Two U.S. senators with sway over all federal spending have dealt a crippling bipartisan blow to the Pentagon’s troubled $2.7-billion program to use radar-carrying blimps to search for enemy missiles.

Sens. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.), chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, and Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), who holds the Democrats’ No. 2 leadership position in the Senate, have refused a request by the Obama administration to shift $27.2 million to the program to keep it alive.

Durbin now favors killing the blimp system, called JLENS.

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“The JLENS program has been a big disappointment to taxpayers,” Durbin’s spokesman, Ben Marter, said in a statement. “It has cost nearly $3 billion.… It’s time to end the program.”

The request for the $27.2 million was sent to Congress last month by Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter, who wanted the money to restart an operational exercise in which two JLENS blimps were supposed to stand sentry above the Washington, D.C., area.

The $27.2 million would have been on top of $45.5 million for JLENS included in President Obama’s proposed budget for the coming fiscal year.

Because Carter had asked for money to be shifted, or “reprogrammed,” from another defense program, his request needed unanimous approval from eight of the most senior members of the Senate and House appropriations panels.


By Wednesday, both Cochran and Durbin had quietly informed administration officials that they opposed the request. In addition to serving as Appropriations Committee chairman, Cochran leads the Senate Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, and Durbin is its ranking Democrat.

In a statement, Cochran’s spokesman, Chris Gallegos, indicated that JLENS was unlikely to receive support for any funding from the Senate.

The denial of the $27.2 million, Gallegos said, “is an indication that the administration’s [$45.5-million] budget request for JLENS is likely to receive an icy reception from the committee.”

The comments suggested that the dramatic breakaway last fall of a JLENS blimp from its mooring at the Army’s Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland was a final straw for congressional appropriators. The blimp was one of two participating in the operational exercise to protect the capital region.


For several hours on Oct. 28, the pilotless, 242-foot-long blimp sailed over Maryland and into Pennsylvania, disrupting commercial air traffic and clipping utility lines with its milelong tether. About 35,000 rural Pennsylvania residents had lost power by the time the blimp came to rest in the woods of northern Pennsylvania, 150 miles from its base.

An Army investigation attributed the breakaway to a faulty air-pressure tube in the blimp. The investigation also found that JLENS support personnel had failed to load batteries to power an automatic deflation device that should have brought the blimp to the ground within two miles.

Durbin’s spokesman said that the operational exercise was an opportunity for JLENS to prove its usefulness, and that “it failed spectacularly.” He also pointed to Pentagon reports documenting poor performance by JLENS on test ranges.

Durbin’s opposition to the funding was first reported Friday by Politico.


JLENS is short for Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor System. It is designed to provide surveillance of low-altitude threats such as cruise missiles and drones. The blimps were intended to float at heights of up to 10,000 feet and spot objects for 340 miles in any direction, according to Raytheon Co., the prime contractor for the program.

In tests, the JLENS radar has struggled to track flying objects and to distinguish friendly aircraft from potential threats. Although the blimps were supposed to operate in pairs for 30 days at a stretch, none has been able to stay airborne continuously for that long.

A Los Angeles Times report published in September described how backers of JLENS at the Pentagon and at Raytheon maneuvered to keep taxpayer money flowing to the problem-plagued program.

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In late 2010, the second-ranking U.S. Army leader — Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli — tried to kill JLENS. Chiarelli was trumped by the then-vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Marine Gen. James E. “Hoss” Cartwright, who backed plans for what became the operational exercise, a lifeline for the program.

Cartwright retired from the military in late 2011 — and five months later went on Raytheon’s payroll as a director. In his first three years on its board, Raytheon paid Cartwright more than $828,000 in cash and stock, records show.

A report released this year by the Pentagon’s independent testing office made clear that JLENS still could not be relied on to perform its expected mission. The report said that software glitches could prevent the system from conveying accurate, timely information about high-priority threats.

The Defense Department spent $3 billion on this program. That’s an awful lot for a balloon that they can’t shut off. Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.)


Other doubts about JLENS emerged Friday from two Maryland lawmakers who had staunchly backed the program and the operational exercise based at Aberdeen.

Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.) issued a statement expressing “very grave reservations about both the program’s safety for local communities and its national security accomplishments.”

“The Defense Department spent $3 billion on this program. That’s an awful lot for a balloon that they can’t shut off,” the statement said. “We should get a lot more for our national security for $3 billion.”

Another longtime supporter of the program, Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger (D-Md.), said he too now opposes spending the additional $27.2 million to restart the exercise.


The breakaway of the blimp “jeopardized the safety of my constituents,’” said Ruppersberger, who serves on the House Appropriations Committee. “I can’t, in good conscience, support its continuation in such a highly populated area.”

Twitter: @dwillmannews

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