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Australia may decide on additional Super Hornets in 2012

Lankan Ranger

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Australia may decide on additional Super Hornets in 2012

Australia will make a decision next year as to whether it will acquire additional Boeing F/A-18 E/F Super Hornet fighters, following a comprehensive review of the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II programme in late 2011.

In an official transcript of a TV interview, minister for defence Stephen Smith stressed that the country will conduct an "exhaustive risk assessment" of the F-35 programme next year in conjunction with other partners in the programme, namely the USA.

Following this, he will make a recommendation "as to whether we need to exercise any other options to ensure no gap forms in the nation's air combat capability." Smith added that the "obvious option" to ensure no such gap occurs is more Super Hornets.

"The Super Hornets are very good air combat planes and if we have to use them as a bridging capacity then that doesn't fill me with any fear at all," he said. "But I'm confident that the joint strike fighter project will get up."

"Our pre-planning (for the F-35) had a lot of padding for cost and for schedule," said Smith. "We're now starting to run up against schedule. We're still expecting to receive our first two planes in the United States in 2014-15 for training purposes. We've committed ourselves to 14. Our Defence White Paper and our Defence Capability Plan talks in terms of around or up to 100, but beyond 14 the Government will make a judgment and a decision as time and events unfold."

Though Smith's comments highlight that no decision about further Super Hornets has been made, they indicate that Canberra could be warming to the idea. On 27 July, Smith, commenting on delays to the F-35 programme, said he did not "want people to run or leap to a conclusion that [more Super Hornets] is the path we'll go down."

On 5 August the Royal Australian Air Force received two Super Hornets, bringing its total of the type to 20. The final four of a 24-aircraft Super Hornet order will be received by the end of 2011. Australia originally purchased the Super Hornet as a stop-gap owing to delays in the F-35 programme.

Australia may decide on additional Super Hornets in 2012
 
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Australia may decide on additional Super Hornets in 2012

Australia will make a decision next year as to whether it will acquire additional Boeing F/A-18 E/F Super Hornet fighters, following a comprehensive review of the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II programme in late 2011.

In an official transcript of a TV interview, minister for defence Stephen Smith stressed that the country will conduct an "exhaustive risk assessment" of the F-35 programme next year in conjunction with other partners in the programme, namely the USA.

Following this, he will make a recommendation "as to whether we need to exercise any other options to ensure no gap forms in the nation's air combat capability." Smith added that the "obvious option" to ensure no such gap occurs is more Super Hornets.

"The Super Hornets are very good air combat planes and if we have to use them as a bridging capacity then that doesn't fill me with any fear at all," he said. "But I'm confident that the joint strike fighter project will get up."

"Our pre-planning (for the F-35) had a lot of padding for cost and for schedule," said Smith. "We're now starting to run up against schedule. We're still expecting to receive our first two planes in the United States in 2014-15 for training purposes. We've committed ourselves to 14. Our Defence White Paper and our Defence Capability Plan talks in terms of around or up to 100, but beyond 14 the Government will make a judgment and a decision as time and events unfold."

Though Smith's comments highlight that no decision about further Super Hornets has been made, they indicate that Canberra could be warming to the idea. On 27 July, Smith, commenting on delays to the F-35 programme, said he did not "want people to run or leap to a conclusion that [more Super Hornets] is the path we'll go down."

On 5 August the Royal Australian Air Force received two Super Hornets, bringing its total of the type to 20. The final four of a 24-aircraft Super Hornet order will be received by the end of 2011. Australia originally purchased the Super Hornet as a stop-gap owing to delays in the F-35 programme.

Australia may decide on additional Super Hornets in 2012


Australian politicians talk high but worth less. they think, no matter how many crimes they commit inside Australia, they may be defended by the Western nations because of being a Christian religious background Western nation. but in reality, they hardly have 24 Super Hornet to defend themselves as rest of their inventory is made of almost useless aircrafts they bought in 70s/80s which have serious maintenance problems. even if China may drop 40,000 troops on the soil of Australia, Australian rulers will then prefer to offer their wives and daughters to them and run from Australia. Australian rulers have big mouth but they are worth for nothing and their strength is mainly based on the number of fathers they have who may defend Australia in any wrong circumtances. while on the other hand, their main father US is just waiting for its economic fall like how SU faced in early 90s, and also US neither has enough oil/gas like russia to defend their economy also once its fall starts......

Australia is nothing but a nude white women in Indian ocean and the time others will start on her one by one, I guess even a country like Indonesia will also not show much mercy and try to get as much share in Australia as they can. Chinese military strength might not be opened to the Australian rulers but Australian strength is completely opened to others, how much they are worth and how many fathers they may gather to protect themselves if their worse will start. when they organize crimes in Australia, they are found more drunk while doing all that and when they compare their strength w.r.t. others, they generally behave like a beggar who is fighting for its survival.........

Defence Minister Stephen Smith has told a high-powered gathering in China the Asian nation's increasing military strength obliges it to be more open and transparent.

China told openness must accompany power
 
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