B-21 Raider stealth bomber’s first flight delayed a few months later than anticipated: Air Force

The U.S. Air Force says the first flight of its B-21 Raider stealth bomber will be later than expected but is still within the "baseline" of schedule and cost.

The Air Force revealed last week that the debut flight of the B-21 Raider stealth bomber is delayed several months.

Speaking at the McAleese & Associates conference in Washington, Air Force secretary Frank Kendall said the B-21’s first flight "slipped from the original schedule" but is still within the baseline schedule and cost.

"There’s a baseline schedule, which is on the books," Kendall told reporters. "[B]ut there’s been no breach of that. But with the internal schedule, there’s been a slip of a few months." 

B-21 manufacturer Northrop Grumman told Defense News the program "continues to focus on system maturity, production readiness and sustainment preparedness to best position the B-21 for first flight an effective flight test campaign, leading to initial operating capability." 

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The B-21 Raider was first unveiled to the public in Palmdale, California in early December. It is the first new American bomber aircraft in more than three decades, and almost every aspect of the program is classified. 

At the time, Northrop Grumman said the rollout of the newest nuclear stealth bomber marks the first time the world’s first sixth-generation aircraft would be seen by the public. 

Per The Air Force Times, Kristyn Jones, the department’s interim undersecretary, revealed in a budged briefing last week that the service has six B-21’s in different stages of production at Air Force Plant 42.

Fox News’ Julia Musto contributed to this report. 

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