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Acquisition & Procurement/News
Boeing Inks $3B Passenger Aircraft Supply Deal With Iran Aseman Airlines
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 5, 2017
Boeing Inks $3B Passenger Aircraft Supply Deal With Iran Aseman Airlines


Boeing Inks $3B Passenger Aircraft Supply Deal With Iran Aseman AirlinesBoeing has signed a potential $3 billion deal to supply 30 737 MAX passenger aircraft to Iran Aseman Airlines.

The memorandum of agreement will also provide the Iranian carrier with rights to procure 30 additional Boeing-built 737 MAX planes, Boeing said Tuesday.

Boeing entered into the transaction after the U.S. government validated that Iran had satisfied requirements of a 2015 nuclear agreement.

The company expects to begin deliveries by 2022 and will seek approval from the Treasury Department’s office of foreign assets control over its deal with the airline that is expected to create approximately 18,000 U.S. jobs.

Aerospace analysts said Boeing’s sales deals with Iran would test the priorities of President Donald Trump, who has vowed to protect U.S. industries and employees from foreign competition and apposed a nuclear agreement with the Middle Eastern country, according to a report by Rick Gladstone for the New York Times.

The potential deal with Iran Aseman Airlines came months after Boeing signed a potential $16.6 billion contract in December 2016 to produce and supply 80 passenger aircraft to Iran Air.

Civilian/News
Tom Sorley to Chair FirstNet Public Safety Advisory Panel
by Scott Nicholas
Published on April 4, 2017
Tom Sorley to Chair FirstNet Public Safety Advisory Panel


Tom Sorley to Chair FirstNet Public Safety Advisory PanelTom Sorley, vice chair of the First Responder Network Authority’s public safety advisory committee over the past four years, has been appointed as chair of the panel.

FirstNet said Monday the more than 30-year public safety veteran will lead PSAC and its efforts to help the agency uphold its goal to create a nationwide broadband network for public safety personnel along with the communities they serve.

Sorley also serves as the PSAC representative from the U.S. Conference of Mayors and deputy chief information officer of public safety at the City of Houston Information Technology Services  department.

He is responsible for radio communications and IT services for the Houston Emergency Center, the city’s integrated dispatch and emergency operations hub.

His three-decade career also includes time as manager of the Orange County, Florida, public safety communications division.

Sorley’s appointment came less than a week after FirstNet awarded a potential $6.5 billion contract to AT&T  to build the country’s first national emergency services network.

DoD/News
Vice Adm. Mary Jackson Assumes Navy Installations Command Leadership
by Scott Nicholas
Published on April 4, 2017
Vice Adm. Mary Jackson Assumes Navy Installations Command Leadership

 

Vice Adm. Mary Jackson Assumes Navy Installations Command Leadership
Mary Jackson

Vice Adm. Mary Jackson, former commander of Navy Region Southeast, officially assumed the role of commander of the Navy Installations Command during a change-of-command ceremony held Friday in Washington.

The service branch said Friday Jackson succeeded Vice Adm. Dixon Smith, who served as the fifth CNIC and managed 71 Navy installations under 11 regions that include transmitter sites, missile ranges, schools, naval magazines and fuel storage sites.

Former President Barack Obama nominated Jackson for the CNIC position in November last year.

Her sea assignments have included service as assistant operations officer and navigator on USS Willamette, executive officer of USS Stout and operations officer of the USS Briscoe and USS Vella Gulf.

She previously commanded the USS McFaul guided missile destroyer, which served as the flagship for the Combined Task Force Iraqi Maritime and Destroyer Squadron 50 in the Arabian Gulf and the North Arabian Sea.

Jackson also held various positions at the U.S. Naval Academy, U.S. Joint Forces Command, Naval Surface Forces, Atlantic Fleet, Navy Personnel Command and Naval Station Norfolk.

 

News
GAO: Congress Should Let Agencies Determine Insurance Coverage Level for Data Breach Victims
by Ramona Adams
Published on April 4, 2017
GAO: Congress Should Let Agencies Determine Insurance Coverage Level for Data Breach Victims


GAO: Congress Should Let Agencies Determine Insurance Coverage Level for Data Breach VictimsThe Government Accountability Office has said Congress should consider allowing agencies to determine the appropriate level of identity theft insurance coverage for affected individuals of data breaches.

