What is the B-21 Raider? What are its uses? The sixth-generation stealth bomber from Northrop Grumman.

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After the Cold War, the only stealth bomber in the United States, the B-2 Spirit, has dwindled to a fleet of only 19 aircraft, costing billions of dollars and becoming outdated. The new generation that will replace it is the B-21 Raider — the sixth-generation stealth bomber from Northrop Grumman, with plans to produce 100 units on the production line and begin entering service earlier than expected due to an official production acceleration agreement. In this article, we explain what the B-21 is, what it does, how much it costs, and why Turkey is approaching long-range strike capabilities with a different philosophy in simple language — but without losing technical details.

Quick Overview
Category: Strategic Stealth Bomber (Sixth Generation)
Manufacturer: Northrop Grumman (United States)
First Flight: November 10, 2023
Unveiling: December 2, 2022, at Palmdale
Unit Cost: ~692 million USD (fixed for FY 2022)
Planned Fleet: At least 100 aircraft

What is the B-21 Raider?

The B-21 Raider is a strategic twin-engine flying wing bomber developed by the United States Air Force (USAF) under the Long Range Strike Bomber (LRS-B) program. The program began in 2014, the contract was awarded to Northrop Grumman in 2015, and the aircraft was unveiled to the public on December 2, 2022, at Palmdale 42, where it made its first flight on November 10, 2023, at Edwards Air Force Base.

The name “Raider” comes from the Doolittle Raiders of the Doolittle Raid that struck Tokyo during World War II — a clear nod to the tradition of long-range strategic strikes and risk-taking. It shares the same aerodynamic logic of the flying wing as the B-2 Spirit but differs in the following points:

  • Open Architecture (Open Mission Systems): Software and hardware are modifiable — weapons and future sensors are integrated as “attachments.”
  • Hybrid Manned and Unmanned Mission: The first production version is piloted, but the platform is designed to be ready for unmanned operations.
  • Digital Stealth: Against enemy radars, it uses not only shape but also surface coating (RAM — Radar Absorbent Material) and electronic warfare systems to achieve multi-layered invisibility.
  • Lower Maintenance Cost: The B-2 consumes 50% of its flight hours while in the hangar; the B-21 is designed for “forward base” operations with a modifiable maintenance approach.

What are its uses?

  1. Strategic Nuclear Deterrence: The B-21 will take on the air leg of the U.S. nuclear triad (land/sea/air) after the retirement of the B-1B and B-52. It is compatible with B61-12 cruise missiles and future LRSO missiles.
  2. Long-Range Conventional Strikes: It can penetrate access denial/area denial (A2/AD) environments using hypersonic munitions (such as ARRW), JASSM-ER missiles, and large bombs to destroy bunkers like the GBU-57 MOP.
  3. Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance (ISR): It can enter enemy radar coverage for both target detection and electronic warfare execution. It acts as a central platform for the “counter-air penetration” doctrine.
  4. Command and Control Node: Thanks to its open architecture, it serves as a central node for information sharing with NGAD fighter aircraft, unmanned combat aerial vehicles (CCAs), and satellites.

Technical Specifications

FeatureValue (described)
Crew2 (compatible with unmanned operations)
ArchitectureFlying wing (tailless)
Engine2 × Pratt & Whitney PW9000 family (stealthy, derived from B-2 F118)
SizeSmaller than B-2; estimated wing ~40 m
Range9300+ km (without refueling)
Internal payload~14 tons (less than ~18 tons of B-2; prioritizing efficiency)
Stealth generationSixth generation (RCS claim not “star” but “bug level”)
Electronic systemsOpen Mission Systems (OMS), integration of distributed sensors
Electronic warfare suiteAdaptable, extensive electronic warfare, internal
Nuclear capabilityB61-12 gravity bomb + LRSO cruise missile (in development)
Conventional munitionsJASSM-ER, JDAM, GBU-57 MOP, ARRW (hypersonic)
RefuelingAerial refueling — compatible with KC-46 / KC-135
Northrop B-2 Spirit — predecessor of B-21 Raider
Northrop B-2 Spirit — predecessor and aerodynamic reference for the B-21. The flying wing architecture that flew in 1989 has been updated with next-generation sensors and digital stealth integrated into the B-21. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

Who is buying, and at what price?

The B-21 is currently being purchased only by the U.S. Air Force. The contract structure is as follows:

OperatorQuantityCost / year
U.S. Air Force (USAF)At least 100 (low-rate production started)~$692 million per aircraft (FY 2022) — total ~ $200 billion for the program
United States (accelerating production)+25% production rate$4.5 billion additional contract (2025)
Australia (negotiating)Exit permission obtained (2024)Not disclosed, under AUKUS 2 column

Export licensing for the B-21 is limited — it is said to be open only to Five Eyes allies under U.S. ITAR regulations. Australia requested in 2024; decision-making process is ongoing.

