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Monday, June 09, 2008
Frank Gaffney :: Townhall.com Columnist
Firing Offense
by Frank Gaffney
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When Defense Secretary Robert Gates summarily fired the top civilian and military Air Force officials last week, the reason he gave was a grave failure of leadership with respect to that service’s nuclear missions. The low priority assigned by the Pentagon to its nuclear stewardship responsibilities is systemic and acute. Consequently, this act of accountability is both warranted and a needed wake-up call to all the armed forces.

As it happens, there is another ground on which the dismissal of Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne could be justified. He was specifically brought in to clean up Air Force procurement, but ended up presiding over a disastrously mishandled procurement of the KC-X next-generation aerial tanker. The decision to award this contract worth conservatively $35 billion to a team led by the European aerospace conglomerate, EADS, should be considered a firing offense.

In the next few days, the Government Accountability Office is expected to rule on a protest to that award by the losing bidder, Boeing. If the GAO does its job, there is little doubt it will conclude the Air Force unfairly, even cynically, manipulated the acquisition process so as to enable EADS to compete with an aircraft that did not meet the service’s stated requirements and that was significantly more costly to operate.

In documents that have come to light since the contract award was announced in February, including an Air Force briefing provided to the losing company and a redacted version of Boeing’s protest, a number of facts are clear:

The Boeing tanker, based on the 767 commercial aircraft, is a known commodity. Two were delivered to the Japanese air force earlier this spring. Four more are currently being built for Italy. Its American manufacturing line is well-established. Its estimated costs are grounded in data developed during more than 10 million 767 flight hours.

By contrast, the EADS alternative known as the KC-30 is more the proverbial bird in the bush. None has been delivered. None has moved aviation fuel through an operational boom. And none has been produced by the politically-driven, Rube Goldberg-style production line that EADS proposes to establish on two continents – unless, that is, the costs grow. In which case, it turns out, the French-led conglomerate will build all of the U.S. Air Force’s new tankers in Toulouse, France, not Mobile, Alabama, with attendant loss of the promised American jobs.

Speaking of workforce, there is the natty problem that unions representing EADS employees have a record of rabid hostility towards the United States and its policies. The effect of entrusting one of the most important elements of our power-projection capabilities to foreign labor capable of production sabotage and/or work-stoppage could be catastrophic. That is especially true insofar as the reliance on EADS would not be confined to the manufacturing of the tankers. If past practice is any guide, the company that produced the planes would also be relied upon for maintenance over their expected 40-year service life.

Quite apart from the nationality of the source, there is the basic question of competence. Boeing is no newcomer to the business of building and supporting aerial refueling tankers. In fact it has been at it for 79 years and delivered a total of 2,000 tanker aircraft. It has delivered 1,800 operational refueling booms, the complicated piece of equipment used to move fuel safely and swiftly from the tanker to the recipient aircraft.

By contrast, the EADS team has been trying to develop a tanker business for just the last five years. To date, it has not delivered any aerial refuelers or operational booms. To repose confidence in such a team, to say nothing of its cost projections, entails a leap of faith that seems irresponsible in the extreme. Continued...

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About The Author

Frank Gaffney Jr. is the founder and president of the Center for Security Policy and author of War Footing: 10 Steps America Must Take to Prevail in the War for the Free World .
 
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GAFFNEY'S GAFFES


The Air Force Secretary Procurement OFFICE told the Senate Armed Services Committee that the KC-45A was "clearly a better performer" than Boeing's KC-767. NG/EADS presented the KC-45A at lower cost, lower risk, more flexible and with many more capabilities than Boeing's KC-767 to be assembled with different components and systems from different aircraft for the final product that is yet to be built.


GAFFNEY'S GAFFES 2
The KC-45A Refueling Tanker has already been built and tested by refueling aircraft with the innovative NG/EADS $100 million, 3-D vision system, electric centerline boom, under-wing hoses (98.6 ft.) and drogue pods which are remote controlled from the cockpit by the operator. The aircraft can offload 420 gallons of fuel per minute.

