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As the military technology advances, these most expensive  military aircraft in the world were created.For the need of more powerful  means of defense, flying military technology is/was developed.
 Even creating  a highly cost military equipment is not debatable by some  people as it’s  wasting government’s money, but the show must go on.  Here’s the Top 10 most  expensive military aircraft ever made in the  world.
 
B-2 Spirit: $2.4 billion
The B-2 bomber was so costly that Congress cut its initial 1987 purchase order  from 132 to 21...  (A 2008 crash leaves the current number at 20.) The B-2 is  hard to detect  via infrared, acoustic, electromagnetic, visual or radar  signals. This  stealth capability makes it able to attack enemy targets with  less fear  of retaliation. In use since 1993, the B-2 has been deployed to both  Iraq and Afghanistan. 
F-22 Raptor: $350 million  First conceived during the Cold War as an airframe to vie with Soviet  aircraft  that was never built, the F-22 is touted by manufacturer  Lockheed Martin as the  best overall combat plane in the world — not to  mention the most expensive. It  can shoot down enemy cruise missiles, fly long distances at supersonic speeds  and avoid nearly all types of radar detection. But the Senate debate over  whether to build seven more — at a taxpayer cost of $1.67 billion — eventually  came down to the plane’s  job-creating abilities. The axed project would have  employed 25,000  Americans. 
C17A Globemaster III: $328 million
   The Air Force military-transport plane is used to move troops into war  zones,  perform medical evacuations and conduct airdrop missions. There  are 190 C17As  in service; the aircraft is propelled by four turbofan  engines (of the same  type used on the twin-engine Boeing 757) and can  drop 102 paratroopers at once.  In operation since 1993, it has been used to deliver troops and humanitarian aid  to Afghanistan and Iraq. 
P-8A Poseidon: $290 million  Boeing’s spruced-up military version of its 737 jet will be used by the Navy to  conduct anti-submarine warfare and gather intelligence. It can carry  torpedoes, missiles, depth charges and other weapons. The P-8A is  expected to  go into service in 2013. 
VH-71 Kestrel: $241 million  This high-tech helicopter project, intended to replace the President’s aging  chopper fleet, was running more than 50% over budget by the time Barack Obama  took office. Soon after his Inauguration, the President announced plans to scrap  the helicopters because of cost overruns. On July 22,  however, the House  Appropriations Committee unanimously approved  restoring $485 million to fund  the Kestrels. 
E-2D Advanced Hawkeye: $232 million  A major step forward for surveillance and reconnaissance, the Advanced  Hawkeye’s powerful new radar system will increase the range of territory an  aircraft can monitor by 300%. “It can probably watch the pistachios  pop in  Iran,” an analyst for the think tank Lexington Institute told  National Defense  in July. Though development of the plane is on track  and two test versions have  been delivered to the Navy, budget cuts may  keep the planes grounded for at  least a year longer than planned. | 
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