CCAGW to Congress:Strike Earmarks for JSF Alternate Engine!

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Thu Oct 8, 2009 4:55pm EDT

WASHINGTON--(Business Wire)--
Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW) President Tom Schatz today
sent a letter to all members of the House of Representatives and the Senate
urging them to eliminate the $560 million in pork-barrel earmarks for the Joint
Strike Fighter (JSF) alternate engine. The letter reads, in part: 

As you move to conference on H.R. 3326, the Department of Defense Appropriations
Act for Fiscal Year 2010, I urge you to eliminate the $560 million in
pork-barrel earmarks for the JSF alternate engine. The Pentagon has proposed
canceling the alternate engine project each year since 2006, only to have
Congress add more than $1 billion in funding back to subsequent defense
appropriations bills. 

There is no economic or military justification for spending billions of taxpayer
dollars on an alternate engine that will not save money or improve U.S. defense
capabilities. Yesterday, the builders of the alternate engine stopped testing
after yet another failure on the test stand. This marks the fourth time in less
than 50 total testing hours that the alternate engine has experienced problems. 

While the alternate engine manufacturers continue to waste time and money
addressing multiple issues, the main engine has completed over 12,000 test hours
and has not experienced a single failure in its 140 hours of flight tests. 

Ashton Carter, the Pentagon`s top weapons buyer, was quoted on October 5, 2009
as saying that the Pentagon had "looked at and analyzed the potential benefits
of a second engine of the Joint Strike Fighter for years…[T]he crux of the
analysis is that the additional upfront costs of a second engine are very clear
and very real and the possible savings associated with a hypothesized
competition in the future are much harder to estimate." 

In May, President Obama highlighted the alternate engine as an example of
government waste. The President stated, "We`re going to save money by
eliminating unnecessary defense programs that do nothing to keep us safe - but
rather prevent us from spending money on what does keep us safe. One example is
a $465 million program to build an alternate engine for the Joint Strike
Fighter. The Defense Department is already pleased with the engine that it has.
They do not want - and do not plan to use - the alternate version. That`s why
the Pentagon stopped requesting this funding two years ago." 

President Obama has threatened to veto legislation that includes funding for the
alternate engine. It is not too late for Congress to act responsibly: eliminate
the earmarks for the unnecessary alternate engine and ensure both the financial
and military security of our nation. 

CCAGW is the lobbying arm of Citizens Against Government Waste, the nation`s
largest nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to eliminating waste,
fraud, abuse, and mismanagement in government.

Council for Citizens Against Government Waste (CCAGW)
Leslie K. Paige, 202-467-5334 



Copyright Business Wire 2009

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