Daily Report

Dec. 4, 2008

Cooking the Books 2?

This is both good and bad news: The Pentagon plans to conduct new reviews to determine the appropriate number of F-22 fighters, so says held-over Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Is he aware that the Pentagon quashed previous studies that pointed...

No Lame Duck

“I have no intention of being a caretaker secretary,” Robert Gates told Pentagon reporters Dec. 2 (see above), in speaking about his decision to stay over as Defense Secretary in the new Administration. Gates had planned to leave the top...

Ospreys Are Back, Smiling

Ospreys Are Back, Smiling: All four Air Force Special Operations Command CV-22 Ospreys have returned to their home at Hurlburt Field, Fla., from Exercise Flintlock, a US Africa Command exercise in the Trans-Saharan region. It was thefirst overseas deployment for the new AFSOC aircraft and the enterprise "went above and beyond everyone's expectations," said Capt. Dennis Woodlief, one of the 8th Special Operations Squadron pilots on the deployment. He added, "We had zero maintenance cancels, zero delays, and we executed 100 percent every time." As to the CV-22's operational prowess, Lt. Col. Eric Hill, 8th SOS commander, said the "tyranny of distance in the African continent" presented no problem for the Ospreys. He explained: "We were able to go over 500 nautical miles, infiltrate a small team for them to run their exercise, and bring them back all the way to home base without doing an air refueling stop. And, we were able to do that in the span of about four hours." Woodlief added, "It would take the MH-53 [helicopter] twice, sometimes three times as long." Joining the 8th SOS on the deployment was the 1st Special Operations Helicopter Maintenance Squadron, which had to bring enough parts and equipment to sustain the CV-22s at the exercise's remote location. "We have a laundry list about three pages long of things we'd like to take next time," said MSgt. Craig Kornely, lead production supervisor, noting that the unit must "grow into the machine." Acknowledging the team "learned some lessons," Hill declared, "There's nothing more gratifying than seeing [your squadron] take a revolutionary capability out on its first deployment, have hug mission success, meet every mission task, and, most importantly, bring everybody back to home base safely." (Hurlburt report by 1st Lt. Lauren Johnson)

Young Alters Procurement Rules

Pentagon acquisition guru John Young has signed off on revisions to DOD acquisition procedures in DOD Instruction 5000.02, marked as "the first major change" to the department's buying policy in "over five years," according to a Dec. 2 Pentagon release summarizing the changes. Among those changes: implementation of a materiel development decision review to ensure programs have "approved requirements and a rigorous assessment of alternatives"; competitive prototyping of the system or key components in the technology development phase; more frequent and more effective program reviews to measure progress; implementation of configuration steering boards to head off requirements creep; independent reviews to certify technology maturity before proceeding to final development; and test and evaluation at every acquisition development phase to identify and correct technical and operational problems early. In the statement, Young said that military procurement policies "must be more disciplined and effective to ensure that results are more predictable and that we are better stewards of taxpayer dollars." Young has been highly critical of the Air Force's high-profile acquisition efforts, most recently the CSAR-X helicopter replacement program, even going so far as to question whether there's really a need for a new dedicated combat search and rescue aircraft.

Some Still Not Convinced

Brig. Gen. Leon Rice, assistant Adjutant General-Air in Massachusetts, met with some resistance as he discussed the Air National Guard’s plans to lower the ceiling for intercept training flights over the Condor Military Operation Area over Western Maine at the...

A Combat Controller Story

SSgt. Robert Gutierrez Jr., a special tactics combat controller with the 352nd Special Operations Group at RAF Mildenhall, England, was on patrol in Afghanistan with an Army Special Forces team earlier this year when the convoy came under fire. He...

An Incomplete Report Card

A new Congressional Budget Office report on DOD’s National Security Personnel System cites the difficulty of evaluating the program this early in the game, saying, “Sufficient time has not yet elapsed since the first employees were converted to accumulate an...

ATK Get STAT Contract

Arnold Engineering Development Center in Tennessee has awarded a $26.1 million contract to Alliant Techsystems to develop and manufacture the Space Threat Assessment Testbed System, according to a Dec. 1 company release. AEDC began hunting in 2006 for a contractor...

Aussies Confirm 100 Is the Number

Air Marshal Mark Binskin, head of the Royal Australian Air Force, maintains that his country must buy 100 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters even as budget strings tighten to sustain 24-hour operations in the even of a high-threat, reports The Australian....

Test Pilot Rondeau Dies

Retired Air Force Col. Maurice A. Rondeau, 90, died Nov. 12 of complications from open heart surgery, reports the Press Telegram. Rondeau began his career as an aviation cadet in World War II and served in two more wars and...

Air Sorties in War on Terrorism, Southwest Asia

Dec. 2, 2008 Sortie Type OIF OEF OIF/OEF Total YTD ISR 27 15 42 12,454 CAS/Armed Recon 35 64 99 34,670 Airlift 110 110 43,745 Air refueling 46 46 16,891 Total 297 107,760 OIF=Operation Iraqi Freedom OEF=Operation Enduring Freedom ISR=Intelligence-surveillance