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The Most Expensive Military Weapons Ever Produced

 A 33rd Fighter Wing aircraft maintainer moves by the Department of Defense's newest aircraft, the U.S. Air Force F-35 Lightning II joint strike fighter (JSF), before giving the pilot the order to taxi the aircraft at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., July 14, 2011.

The Most Expensive Military Weapons Ever Produced

War is an expensive endeavor. Cost has been attached to conflict since antiquity, as weapons, training, and logistics aren’t necessarily cheap things to consider when planning. That said, the most expensive military weapons ever fielded exceed expectations. We live in an era where a single day of conflict has a price tag in the billions of dollars. Given the state of defense budgets across most of the world, you can fully expect procurement for some platforms to climb into the trillions.

At the end of the day, modern warfare is a horrifyingly expensive endeavor, no matter who is leading the fight. Survival for some nations hinges on the technological supremacy and efficacy of modenr platforms. With that in mind, let’s take a closer look at the most expensive military weapons ever produced, and what those staggering prices actually obtained.

F-35 Lightning II

Starting us off is the most expensive military weapon ever devised, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter Program. When everything is tallied up, from development to procurement and the expected decades of operation and maintenance, you’re looking at a total cost of around 1.7 trillion dollars. This is the most expensive defense program ever undertaken by any nation, even accounting across the whole of the United States’ history.

That said, the aircraft is a technological marvel. It blends supersonic flight with stealth. The Lightning is a multi-role fighter capable of using conventional runways, aircraft carriers, and short takeoff strips, depending on the variant. Each comes equipped with bleeding-edge sensor fusion systems, giving pilots full awareness of their surroundings, gaining a near-complete view of everything around the aircraft.

The ballooning cost of the F-35 is the direct result of ambition. During the 1990s, legacy aircraft in the American fleet and its allies were scheduled for replacement. The F-35 was designed with the express purpose of encompassing numerous roles, allowing for a single common platform shared across NATO. Along the way, there have been developmental delays, technological failures, and the complexity introduced from working on multiple variants at the same time.

However, the F-35 has been introduced to air fleets. It currently serves the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, Israel, and other client states.

Gerald R. Ford-Class Aircraft Carriers

Aerial drone photo of USS Gerald R. Ford latest technology nuclear powered aircraft carrier anchored in deep blue open ocean sea

A modern aircraft carrier isn’t just a mere military weapon. When you get down to it, these are massive instruments of force projection. Any modern carrier is capable of projecting force across any corner of the world in a matter of days. This is clearly seen in the Gerald R. Ford-class carriers, the most expensive ever built. With a price tag approaching 13 billion dollars per ship, it’s the most expensive warship ever built.

The lead ship, the USS Gerald R. Ford, is bristling with bleeding-edge technology. This is part of the near-extortionate costs. It comes equipped with electromagnetic catapults, advanced arresting gear, and a new nuclear reactor design. The ship also comes with a new superstructure design, along with advanced radar systems.

As you might expect, debuting so many new improvements can lead to problems. The Ford-class has been delivered years later than initially expected. However, it is likely to serve the United States Navy well into the next century. The growing pains might be worth the wait.

B-2 Spirit Stealth Bombers

B-2+Spirit | U.S. Air Force B-2 Spirit Flyover

If looking at sheer unit cost, few aircraft are going to match up to the B-2. We can certainly point to the extreme expenses seen with things like naval vessels. Throughout much of history, those have certainly been the most expensive considerations for any military. At a staggering 2.1 billion dollars per aircraft, the B-2 remains the most expensive aircraft ever built.

Originally designed in the final years of the Cold War, the B-2 was intended to penetrate Soviet air defenses and deliver nuclear weapons. The flying wing design, low radar cross-section, and operational payload were a genuine revolution in the burgeoning stealth technology seen in the late 80s and early 90s.

Its price was driven originally by the cost of the exotic materials and manufacturing processes needed for its radar-absorbent surface. Further costs were driven up by the rather cruel economics at play with the program’s cancellation. The B-2 was initially intended to have 132 production aircraft. The post-Cold War drawdown and budget slashes saw the final production number at 21 units. As such, each of these vehicles has an enormous cost associated with it, as economies of scale were never developed.

That cost is still quite high to this day, as each aircraft requires air-controlled hangars, intensive maintenance, and a highly specialized support infrastructure. Flying a B-2 costs 130,000 per hour, something that isn’t likely to change anytime soon.

Virginia-Class Submarines

The Virginia-class submarine USS Indiana (SSN 789) completed her maiden deployment and returned home to Submarine Base New London.

While the Cold War might have officially ended in 1991, an arms race has been taking place underneath the surface of the world’s seas. Nuclear-powered attack submarines represent a decisive show of force for any nation. The Virginia-class, with an estimated cost of 3.4 billion dollars per hull, is one of the most advanced to ever be launched. In terms of submarines, the Virginia-class is one of the most expensive ever fielded, but for good reason.

Each of these vessels can operate for months at a time without having to resurface. The crew of around 135 can operate without the need to refuel, making their exact position unknown to antagonistic forces. Further, these submarines are capable of launching cruise missiles at ground targets, hunting and destroying other enemy naval vessels, conducting special forces insertions, and gathering intelligence.

The Virginia-class is a comprehensive stealth platform that acts as the tip of the United States Navy’s spearhead. As both Chinese and Russian submarine activity increases across the world’s oceans, this one investment is being conducted to meet rising demand. Further, the Virginia-class is expected to be delivered to the Australian Navy through the AUKUS agreement, making for strategic deployment across the major waterways of the world.

Zumwalt-Class Destroyers

With an estimated cost of around 8.2 billion dollars per ship, the Zumwalt-class destroyer represents the cost of ambition. At the heart of it, the next-generation destroyer was designed for a future that never came. Stealthy, heavily automated, and originally intended to come equipped with an electromagnetic railgun, the Zumwalt-class fell victim to the same sort of program cancellations that saw the B-2’s costs spiral out of control.

The destroyer’s main gun, the electromagnetic railgun, had a staggering cost of around 1 million dollars per round, making it far too expensive for common use. A planned production run of 32 ships was cut to 3. As we touched upon with the B-2, there was no time to develop economies of scale, so production bore the brunt of the highly expensive handful of vessels produced.

However, it isn’t all lost for the Zumwalt-class, as the handful of ships in the United States Navy fleet are being converted to use hypersonic missiles. The railgun was the product of early 21st-century thinking, before the ubiquity and cost-reduction of things like anti-ship missiles. As a missile boat, the Zumwalt-class’s advanced technology will make it a force to be reckoned with. That said, you can’t help but wonder if the enormous expenditure for each of these vessels could have been spent elsewhere.

Conclusion

There’s a common thread running throughout all of these weapons platforms. An underlying belief that warfare is dictated by technological superiority, hoping that complexity and sophistication can counter sheer numbers, and that any antagonistic nation simply cannot hope to match up. There is some truth to that thinking. Aircraft like the B-2 were able to conduct missions in territory that was unthinkable decades ago.

Ambition can hamstring any military weapons platform, just as it can with any project. Scope creep, ballooning expenses, and a lack of deliverables aren’t just a problem for the office, but the militaries of the world as well. That isn’t to say these weapons are failed products. In some ways, they are highly prescient as modern warfare is being shaped by the likes of artificial intelligence, autonomous weapons, and hypersonic missiles. If anything, these might be the cheapest we see for the foreseeable future with the way things are going.

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