Pentagon acquisition chief Ashton Carter agrees with the QDR Independent Review panel suggestion that programs be given a hard deadline by which they must perform. Carter said that until recently, when money or performance didn’t measure up, services took the “easy” solution of “kicking them to the right.” But adding time also adds money, and Carter said a year’s delay on a 10-year program means another 10 percent in cost. He said he hopes the Long Range Strike system will be available in the five to seven years the QDR red team suggested. “We have to control the variable of time,” Carter asserted.
The Air Force awarded a $13.08 billion contract to the Sierra Nevada Corporation on April 26 for its Survivable Airborne Operations Center aircraft, the successor to the service’s E-4B “Doomsday” plane. Like the E-4B, officially called the National Airborne Operations Center, the SAOC will be meant to withstand a nuclear attack and keep…