Critical Point: The price of a single B-21 aircraft (~$692 million) exceeds the entire budget for the serial production of Turkey’s TAYFUN ballistic missile project. The stealth bombing doctrine is designed to project U.S. global power; Turkey’s geographical priorities require a completely different roadmap.

Turkish strategy — a different philosophy

There is no direct equivalent to the B-21 in Turkey’s “long-range strike” equation — because the needs or doctrine are not shared. Turkey addresses the same mission through three different platforms, with higher cost-effectiveness:

StandardB-21 RaiderTurkish Doctrine
PhilosophyManned stealth platformHybrid: Unmanned + Ballistic Missile + Cruise Missile
Long-range strikeB-21 + JASSM-ER (~1000 km)TAYFUN (>500 km) + GEZGİN cruise missile (>800 km)
Stealth platformB-21 (~$692 million per aircraft)KAAN (5th generation fighter) + KIZILELMA drone
Unmanned strikeB-21 (capable of unmanned operation)AKINCI + AKSUNGUR + KIZILELMA
Nuclear deterrenceB61-12, LRSONATO nuclear sharing (Incirlik) + conventional deterrence
Unit cost$692 millionTAYFUN: ~$3-5 million/missile, KIZILELMA: ~$30 million
Export autonomyRestricted by ITAR, only 5 eyes100% domestic, open for export

The trajectory of the Turkish defense industry is not B-21 but asymmetric superiority: ballistic missiles reach their targets within seconds, drones are produced at a much lower cost than manned aircraft, and unmanned systems with stealth profiles like KIZILELMA reach their targets without being detected by enemy radar. This doctrine is more suitable for the European NATO wing; it is not the same as the geographical requirements of the United States in the Pacific.

Other Global Counterparts

  • Xian H-20 (China): Has not flown yet, flying wing design. Produced by AVIC. The closest direct competitor to the B-21.
  • PAK-DA (Russia): Stealth strategic bomber program from Tupolev. Under development since 2018, with the first targeted flight in 2027.
  • B-2 Spirit (legacy): First flight in 1989, still active with 19 aircraft. Unit cost ~ $2.1 billion (including inflation).
  • B-52H Stratofortress: Entered service in 1955, still conducting strategic bombing missions, a classic American. Not stealthy, but complements the B-21 in range and payload.
  • B-1B Lancer: Variable-sweep wing supersonic bomber, heading towards retirement alongside the B-21.

Frequently Asked Questions

How stealthy is the B-21?
There is no official information – but Northrop claims “RCS (Radar Cross Section) size of a bug.” The RCS of the B-2 is about the size of a small bird; it is said that the B-21 is much lower than that.
Can the B-21 carry hypersonic missiles?
Yes. Hypersonic munitions (Mach 5+) like the AGM-183A ARRW are being tested in the internal weapons bay of the B-21. It is also compatible with JASSM-ER and long-range LRSO cruise missiles.
Can Turkey acquire the B-21?
No. Due to ITAR restrictions and nuclear engineering, the B-21 is only available to Five Eyes allies. Turkey’s roadmap goes through the trio of KAAN + TAYFUN + KIZILELMA.
When will the B-21 enter service?
Ellsworth Air Force Base will receive its first operational fleet in 2027. The production line has been accelerated by 25% in 2025 (an additional contract worth $4.5 billion).
Is the B-2 Spirit being retired?
Yes, gradually. By the 2030s, 19 B-2 aircraft will be retired; more than 100 B-21 aircraft will be produced to replace them.
Can the B-21 fly unmanned?
The platform is designed for unmanned flight, but the first version of the series is manned. Future independent missions are possible with software updates.

Conclusion

The B-21 Raider is a tool designed to project the global power of the United States – a symbol of long-range stealth strike capability in the Asia-Pacific region. It is not a direct counterpart to Turkey; as the Turkish defense industry fulfills the same mission through ballistic missiles + drones + jet-powered unmanned aerial vehicles, maintaining export independence and at a much lower unit cost. The stealth profile of the KAAN aircraft, the configuration of the KIZILELMA drone, the range of TAYFUN, and the payload capacity of the AKINCI aircraft – all function as a doctrine operating as a network rather than compressing into a single platform. The B-21 is an impressive engineering achievement; however, the Turkish path represents a different engineering success.

Sources

  • Northrop Grumman – B-21 Raider press page (northropgrumman.com)
  • U.S. Air Force – Official B-21 Raider fact sheet (af.mil)
  • Wikipedia – “Northrop Grumman B-21 Raider”
  • Air Force Magazine – B-21 LRIP reports (2023-2025)
  • The Aviationist – Analysis of the first flight and introduction of the B-21
  • Defense News – B-21 production acceleration contract (2025)

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