinese-made magnets and replace them with American ones, the documents indicate.
    
    Lockheed is developing the F-35, the Pentagon's costliest arms program, for the United States and eight countries that helped fund its development: Britain, Canada, Australia, Italy, Norway, Turkey, Denmark and the Netherlands. Israel and Japan have also placed orders for the jet.
    
    The program is already years behind schedule and 70 percent over initial cost estimates. At the time Kendall was granting the waivers, officials were acutely worried that further delays and cost increases would erode the foreign orders needed to drive down the future cost of each warplane.
    
    In the documents, Kendall underscored the importance of the F-35 program to ensure continued U.S. military superiority and counter potential emerging threats from nations developing their own stealth fighter jets, including Russia and China.
    
    He said additional delays would force the United States and its allies to keep its legacy fighters flying longer, which would result in higher maintenance costs. It would also leave them with older jets, which Kendall said "cannot match the offensive and defensive capabilities provided by F-35."
    
    The Pentagon first disclosed problems with non-U.S. magnets in a little-noticed written statement to Congress in the spring of 2013. But the statement did not name companies involved and did not disclose that some of the parts came from China.
    
    Officials at Northrop, Honeywell and Lockheed declined to comment on the issue, referring queries to the Pentagon.
    
    Joe DellaVedova, spokesman for the F-35 Joint Program Office (JPO) at the Pentagon, said the office was committed to ensuring that federal defense acquisition laws were strictly followed.
    
    "There was never any risk of technology transfer or other security breach associated with these manufacturing compliance issues," he said. "The JPO is working with industry to put in place long-term solutions to avoid the need for future waivers."
    
    In his statement to Congress, Kendall said he took the matter "extremely seriously" and said Lockheed was told to take aggressive steps to identify any further cases, and correct its compliance process.
    
    Bill Greenwalt, a former senior defense official and now an analyst with the American Enterprise Institute think tank, said the risk to national security appeared low since the magnets in question had no programmable hardware.
    
    However, he added: "This is an area that will need considerable due diligence in the future to ensure that components for more high-risk applications are safe from potential tampering and foreign mischief."
    
    SPECIALTY METALS
    
    Since 1973, U.S. laws have banned the procurement of specialty metals produced outside the United States for use on U.S. weapons. A separate 2006 law also bans the purchase of end-use items and components that include such specialty metals.
    
    The documents reviewed by Reuters show that Northrop first discovered the use of non-compliant Japanese magnets on the Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) radar it builds for the F-35 in August 2012, alerting the prime contractor, Lockheed, which then told the Pentagon.
    
    A subsequent investigation of all parts on the F-35 turned up two more cases in which non-U.S. specialty metals were used on the F-35's radar, and on target assemblies built by Honeywell that are used for positioning doors and landing gear.
    
    Northrop's radar was also found to contain $2 magnets made by Chengdu Magnetic Material Science & Technology Co, in China's Sichuan region, according to the documents.
    
    The magnets used on the Honeywell target assemblies were acquired through Illinois-based Dexter Magnetic Technologies Inc.
    
    Dexter and Chengdu Magnetic did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
    
    KNOWING AND WILLFUL?
    
    In June, the House Armed Services Committee asked the GAO to determine whether the companies involved "knowingly and willfully" supplied non-compliant magnets, and how the Pentagon investigated that question. The committee also asked GAO for recommendations on potential changes, such as fines or penalties for non-compliance to deter future problems, as well as suggestions for beefing up Pentagon supply chain management procedures.
    
    In a document approving use of Chinese magnets on the batch of 32 F-35 fighter planes now being built, Kendall said neither Lockheed nor Northrop knowingly allowed the parts to be used.
    
    In his waiver, Kendall wrote that Northrop's initial mistake, involving magnets built in Japan, was an "administrative oversight" and noted the firm quickly reported the matter when it was discovered in August 2012. It led to the comprehensive review that found two additional issues involving Chinese-built magnets.
    
    It is not clear from the waiver documents whether Kendall determined that Honeywell's use of Chinese-built magnets involved a similar mistake.
    
    (Editing by Michael Williams, Tiffany Wu and Grant McCool)
    


网友评论2014-01-06 09:34


    天下无人不通共?
    
网友评论2014-01-06 09:59


    华强北就是个牛
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:00


    就这样屈服了么?
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:01


    F35是什么不给技术怎么造零件呢
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:01


    民主的三哥照样不用独裁某大国生产的风筝线
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:02


    为了降低成本么~~
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:02


    中国的稀土永磁体很好(也很便宜,妈蛋),不然美军也不会放弃禁令了
    而且美军还被中国回收再利用的电子元件坑过············这是药丸啊
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:04


    Reply Post by 寒塘之鹤影 (2014-01-06 10:02):
    
    为了降低成本么~~
    
    为了防止成本进一步上涨以及项目进一步延期·······································
    元老院把洛马剁了的心都有了
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:05


    华强北翻新能力爆表,很多东西美国原厂停产很久了,那边都能屯一堆
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:07


    嘴上说着不要,身体还是挺老实的嘛
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:12


    Reply Post by 凯文大神 (2014-01-06 10:07):
    
    嘴上说着不要,身体还是挺老实的嘛
    虽然不知道发生了什么,但感觉好傲娇的样子。
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:14


    这个也没啥值得高兴的吧,莫非中国能从卖零件中间摸到f35的什么窍门不成
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:14


    Reply Post by 凯文大神 (2014-01-06 10:07):
    
    嘴上说着不要,身体还是挺老实的嘛
    
    中国腹黑攻,美国强气受这样?
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:47


    长虹要涨啊!!!
    
网友评论2014-01-06 10:51


    华强北表示我这山寨F35都造好了就等你灯塔国赶紧把正品放出来
    
网友评论2014-01-06 11:47


    Reply Post by 凯文大神 (2014-01-06 10:07):
    
    嘴上说着不要,身体还是挺老实的嘛
    
    打灭~
    
网友评论2014-01-06 12:30


    接触过ic的都知道这早就不算事了,几年前类似文章就一堆,ic业务员每天对着外国人口口声声地说自己来自美国英国日本……对了,按照业内的说法翻新太难听了,要叫加工
    

    
    
    

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