KEY POINTS
  • The Pentagon is expected to kill its long-awaited JSTARS recap program in its fiscal 2019 budget request Monday, according to the publication Defense News.
  • The program is to replace the Air Force's existing E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System, which was first used in the 1990s.
  • The JSTARS recap competition is worth nearly $7 billion and pits three rivals, Boeing, Northrop Grumman and Lockheed Martin.
  • There have been criticisms raised by top Air Force officers about the value of a new JSTARS in contested airspace.
A mechanic checks the engine of a U.S. E-8C surveillance plane ahead of take-off at Frankfurt airbase on April 9, 1999.

The Air Force's delayed multibillion-dollar program to replace its aging E-8C Joint Surveillance Target Attack Radar System (JSTARS) fleet may finally be dead. The value of the program had been criticized by some service officials, including Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson and the head of Air Combat Command, General Mike Holmes.

The publication Defense News reported Saturday that the Pentagon plans to kill the JSTARS recapitalization program in its fiscal 2019 budget submission, and instead push for "a system-of-systems that will link together existing platforms to track ground targets and do command and control." The publication cited sources familiar with the 2019 budget request, which is expected to be released Monday.