AIR FORCE TO UNVEIL STEALTH BOMBER

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP96-00789R000300760005-1
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 24, 1998
Sequence Number: 
5
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 5, 1988
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP96-00789R000300760005-1.pdf91.39 KB
Body: 
~E:s it. =-r, 3c- lot ,is ke it F eta=~~~ei~~~te~l~ ~ot~v ~5., Service Discloses Previously" Glassi i'ed Details on Plane, Crew By Molly Moore Washington Post Staff Writer F15 fighter, yet has a wingspan al- most as wide as a B52," the Air Force said in a statement. The Air Force announced yester- day that its secret Stealth Advanced Technology Bomber will be un- veiled to the public in November and revealed previously classified details about the aircraft and its crew. Air Force officials said the futur- istic B2 bomber has entered the final stage of its assembly process and will make its maiden flight in late fall. It will be the first of 132 bombers scheduled for production. The service disclosed that the sophisticated, highly automated bomber will be operated by a crew of only two, compared with the four-man crew of the BI bomber. The V-shaped craft is 69 feet long with a wingspan of about 172 feet and is 17 feet high, the Air Force said in providing the first detailed description of the intercontinental bomber. "The unique shape of the 'flying wing' design r ba. T ~rfj that is only sli b do h The long-range bomber's special radar absorbent skin and curved shape are designed to enable the craft to penetrate deep into the So- viet Union and evade radars and air defenses longer than conventional aircraft. The Air Force, however, still re- fused to disclose new cost estimates on the the aircraft, one of its largest "black," or secret, programs. Al- though the service said it will not reveal the new figures until later this year, The Washington Post has previously reported that the cost of the bomber has climbed to an es- timated $450 million per plane, a 20 percent increase over past es- timates. The Air Force said yesterday that it has begun checking the first bomber's systems and instrumen- " Sure Shot Supreme should have Published as $179.95. The Wash- tation, starting the "final phase in the assembly process leading to the first flight." The contractor, Northrop Corp "is currently well into the assembly phase of aircraft No. 2," the Alt Force said. The first six airplanes will be as= signed to flight test duties, with five eventually joining the operatio The first plane will be "rolled out for public viewing at Air Ford Plant 42 in Palmdale, Calif., in inid- November, according to the Air Force. Officials said the plane will not make its first flight until later ip the fall. -; "Current plans call for the B2, which will have a capability to de- liver both nuclear and conventional weapons against fixed and mobile targets, to achieve operational ca~ pability in the early 1990s," the statement said. t. 5-1