|
Seoul Seeks Savings on F-X Fighter
Despite 'Best & Final Bids' In Hand
Following delays of six to eight months in its evaluation processes,
South Korea is hovering on the brink of a decision on its long-standing
$3.3 billion F-X multi-role combat aircraft program. Its most
recent move, however, was further deferral of promised selection
earlier this year from best and final offers (BAFOs) from four
RFP respondents.
For flight safety reasons, the RoKAF has limited its evaluations
to twin-turbofan fighters, from which the Boeing F-15K, Dassault
Rafale Mk 2, Eurofighter Typhoon, and Sukhoi Su-35 were finally
short-listed. But in early January, the original BAFOs for initial
procurement of some 40 of these types were rejected by the Defense
Ministry in Seoul, as being beyond its projected program budget.
Revised BAFOs called for by February 4 left little scope for price
reductions, although allowing possible improvements in industrial
offset returns. Requirements for their increase from around 30%
to 70% of the total contract value had already been put forward
in April 2001 by the Seoul Defense Ministry, although Eurofighter's
bid now reportedly includes offers of up to 100% in offset contracts.
Boeing has optimized its F-15K, with Raytheon AIM-9X and AIM-120
AMRAAM air-to-air missiles, and Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM)
ASMs, in conjunction with a Boeing/Vision Systems Joint Helmet-Mounted
Cueing System (JHMCS), to become front-runner for Korea's F-X
program. Procurement is also being sought by the Seoul government
through the U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA) of
45 150nm+ range Boeing/MDC AGM-84H Stand-off Land Attack Missile-Expanded
Response (SLAM-ER) ASMs, costing an estimated $115 million, for
its F-15Ks. DSCA approval has further been received for an unsolicited
proposal for integration in RoKAF F-15Ks of MBDA's ASRAAM close-combat
air-to-air missile.
ASRAAM also forms part of EADS CASA's South Korean Eurofighter
package submission, together with AMRAAM, following similar DSCA
clearance. Eurofighter's Typhoon further integrates close-combat
AIM-9L/M Sidewinder and MBDA Meteor beyond-visual-range AAMs, plus
such advanced air-to-surface weapons as the short-range MBDA Brimstone
and Storm Shadow cruise missiles. Export of the latter, however,
is likely to be subject to MTCR treaty restrictions, as would its
French SCALP EG version arming Rafale. Dassault's South Korean bid
also includes MBDA MICA medium-range active radar-homing and Meteor
AAMs, plus AM-39 Exocet anti-ship/attack missiles. By John Fricker
|