Los Angeles Times

Boeing loses missile contract

The Pentagon cancels $1-billion deal as firm, Raytheon struggle to develop intercepto­r.

- By Roxana Tiron Tiron writes for Bloomberg.

The Pentagon cancels $1-billion deal as the Chicago firm and Raytheon struggle to build intercepto­r.

The Pentagon canceled a Boeing Co. contract for a “kill vehicle” envisioned to shoot down missiles from North Korea or Iran, the latest setback for a next-generation system that has struggled to prove its effectiven­ess.

The terminatio­n of the Redesigned Kill Vehicle comes as the maker of the intercepto­r’s warhead, Raytheon Co., continued to struggle with design and manufactur­ing problems that increased costs, the Missile Defense Agency said in a statement Wednesday. Boeing had received a $1-billion contract in May 2017 for the project.

“Ending the program was the responsibl­e thing to do,” Michael Griffin, the undersecre­tary of Defense for research and engineerin­g, said in the statement. “After exercising due diligence, we decided the path we’re going down wouldn’t be fruitful, so we’re not going down that path anymore.”

The Defense Department plans to start a competitio­n for a new contract to design a next-generation intercepto­r for its Groundbase­d Midcourse Defense program, according to the statement.

The intercepto­r had been billed as a major improvemen­t for a $180-billion network of ground- and seabased missile intercepto­rs, sensors and communicat­ions links intended to defend the U.S. from a limited North Korean or Iranian attack by dispatchin­g a missile to crash into and destroy it.

Although the Defense Department has claimed progress in missile defense tests against a dummy target, arms control experts have repeatedly said the Pentagon has conducted only tightly controlled tests in which the target warhead can easily be picked out from decoys.

Boeing said in a statement that it accepts the Missile Defense Agency’s decision “and supports the competitio­n for a new, next-generation intercepto­r.” The Chicago aerospace company said “we will continue to support the requiremen­ts that our customer sets forth for effective missile defense, just as we have for more than two decades.”

Raytheon said in a statement that the Missile Defense Agency “is updating its requiremen­ts in the face of an increasing­ly complex threat environmen­t” and that the Waltham, Mass., contractor supports the decision to “initiate a competitio­n for the next-generation intercepto­r to meet these advanced threats. ”

The terminatio­n is effective Aug. 22, according to Mark Wright, director of public affairs at the Missile Defense Agency.

Griffin decided to cancel the program Aug. 14 and had backing from Deputy Defense Secretary David Norquist, Wright said. The move marks one of the first major contractin­g decisions since Defense Secretary Mark Esper took office last month. Esper is a former top lobbyist for Raytheon who has promised to recuse himself from most decisions involving the company.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE INTERCEPTO­R is part of a $180-billion missile defense network.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE INTERCEPTO­R is part of a $180-billion missile defense network.

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