The KC-45A includes components built in the United Kingdom, Germany, Spain and France with 60 percent of the American components from 40 States and 230 companies creating 48,000 direct and indirect American jobs. Boeing's proposed tanker includes components manufactured in Japan, United Kingdom, Canada and Italy.

The KC-45A provides a total air mobility solution with exceptional capacity for in-flight refueling, plus full flexibility in cargo delivery, passenger transport, aeromedical evacuation, launch with 20% more fuel, fly farther, stay on station longer, and refuel all planes of our military and NATO aircraft.

The KC-45A will be assembled at the NG/EADS $600 million, 600,000 square foot new, state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities that is in process at the Brookley Field Industrial Complex in Mobile, AL that will create 1500 jobs in Mobile, AL.

The Australia, UK, UAE, Saudi Arabia Air Forces also chose NG/EADS over Boeing. Boeing is protesting the selection of NG/EADS for the U.S. Air Force but did not protest the foreign Air Force bids.

There are 25 one to four star retired Air Force Generals who want to know why the politicians from Kansas and Washington are planning to stop funding? WHO IS IN WHOSE POCKET?

The EADS side is panicking....LoL
"You can fool some of the people all of the time...."

The absurdity of granting Airbus/EADS/France with a subsidy to create US weapons systems is finally coming to light, even for the brain-dead of DC and the paid off in Alabama.

EADS has NOT produced a working tanker and in fact, they have virtually ZERO experience in such things.

More importantly, there is the greater "national interest" - not just local jobs creation that our Alabami boy whines about above. It is in our national interest to maintain engineering and manufacturing skills and capabilities. American taxpayer money being sent to France is absurd.

Buh-bye EADS.... :)

NESSUS
APPARENTLY YOU CANNOT READ! Everything posted above by me, From The Top1, IS TRUE BACKED UP WITH FACTS. You and Gaffney are gaffes.

POLITICAL POLLUTION
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) are sticking their nose into the free market instead of the business of state. They have encouraged members of Congress to claim "foul" concerning the U.S. Air Force Tanker contract awarded to Northrop Grumman/EADS.

Senator Joe Lieberman (I-CT) said, "Congress has no business getting involved. Instead, Boeing should work through the regular government process to protest the decision."

Boeing, based in Washington, would have built its tanker in Everett, Wash., and modified it for military use in Kansas.

In May 2003, Boeing was awarded a similar contract. Congress exposed fraud by the Air Force and Boeing paid a record $615 million-dollar settlement to the government.

Senator Pat Murray (D-WA) said, "I will stop funding for the Refueling Tanker if NG/EADS keeps the bid."

AMERICAN CONTRACTORS
The KC-45A Refueling Tanker will be built by a world-class industrial team led by Northrop Grumman, USA and includes primary subcontractor EADS, North America and General Electric Aviation, Sargent Fletcher, Honeywell, Parker, AAR Cargo Systems, Telephonics and Knight Aerospace. The KC-45A's refueling systems will be built at new facilities in Bridgeport, West VA and delivered to the KC-45A Production Center for aircraft integration.

The KC-45A Refueling Tanker will be assembled at the Northrop Grumman $600 million, 600,000 square foot new, state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities that is in process at the Brookley Field Industrial Complex in Mobile, AL and scheduled for completion in 2009.

The NG/EADS assembly line is scheduled for completion in 2010 and will create 48,000 direct and indirect jobs in over 230 companies in the United States.

How about
FromTheTop1

APPARENTLY YOU CANNOT READ! Everything posted above by me, From The Top1, IS TRUE BACKED UP WITH FACTS. You and Gaffney are gaffes.

================================================

Link? Source?

Flawed selection process....
Fromthetop1 ....... you are what is known as an "uber free trader"......a sellout....someone who would sell out his country for the philosophical purity of "free trade". Either that or you have to gain financially from the proposed assembly plant in Alabama.

As I said earlier, there is a larger issue here, beyond creating a subsidy for the French. It's called the NATIONAL INTEREST. Understand?

