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Finland approved to buy 64 F-35s in $12.5B deal
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington DC (UPI) Oct 09, 2020

The U.S. State Department approved a $12.5 billion purchase on Friday by Finland for 64 F-35 fighter planes and associated munitions and equipment.

The approval, a statutory notification to Congress, follows an April request by the Finnish Defense Ministry to buy the planes through the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, the U.S. Defense Department agency responsible for foreign military sales.

Although Finland is aligned with western military powers and not with its neighbor, Russia, it is not a NATO member.

The list of ordered equipment includes the planes, made by Lockheed Martin; two spare engines; and an assortment of bombs, missiles, electronic warfare and navigational systems, training and support.

The Finnish Air Force currently has 55 F/A-18 Hornets, which it plans to phase out by 2025, and no F-35s, regarded as the most advanced available fighter planes.

The proposed sale "will provide Finland with a credible defense capability to deter aggression in the region and ensure interoperability with U.S. forces" and will "replace Finland's retiring F/A-18s and enhance its air-to-air and air-to-ground self-defense capability," a DSCA statement on Friday said.

Prime U.S. contractors will include Lockheed Martin, Pratt and Whitney Military Engines, Boeing Co. and Raytheon Missiles and Defense.


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AEROSPACE
Air Force starts delivering lighter, next-generation ballistic helmets
Washington DC (UPI) Oct 08, 2020
The Air Force on Thursday announced that it has started delivering a lighter, next generation of ballistic helmets to security forces. The new helmets replace the Advanced Combat Helmet that Airmen had to modify with bulky additions to accomplish different mission sets, officials said in a statement. The new helmets are part of a larger effort to "modernize Defender equipment," which includes new handguns, rifles, communication systems and body armor, Master Sgt. Markus Nelson, an Air Fo ... read more

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