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thedrifter
08-05-04, 12:20 PM
How American is Marine One?

Marine One is among the best known symbols of presidential power. A gleaming green and white helicopter frequently swoops onto the White House South Lawn these days to carry President Bush off on another election-year trip.

But it is also a symbol of the tension between domestic politics and international relations. As the Bush administration shops for a new generation of presidential helicopters, it is considering a manufacturer with ties to loyal friends abroad. That raises the question, how American should Marine One be?

After 30 years in the air, the 19 helicopters in the presidential fleet are old in aircraft terms. So the Navy is running a competition to select a company to develop the next Marine One. The contract is worth $1.6 billion.

Two firms are locked in a battle for the business. Struggling Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation, based in Connecticut, has built and maintained the presidential helicopter fleet since 1957. Its VH-92 entry will be "engineered, manufactured, and assembled in America," firm president Steve Finger says.

The other entry comes from a partnership between Lockheed Martin Corporation and AgustaWestland, the latter being a joint Italian and British venture. Lockheed says it would manufacture the helicopter in upstate New York, but the design comes from overseas. Not surprisingly, this version is strongly supported by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and British Prime Minister Tony Blair - two of President Bush's staunchest allies in the Iraq war.

The Navy has put off picking a winner until after the election. It would be surprising if Sikorsky's 100 percent American bid does not carry the day, leaving the US to find another way to reward its foreign friends.

http://csmonitor.com/2004/0803/p08s02-comv.html?s=ent


Ellie

mrbsox
08-05-04, 01:43 PM
I'm reminded, in the late 70's, the base operations at LeJeune was looking for some replacement pick up trucks, for utility usage.

It was down to the Nissan or the Ford Courior (sp?). Mileage was an issue, cost, etc. The deciding factor was.....

This is an American military post, and we should buy AMERICAN. So they went with the Ford.....

built AND imported by Mazda !!

Wendellg
08-05-04, 01:58 PM
We are talking a Presidential "Ride" here. I think it would look much better if our President flew around in American designed/made helicopters. Anyway, that is my two cents worth.

CAR
08-06-04, 09:23 PM
It would be a very poor statement if the leader of the Free World rode around in Cool A$$ helicopter, flown by the best American Helicopter pilots, maintained and protected by the best American fighting force in the world and it was built by a friegn company.

No offense allies. Just want to be able to keep our pride.

greybeard
08-10-04, 09:40 PM
built AND imported by Mazda !!

One guess--who now owns Mazda?
(hint-same company that owns Jaguar)

hrscowboy
08-11-04, 07:58 AM
here we go again buy american buy american, well gentleman i have a real problem with an individual that makes 36.00 an hour putting trunk locks in trunk lids on the assembly line of general motors which really takes no skill. When we have state workers building highways for you and i to drive back an forth on only making 12.00 an hour. And us farmers like myself are feeding 128 people including myself a year and only getting 4.50 for a bushel of corn or wheat. i dont care what air one is as long as we can maintain it and it gets my president back and forth safely.

Kurt Stover
08-11-04, 09:03 AM
If it were up to al gore, the whole staff would be riding Huffy bikes with bannana seats, the 2 foot sissy bar and Tennesse Titans stickers on the chain guard. They could then take a Floraduh voting card and clip it onto the fender and let it flap across the spokes to make a really neto sound....

hrscowboy
08-12-04, 11:03 PM
geez gunny why you wanna make fun of my first motorcycle when i was a kid.