Daily Report

June 17, 2008

Back to Work

While we wait on the Government Accountability Office to rule later this week on the Air Force’s KC-X tanker competition, GAO has just rendered a verdict in another tanker-related protest. Ruling on the side of the Air Force, GAO on June 13 dismissed the remainder of the protest points filed by Alabama Aircraft Industries Inc. (formerly Pemco Aviation) over the service’s choice of Boeing over AAII in September 2007 to perform depot maintenance work on the KC-135 tanker fleet. AAII announced the decision in a statement on that same day. As a result, the Air Force has lifted a stop-work order that it had imposed on Boeing during the protest period, allowing the company to resume its contractual activities, Reuters news wire service reported June 16. The contract has a total estimated value of about $1.2 billion. This saga may not be over, however, as AAII President Ron Aramini said his company will continue to press its case until the Air Force conducts a “full and fair evaluation of the proposals.” This would show, he said that AAII is “the highest quality and lowest cost source” for the KC-135 depot work. We are not sure exactly what avenues he intends to pursue to achieve this. An AAII spokeswoman said she could not elaborate beyond the company’s statement. AAII won its first protest with the GAO against the contract award in December 2007. But after the Air Force went back and recalculated the risk of Boeing’s proposal, per the GAO’s recommendation, it selected Boeing once again in March as the winner. This led AAII to lodge a second complaint. The GAO rejected part of the second protest already in May. With its ruling last week, it has now ruled on the remainder of the second protest.

Moseley Sets Date

Gen. Michael Moseley’s last day on the job as Chief of Staff tentatively will be June 27, according to USAF officials. After that, he expects to be on terminal leave until Aug. 1, the date on which his retirement will...

Down for the Count?

A federal judge has once again rejected Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich’s lawsuit to prevent the Illinois Air National Guard’s 183rd Fighter Wing from losing its F-16s under BRAC 2005. The Associated Press reported June 14 (via the Chicago Tribune) that...

KC-X and Jobs

The Economic Policy Institute, a self-proclaimed independent, non-profit and non-partisan think tank in Washington, D.C., issued a study earlier this month claiming that the Air Force’s KC-X tanker award to Northrop Grumman/EADS will generate 14,000 fewer jobs than if USAF...

No Let-up In Overhead Support

Coalition aircraft flew 54 close air support missions in Afghanistan on June 14, with A-10s and F-15Es leading the way, Air Forces Central announced June 15. Among the kinetic strikes on that day, F-15Es used 500-pound and 2,000-pound joint direct...

Assessing the Damage

The Air National Guard has used the RC-26 surveillance aircraft to support relief efforts in states including Indiana and Wisconsin in the wake of severe flooding in the Midwest. The fixed-wing aircraft, used primarily for counterdrug work, has provided real-time...

Airman Receives Posthumous Degree

Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University earlier this month bestowed an honorary degree to Maj. Brad Funk, an instructor pilot at Sheppard AFB, Tex., who was killed May 1 in a T-38 crash on the base. The Times Record News of Wichita Falls,...

Mastering the Skill

The Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards AFB, Calif., awarded graduate degrees for the first time ever earlier this month after completing a five-year accreditation process in May. During a graduation ceremony on June 7, 18 students from Class...

Air Sorties from SWA

Air Sorties in War on Terrorism, Southwest AsiaJune 12-14, 2008 Sortie Type OIF OEF OIF/OEF Total YTD ISR 70 36 106 4,979 CAS/Armed Recon 181 159 340 14,821 Airlift 134 407 20,954 Air refueling 52 170 6,913 Total 1023 47,667...