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Saturday, March 5, 2011

Track Looks Clear for Boeing

This article says that EADS, the European outfit that was competing with Boeing for the contract to build a new Air Force Tanker, has decided not to protest the contract.
WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--The head of EADS North America said Friday that the defense contractor wouldn't protest the loss of a multibillion-dollar U.S. Air Force contract and warned that the Pentagon appeared to have stepped back from its historical strategy of buying the "very best" technology for the military.
I am hoping that this means we will have new tankers before the older KC-135s start falling out of the sky.  A protest, sustained, could have cost the Air Force (and the other Services, who benefit from the ability of tankers to extend the range of fighters and airlift aircraft) a couple of more years of waiting.

Regards  —  Cliff

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

A smart business move for EADS. Boeing has spent millions in pay-offs for this contract and there is simply no way for EADS to benefit by a protest. As for the so-called "Buy American" philosophy, the DoD would have probably gotten more "made in America" with EADS than they will ever get with Boeing.

In the end, the AF will have a new tanker, new if you can accept the "newness" of a 1970's design airframe. We probably could have gotten a better deal by pulling 767's out of various desert storage depots, and running them through a conversion line.

But this was NEVER about a good deal for the AF.

Watch from the wings for Boeing to begin the campaign to "upgrade" AWACS and JSTARS with the "militarized" version of the 767.