Furtheremore, as will come out soon, the Air Force called for a MEDIUM sized tanker, which the 767 is, because it allows lower operating costs, is able to utilize smaller and rougher (and therefore, more numerous) runways, plus the Boeing aircraft has the incentive of maintaining more American content (and the skills required to), which is vital to the NATIONAL INTEREST.


we shouldn't give france
who is not our friend and their union thug america haters, american industry.

Listen to FromTheTop1
He knows what he's talking about. Please don't intervene and shove an inferior airframe down the throat of the Air Force. As a US Airman, I'm appalled that you would all have us accept an inferior product based solely on your jingoism.

FRANCE SHOULD BE SUBSIDIZING US
I don't know why you losers are complaining about France subsiding the US defense program; they should be paying more, not less. With the French case kick, we get a better bigger plane for less payout. Get a clue folks!

A bigger plane is less agile & more $
Hey Trainwreck, you want to put your life on the line for an airframe that's still stuck in CAD? The EADS airframe is untested and larger and therefore more costly to fly and maintain. As Gaffney points out.

Then there are the geopolitical considerations. When Reagan attacked Qaddafi in Libya in the '80s, France refused to allow our aircraft to transit their airspace. Imagine what Europe might due if we engage in another "unjust" war? How about work slowdowns or stoppages? Or sabbotage of vital components?

But hey, it's your life. No, wait a minute it's MY security too.

Firing Offense
I, personally, find it altogether too easy to construct plausible scenarios in which EADS deliveries of a very important defense system could be interrupted for purely political (France, et al.) motives during an international crisis. It seems far more prudent to keep our defense production capabilities intact and at home.

EADS is sorta like....
Arabs running our seaports, isn't it.

France is a fickle nation. I hesitate to call them an ally because of their behavoir vis a vis Iraq in recent years. We cannot afford to give the manufacture and maintenance of such an important function as in-air refueling to any foreign government.

A Couple of Questions
1. Does the Air Force not understand the mission needs of the aircraft their seeking?

2. Is the Air Force full of Francophiles?

3. Are there not socialist union thugs in Everett?

What about MCain's...
...involvement? Didn't he support the eads contract? This one issue could take him down on 11/4/08. Lets hope the Obama advisers don't see the value of using this issue against McCain.

This is a perfect, shining example of how the globalist mentality is destroying the GOP. All for the sake of unfettered, wide open global free trade. And as a result the U.S. "always" comes up short on every deal made. However a few folks walk a way with pockets full of money while the rest of the country sacrifices. DD

A Reality Check?
I have followed this award since its beginning. I will admit two things. Both Boeing and Airbus provide good products, however both are not suited to an award of this nature. The original article above states the situation as is really is and I agree with it. I especially agree with the notion of many smaller aircraft for the mission rather than one large one. To spell it out clearly, consider a flight of 5 to 6 F-15s all needing gas. . .Refuleing takes about 5-10 minutes depending on fuel flow and amount of fuel carried. As they fly up to a single tanker it is akin to waiting in a gas line. It does not make sense to have more capability if it is going to delay getting refueled planes back into action. Two or three medium tankers promote a more rapid response to theatre conditions.

Having two companies working together on two continents (who have never worked together before) is also a challenging exercise. We now have language barriers to overcome, leadership from several countries impacting the prime airframe manufacturer, and more political baggage. The Northrop system will no doubt be a good system, but it will be held hostage to a foreign airframe. Aerial Refueling subsystems only fly if the airplane flies and no matter how you look at it, the basic airframe is still a French Airbus (no matter where it is assembled). After all, a Toyota assembled in Kentucky is still considered a Japanese car.

Any way you look at this award, it does not make sense. Though both systems may be good, Boeing has the only system that really provides what is needed for the warfighter and they have proven boom-nozzle technology and experience. I would love to see some high flow- high pressure boom refueling data from the EADS proposal. . .

Sorry EADS, this appears to be a politically motivated event and I am backing Boeing.

