Some members of Congress aren't happy about the Navy's desire to kill off the $5-billion-a-copy DDG-1000 warship program and buy cheaper Arleigh Burke-class ships instead, The Boston Globe reports:
"A shift of this magnitude in the Navy's shipbuilding plan requires a full review ...
including congressional oversight," the lawmakers wrote to
Defense Secretary Robert Gates. "To do otherwise would undermine the Navy's shipbuilding plan."
Perhaps, but jobs and votes certainly are a factor in the senators' objections. Kennedy's constituents include defense firm Raytheon, which builds the DDG-1000's electronics. As Galrahn from the excellent Information Dissemination blog reports, the DDG-1000's industrial base is spread over a greater number of states than that for the Burke class. "Many sub-contractors from all across the nation lose big" in the switch from DDG-1000s to Burkes.
"This will be a factor in any Congressional vote" to end, or preserve, the DDG-1000.
(Art: Northrop Grumman)
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