sherdil76
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The RAF is losing more than 70 of its fleet of Eurofighter Typhoon aircraft.
The service will buy 160 instead of the 232 planned, it was announced in Munich at the contract-signing ceremony involving the four nations of the Nato Eurofighter Tornado Management Agency.
Britain signed up for a third and final tranche of Typhoons but agreed to buy 40 instead of 88. Twenty-four of these will be sold to Saudi Arabia, leaving 16 for the RAF. Britain ordered 55 in the first tranche and 89 in the second.
Air Chief Marshal Sir Glenn Torpy, who retires today as the Chief of the Air Staff, has made it clear that he expects the RAF to operate on the basis of a Typhoon fleet of 120 aircraft.
RAF sources explained that by the time the last jets of the third tranche come into service between 2015 and 2020 the first batch of Typhoons, in service today, would be coming to the end of their life.
The announcement does not safeguard the RAF from further cuts in fast jet numbers. Next years strategic defence review which will go ahead whoever wins the election will look at Typhoons as well as all other Armed Forces equipment.
Cancelling orders would bring financial penalties and cause British job losses, but in the meantime the Munich contract will help to safeguard about 15,000 jobs at BAE Systems, the principal British manufacturer of the multi-role aircraft. Its main factory is at Warton, Lancashire.
A decision after the review to keep all 160 planned Typhoons would be likely to put pressure on the other major aircraft programme, development of the Joint Strike Fighter to replace the Harrier. These jets are to be bought for two 65,000-tonne aircraft carriers, the first of which is under construction.
The plan was to buy 150 Joint Strike Fighters, but ministers and service chiefs have already indicated that the review will look closely at numbers of individual platforms and weapons, not eliminating capabilities altogether.
The numbers game will affect all three services and there is already a suggestion that the Army might lose up to two thirds of its fleet of 300 main battle tanks. There could also be cuts in nuclear-powered submarines and even the carrier programme might be affected. In an interview this week for The Times, General Sir Timothy Granville-Chapman, who has just retired as Vice-Chief of the Defence Staff, said that if it was possible to have only one carrier it should be considered as an option.
The service will buy 160 instead of the 232 planned, it was announced in Munich at the contract-signing ceremony involving the four nations of the Nato Eurofighter Tornado Management Agency.
Britain signed up for a third and final tranche of Typhoons but agreed to buy 40 instead of 88. Twenty-four of these will be sold to Saudi Arabia, leaving 16 for the RAF. Britain ordered 55 in the first tranche and 89 in the second.
Air Chief Marshal Sir Glenn Torpy, who retires today as the Chief of the Air Staff, has made it clear that he expects the RAF to operate on the basis of a Typhoon fleet of 120 aircraft.
RAF sources explained that by the time the last jets of the third tranche come into service between 2015 and 2020 the first batch of Typhoons, in service today, would be coming to the end of their life.
The announcement does not safeguard the RAF from further cuts in fast jet numbers. Next years strategic defence review which will go ahead whoever wins the election will look at Typhoons as well as all other Armed Forces equipment.
Cancelling orders would bring financial penalties and cause British job losses, but in the meantime the Munich contract will help to safeguard about 15,000 jobs at BAE Systems, the principal British manufacturer of the multi-role aircraft. Its main factory is at Warton, Lancashire.
A decision after the review to keep all 160 planned Typhoons would be likely to put pressure on the other major aircraft programme, development of the Joint Strike Fighter to replace the Harrier. These jets are to be bought for two 65,000-tonne aircraft carriers, the first of which is under construction.
The plan was to buy 150 Joint Strike Fighters, but ministers and service chiefs have already indicated that the review will look closely at numbers of individual platforms and weapons, not eliminating capabilities altogether.
The numbers game will affect all three services and there is already a suggestion that the Army might lose up to two thirds of its fleet of 300 main battle tanks. There could also be cuts in nuclear-powered submarines and even the carrier programme might be affected. In an interview this week for The Times, General Sir Timothy Granville-Chapman, who has just retired as Vice-Chief of the Defence Staff, said that if it was possible to have only one carrier it should be considered as an option.