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With an end to the latest Boeing 737 operational interruption in sight and 787 deliveries finally accelerating after nearly six months of virtual stagnation, the U.S. manufacturer is looking beyond its walls at potential threats to its much-needed commercial recovery. The novel coronavirus pandemic remains top of mind, but a new and even less predicable threat is growing: a government-level political dispute that threatens to keep the massive Chinese market closed to new Boeing orders and, for now, the entire 737 MAX program. Access exclusive subscriber-onlycoverage as internal production headwinds slow but still persist. Plus every subscriber has access to our eBook library, featuring updates in supersonics, manned and unmanned innovation in aviation, the renaissance of high-speed air travel, the legends behind the world's first wide-body jet, emerging technologies making their way into the MRO market, technological developments for new satellites & the next generation of space start-ups and the most pressing issues facing military pilots today. Subscribe today and receive all of this plus exclusive online access at aviationweek.com | SUBSCRIBE NOW | | Credit: Joe Walker |
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