Lt Col. Richard E. Cole, the US Airforce veteran of world war II and hero of Doolittle Raid. Image: US Army. The U.S. Air Force has u...
Lt Col. Richard E. Cole, the US Airforce veteran of world war II and hero of Doolittle Raid. Image: US Army. |
Paying homage to the inspiration for the name, Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James handed the mic to World War II veteran Richard E. Cole, the 101-year-old retired lieutenant colonel and the last surviving "Doolittle Raider," to make the announcement on Monday at the Air Force Association's annual Air, Space & Cyber Conference in National Harbor, Maryland, just south of Washington, D.C.
Raider was selected as the name of the Long Range Strike-Bomber, or LRS-B, by leaders after the service launched a survey of service members. Air Force Global Strike Command in March launched a website asking airmen, their family members and retirees to suggest names for the next-generation aircraft.
The Air Force plans to buy 100 of the new bombers from Northrop Grumman Corp., the same company that manufactured the B-2 Spirit, to replace its fleet of B-52 Stratofortresses and a portion of its fleet of B-1 Lancers. Not many details have been shared about the B-21. And the Air Force's photos of the mock-up have critics grumbling that the future bomber closely resembles the B-2.
Northrop in October beat out Boeing Co., the world's largest aerospace company, and Lockheed Martin Corp., the world's largest defense contractor, for the $21.4 billion initial contract as part of the LRS-B program.
Gen. Robin Rand, commander of Air Force Global Strike Command, suggested the Air Force might need to buy even more of the new bombers. "We haven't set the official number," he said of the quantity during a panel discussion later in the day. "We need to start with a minimum of 100 B-21s. We need to really dig our heels in on, ''What should that ceiling be?''