Italian Budget Protects JSF Buy
Italy appears set to push ahead with its order of 90 F-35 joint strike fighters, and has said it will buy 38 by 2020, despite simmering pressure from politicians to trim the program.
In its definitive budget plan for 2015, published in May, the Italian Ministry of Defense said it would spend €582.7 million (US $634.3 million) to maintain JSF purchases this year. So far, Italy has ordered eight F-35As, including three from low rate initial production (LRIP) lot 6 for delivery this year and next year, three from LRIP 7 for delivery next year, and two from LRIP 8 for delivery in 2017 [see end here: https://cdfai3ds.wordpress.com/2014/09/10/mark-collins-f-35-lrip-8-contract-looks-close/ ].
In March, the first JSF rolled off the assembly line built at Cameri in northern Italy, making it the first JSF assembled outside the US.
Italy’s stated ambition to order 38 aircraft by 2020 follows criticism of the program by Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, who said the JSF program would be “revised” after he took office last year.
Then, with many in his own party criticizing spending on the JSF as Italy struggled to balance its budgets, Renzi said in August last year that “the biggest weapon to create peace is not the F-35 or the Eurofighter but schools.”
In June, with six aircraft ordered, Defense Minister Roberta Pinotti responded to opposition to the program by stating she was freezing new orders until the completion of a new white paper on defense which would set out Italy’s defense priorities.
However, in October, the Pentagon announced that Italy would be among the countries taking aircraft from LRIP 8.
Meanwhile, the white paper has been issued and contains strategic priorities, but officials have said that translating that into the number of aircraft Italy needs will be put off until the military General Staff carries out its own strategic review based on the white paper.
The new defense budget does respond to complaints about JSF costs from Italian politicians, stating that savings will be made on the program “in the medium to long term,” up to 2026. After investing €3.5 billion to date, the industrial return for Italy, in terms of contracts signed, amounted to €1.6 billion, the document states.
The government’s bid to keep up the pace on JSF orders is based partly on wishing to avoid losing industrial benefits…
http://www.defensenews.com/story/defense/policy-budget/budget/2015/05/30/italy-budget-joint-strike-fighter-f35-jsf-alenia-naval-law/28094429/