New US B-21 Raider Illustrates Waste in Western Defense Spending Giving Russia-China the Edge

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– The US has unveiled thes stealth B-21 Raider – its newest bomber;



– The B-21 Raider may cost over 700 million US dollars per warplane;

– It will not fly until next year at the earliest and still requires extensive design reviews;


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– Western analysts admit it faces major challenges going against modern integrated air defense systems produced by nations like Russia and China;

– Rather than depend on its stealth, analysts suggest it could use tactics already used by conventional aircraft to carry out standoff strikes using long-range precision guided weapons;

– If used to carry out standoff strikes, there is no need for expensive stealth capabilities;


The US Air Force unveiled a new strategic stealth bomber on Friday, the first in 30 years. With an estimated cost of more than half a billion dollars, the B-21 Raider has yet to make its maiden flight.

The Northrop Grumman bomber, which is capable of carrying both conventional and nuclear weapons, was showcased in a ceremony at Air Force Plant 42 in Palmdale, California. The event was attended by high-ranking Pentagon officials, including Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin.

Austin hailed the B-21 Raider as “the embodiment of America’s determination to defend the republic that we all love,” adding: “This is deterrence the American way.”

When the contract for the Raider was first announced in 2015, then-Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James claimed that the US needs a new bomber “that would allow us to take on much more complicated threats, like the threats that we fear we would one day face from China, Russia.”

The stealth bomber is expected to make its maiden flight in 2023. The US Air Force originally hoped that the aircraft would take to the skies as early as 2019, but was delayed to December 2021, and then to mid-2022.

It was initially projected to cost $550 million each, but over the years, the price tag swelled to $692 million due to inflation. In total, the Air Force plans to procure at least 100 of the planes. In 2021, Bloomberg reported that the total cost for supporting the development, procurement, and operation of the B-21 program will likely cost taxpayers at least $203 billion over 30 years.

In April 2022, however, commenting on the progress of the B-21 project, US Congressman Adam Smith, who chairs the House Armed Services Committee, said the Air Force seems to have “learned the lessons” from the F-35 program – which became notorious for greatly exceeding its budget. The Government Accountability Office warned in 2021 that annual cost overruns for the entire military could near $6 billion by 2036.

Source: https://www.infowars.com/posts/us-unveils-first-new-bomber-since-cold-war/