Bias
Frank, it seems to me that you formed an opinion and then wrote an article to justify or defend your opinion.
The truth is simple. Boeing designed what they thought the Air Force wanted. Northrup Gruman/EADS dsigned what they believed the Air Force needed.
In hindsight, Boeing is suing to buy time to use a different airframe that is more similar to the A-30 so they can be competitive in the bidding process.
Boeing put all of their eggs into one basket and lost. Boeing should have submitted several prototypes.
Frank, when does it pay to use several less capable items or objects when you can use one that does it all?

the KC-X, now KC-45 or KC-330 or KC-30?
FromTheTop1 must be drinking the EADS/NG Kool-Aid or wants a job with EADS or its junior US partner NG, many of his "facts" come right off the NorthrupGrumman website. Fact: the EADS designed KC-45 has never been built or flown, EADS has two A330-200 passenger jets that will someday be modified into KC-45 in a complex process involving factories in 4 countries, follow-on KC-45s will follow an ever changing process until the Mobile factory is built. EADS has built 1 A330 based KC-30 for Australia, similiar to the proposed KC-45, this aircraft is currently grounded at the EADS factory in Sevilla, Spain where it sits until being cleared to fly later this year (Sept/Oct). It will then begin ground and flight testing before being delivered sometime in mid-2009. Fact: 22 of those Ret USAF generals are on NG or EADS payroll, what else would they say? Most if not all of them are "fighter/bomber guys" who only know that tankers have gas for them. Fact: the A330 burns 400 gallons of fuel more per hour itself than a 767, with gas prices passing $4 a gallon, think about it. The USAF tanker fleet flew almost 300,000 hours last year, do the math! Fact: the A330/KC-45 is over twice the sized of the KC-135 it may replace. Ramp space and hanger size issues were not addressed or were overlooked during the KC-X selection process. Correcting this oversight will add Billions of dollars in cost to the KC-45 contacts price. Another fact that EADS/NG (and the USAF) doesn't want out: the KC-45 is 15% larger than the KC-10 but carries 30% less fuel and cargo. How often does that fact get left out?
One final note, EADS (and the EU) are happy, because the US Govt will now be forced to drop its WTO suit on illegal subsidies or look stupid because the USAF is buying Airbus aircraft built with those subsidies.

there is a disconect here
Why is FromTheTop1 talking about a KC-45 when Gaffney was talking about a KC-30? Then without any rferences he says that all his info is correct.
I wouldn't trust something a stratigicly important as a long range refueling plane to a foreign firms. It's just not smart thinking.

Gaffney premise unsuported
I see no way Gaffney can "know" anything about the merits of the protest, without access to all the source selection data. His arguments seem to have no basis in the actual solicitation, but are based on political considerations. Maybe the AF should just do away with source selection and let the Congress decide. It sounds to me like no EADS-based aircraft could ever meet Gaffney's requirement, so no point in having a source competition.

Plus, it seems to me Gaffney's complaint should be with USD (AT&L) John Young and the DAB, not the Air Force.

*MUCH* more than the tanker deal...
--
...figured into this shake-up.

Townhall.com readers really ought to drop in on StrategyPage.com a helluva lot more when they want to get the straight stuff on matters military.

See http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htlead/articles/20080608. aspx (8 June 2008), where Dunnigan & Co. wrote:

"This was the culmination of over half a century of conflict between the U.S. Air Force and the rest of the services. The immediate cause was two incidents involving mishandling of nuclear weapons. But there were other problems as well. The Department of Defense was unhappy with the support the Air Force was giving the troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. Then there was the Air Force effort to take control of all UAVs, even though most of them were being used by the Army, and the Army made it clear it would fight real hard to maintain control. Then there was the issue of insisting that all UAV operators be qualified pilots, while the other services, and many other countries, successfully used non-pilots. Then there were the budget battles, with the Air Force scrambling to scrounge up money to build more of the most expensive fighter (the F-22) ever built. Finally, there was the seemingly endless string of corruption and procurement scandals."


Mr. Gaffney - yet again - demonstrates his unwillingness to rub the crap out of his eyes and acknowledge what's really there to be seen.

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