Gates fires general

Professional Engineer & PE Exam Forum

Help Support Professional Engineer & PE Exam Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Capt Worley PE

Run silent, run deep
Joined
May 4, 2007
Messages
13,369
Reaction score
649
Location
SC
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100201/pl_af..._20100201235738

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Defense Secretary Robert Gates sacked Monday the general in charge of the F-35 fighter jet program and said he would withhold funds from Lockheed Martin over a series of cost overruns and delays.
"The progress and performance of the F-35 over the past two years has not been what it should," said Gates, adding, "a number of key goals and benchmarks were not met."

The Pentagon will withhold 614 million dollars in performance fees from lead contractor Lockheed Martin, he said.

Gates said he took the decision because "the taxpayer should not have to bear the entire burden of getting the JSF (Joint Strike Fighter) program back on track."

The move was taken with the agreement of Lockheed Martin, he told a news conference to present the Pentagon's defense budget.

Gates said his department also bore blame for the "troubling performance record" of the Joint Strike Fighter and fired the Marine officer in charge of the program, Major General David Heinz, who was named last year.

He said a higher-ranking, three-star general would take over the post, reflecting the importance of the F-35 project.

Gates has not hesitated to sack a number of top officers and officials during his tenure as defense secretary since 2006.

He said the move was part of his effort to set a tone that "when things go wrong, people will be held accountable."

Both Gates and President Barack Obama have repeatedly warned that they will not tolerate the kind of delays and cost overruns that have plagued weapons programs in the past.

Much is riding on the stealth aircraft, which Gates has held up as the future of US fighter jets after having pushed through an end to the costly F-22 Raptor, despite opposition from some lawmakers.

Gates has portrayed the F-35 as a more affordable, more flexible aircraft but flight tests have been repeatedly pushed back and an internal Pentagon review found sky-rocketing costs.

The administration's 2011 defense budget unveiled Monday calls for "robust funding" of the Joint Strike Fighter, and Gates said nearly 11 billion dollars would go to buying 43 planes.

The military plans to buy more than 2,400 of the aircraft over the next 25 years, with each branch of the armed services getting a tailored version of the jet.

Eight other countries are also supporting the program, led by Britain which has invested two billion dollars in the F-35's development.

But officials have acknowledged that persistent technical problems could lead some governments to back off buying large numbers of planes.

Despite mushrooming costs, the F-35 program had been "restructured" and the aircraft was on track "to become the backbone of US air superiority for the next generation," Gates said.

The program faced no "insurmountable" technological or other problems, he said.

Gates also warned that he would recommend that Obama veto any attempt by Congress to fund an alternate engine for the F-35 as well for additional C-17 transport planes.

Any benefits to building an alternate engine for the F-35 would be "offset by excess costs, complexity, and associated risks," he said.

As for the C-17 aircraft, he said studies had shown that "the Air Force already has more of these aircraft than it needs."

He said he was aware of political pressure in Congress to fund the C-17 and the second engine for the F-35, but he added: "Let me be very clear: I will strongly recommend that the president veto any legislation that sustains the unnecessary continuation of these two programs."
 
This is good news to me, as one of the major programs I work on is the F-35 MILCON program. I'm not so worried now when the powers that be complain that the construction is 30 days behind schedule, when the **** plane is about 2 years behind schedule!

I also heard the Navy was considering not even procuring its variant of the F-35 now and they might just buy more F/A-18s to fill the gap. Why am I building Navy facilities then? There's a few hundred million down the drain...

I can tell you one thing though -- Lockheed has been a pain in my rear! I hope witholding the $614M in performance fees will get them to perform a little better!

 
I don't understand why it is necessary to forcefully "withhold" a $614M "performance fee" when it is obvious that the company is not performing in an acceptable manner. The performance fee should have never been triggered, so this should be a non-issue. There are serious issues in government contract writing procedures that are costing US taxpayers billions, if not trillions, of dollars.

 
There are serious issues in government contract writing procedures that are costing US taxpayers billions, if not trillions, of dollars.
Its amazing to me how true this is. The system is based on contracts that don't require actual performance or product to get award fee, but only paperwork. Then when the gov doesn't get what they want, they blame the contractor and run them off, only to bid the new contract with the same poorly written contracts. I work on a lot of federal sites that are managed by contractors, and it is the same at every one. Not only that, when contractors change, only the top brass moves, the rest of the employees stay with the site and are employed by the new contractor. We call it white-collar welfare.

Not that I'm really complaining. The way I see it, I pay a lot of taxes, and most of those dollars are wasted, so at least I'm getting a little bit of it back.

 
I don't understand why it is necessary to forcefully "withhold" a $614M "performance fee" when it is obvious that the company is not performing in an acceptable manner. The performance fee should have never been triggered, so this should be a non-issue. There are serious issues in government contract writing procedures that are costing US taxpayers billions, if not trillions, of dollars.
I suspect there was was disagreement (internal to the govt) over whether the contractor deserved his fee.

 
Back
Top