12 March 2010

Real (or Imagined) Sorrow At One-Horse Race for Tanker Contract?

Secretary Gates claims he regrets Northrop's withdrawal from the tanker competition. I guess we'll find out whether or not he really is soon enough.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Thursday he regrets that a major defense contractor has pulled out of the contest to build a badly needed new Air Force plane.

And he warned that the lone surviving bidder shouldn't expect to be able to pad the check.

Gates told a military audience that he wishes Northrop Grumman had chosen to place a bid on the $35 billion contract to build refueling tankers for the Air Force.

The defense giant pulled out of the bidding Monday. Northrop Chief Executive Officer and President Wes Bush said in a statement that the Pentagon's guidelines for the program "clearly favor Boeing's smaller refueling tanker" but that the company would not file a formal protest.

EADS, the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co., had partnered with Northrop to vie for the tanker but was not expected to be able to compete against Boeing on its own. A spokesman for French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Wednesday that Sarkozy will raise concerns that the tanker contract is anticompetitive when he visits President Barack Obama later this month.

Obama has said the Pentagon shouldn't pay large amounts of money to a major defense contractor without any competition. But the Pentagon defended the tanker program as fair and said both companies could compete effectively. Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman said Monday the program would not be reworked just to ensure a competition.


Maybe he just regrets that with only one vendor, he's at the mercy of their pricing, no matter what they claim.

By: Brant

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