Washington, July 31 (DPA) The US House of Representatives passed a $636-billion defence bill Thursday after removing money to continue production of the F-22, meeting a key demand by President Barack Obama.
The bill, for fiscal 2010 and including $128 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, passed by a 400-30 vote. Lawmakers voted 269-165 to slash $369 million designated as down payments for the F-22 Raptor.
Obama and Defence Secretary Robert Gates had lobbied Congress to cut funding for any F-22 beyond the 187 already planned, arguing that while highly advanced, it came at too high a cost and was a legacy of the Cold War.
At $150 million each, the F-22 has been riddled with cost overruns, and drains money from other priorities like providing troops with the tools needed to fight the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Gates said.
Obama had threatened to veto the bill if the fighter jet was kept alive.
Earlier this month the Senate voted under a veto threat to remove $1.75 billion from a $680-billion defence policy bill for seven more F-22.
The White House and Gates have sought to reshape the Pentagon's budget priorities and get rid of Cold War-era weapons systems seen as too expensive and ineffective in waging
counterinsurgencies.