Pentagon Pushes Defense Companies to Limit Use of Chinese Supplies

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The Defense Department stopped accepting new F-35 combat jets made by Lockheed Martin after being informed they contained magnets with metal alloys produced in China

Honeywell disclosed to the Pentagon in recent weeks that engine components it made for the jets contained two alloys sourced from China that were turned into magnets. The company said it had identified an alternative supplier but didn’t give details. Honeywell said it remains committed to supplying high-quality products, and Lockheed Martin said production continued at its plant in Fort Worth, Texas. The Pentagon said it expects a waiver will be issued to allow F-35 deliveries to resume.

Bill LaPlante, the Pentagon’s acquisition chief, said a continuing probe is expected to show that the use of the Chinese alloys—stretching back over a decade—doesn’t affect the security or airworthiness of the F-35. However, he said, the incident has highlighted continuing vulnerabilities in the defense supply chain, even after efforts to improve visibility.

“Any company that says they know their supply chain is like a company that says it hasn’t been hacked,” Mr. LaPlante said at a media briefing on Sept 9.‘Any company that says they know their supply chain is like a company that says it hasn’t been hacked.’The F-35 incident was a setback for the Pentagon’s efforts to manage contractors’ supply chains and identify potential vulnerabilities.

Pentagon leaders have for years recognized potential vulnerabilities arising from Chinese-supplied raw materials and microelectronics. Thoseduring the Trump administration, with a number of Pentagon studies identifying increasing reliance on China and other overseas suppliers.

One of biggest concerns, said Pentagon and industry leaders, is with the U.S. reliance on China for 80% of rare-earth elements, sometimes called technology minerals, which are used in magnets for weapons-guidance systems as well as commercial applications such as electric-vehicle batteries. China has invested heavily in mining and refining rare earths over the past decades, and

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🤣🤣🤣 So does the United States intend to fight the enemy with slingshot in the future? HHH

China phobia

Lmao. The paranoia and isolationist responses lately from Washington are hilarious.

Ridiculous

So you mean to tell me, they have SPENT between $77.9 and $101.3 MILLION DOLLARS PER PLANE that they will now not accept? As of September 2022 they have produced 840 of them. Now, I can find this out via GOOGLE . Why can't you? And why aren't you reporting on THAT? Refunds?

What about all the F35 computer chips made in Asia?

What a joke everything is manufactured in china

This should be a no brainier.

They should are war is coming

you'd think the fact that it is a shitty plane that doesn't work would also play into this

😂😂😂🤡

3 week old news, thanks

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