GAO said in a report published Thursday agencies that experienced data breaches are required by law to provide identity theft services for impacted persons.

The Office of Personnel Management, which experienced cyber attacks in 2015, is required by law to offer identity theft services to affected individuals and cover $5 million in identity theft insurance.

Auditors noted that the mandated level of insurance coverage is “likely unnecessary” since paid claims seldom cost more than a few thousand dollars.

GAO added that insurance requirements could increase federal costs; mislead consumers on insurance benefits; and lead to an escalation of coverage amounts in the marketplace.

The congressional watchdog also found that OPM delivered duplicative identity theft services to approximately 3.6 million impacted individuals and that the Office of Management and Budget has yet to consider options to help federal agencies mitigate service duplication.

OPM does not have criteria or procedures in place to determine when to offer identity theft services and the agency does not always document how it decided to offer such services, the report stated.

GAO urged OPM to establish procedures on the provision of identity theft services as well as document its decision-making process.

OMB should also evaluate the effectiveness of identity theft services and explore options to prevent duplication in federal agencies’ service delivery, the government audit agency noted.

News
Vice Adm. Thomas Moore: Navy Needs 2K Additional Civilian Employees to Address Ship Maintenance Backlog
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 4, 2017
Vice Adm. Thomas Moore: Navy Needs 2K Additional Civilian Employees to Address Ship Maintenance Backlog


Vice Adm. Thomas Moore: Navy Needs 2K Additional Civilian Employees to Address Ship Maintenance Backlog
Thomas Moore

Vice Adm. Thomas Moore, chief of the Naval Sea Systems Command, has said the U.S. Navy needs to hire at least 2,000 additional civilian employees to help address the maintenance backlog at the service branch’s shipyards, Federal News Radio reported Monday.

Scott Maucione writes the employment of additional civilians would help address maintenance issues with the military branch’s fleet of 285 ships and increase NAVSEA’s workforce to approximately 36,000 employees.

“Today, we only deliver about 40 percent of our ships and submarines out of maintenance availabilities on time and that’s causing great stress for the fleet,” Moore said Monday at the Sea Space Symposium in Maryland.

Moore also cited the training of new hires as one of the factors behind delays in ship maintenance during a Senate hearing Wednesday.

“We’ve invested a lot of money in our training systems, so that a young worker can come in today and takes some about one to two years to the point that they can actually provide real wrench turning on the ship,” he told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee, the report added.

Her remarks came months after the Navy unveiled a new shipbuilding plan that seeks to increase the service branch’s battle force fleet to 355 ships within the next 30 years.

DoD/News
Air Force Nominee Heather Wilson Says to Prioritize Space Threat Awareness
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 4, 2017
Air Force Nominee Heather Wilson Says to Prioritize Space Threat Awareness


Air Force Nominee Heather Wilson Says to Prioritize Space Threat Awareness
Heather Wilson

Heather Wilson, the White House’s nominee for the U.S. Air Force secretary post, has said she plans to prioritize efforts to raise awareness of threats to space assets once confirmed, Space News reported Friday.

Phillip Swarts writes Wilson, a former U.S. representative from New Mexico, told members of the Senate Armed Services Committee during her confirmation hearing Thursday that space will continue to be a “contested domain in any future conflict.”

She added she would seek to introduce changes to the Air Force’s acquisition process and advance efforts to increase the service branch’s investment in research and development initiatives.

Prior to the hearing, Wilson also responded to written questions about space such as her commitment to ceasing U.S. reliance’s on Russian-built RD-180 rocket engines as well as support to competition in the launch of national security payloads and development of offensive capabilities for space control to help counter threats to space assets, the report added.

DoD/News
Capt. John Dougherty Named Navy Precision Strike Weapons Program Manager
by Scott Nicholas
Published on April 3, 2017
Capt. John Dougherty Named Navy Precision Strike Weapons Program Manager


Capt. John Dougherty Named Navy Precision Strike Weapons Program Manager
John Dougherty

Capt. John Dougherty, formerly class desk officer for the U.S. Navy‘s unmanned carrier aviation program office, has taken a new role as manager of the service branch’s precision strike weapons program office.

The Navy said Thursday that Dougherty will oversee 30 programs that cost more than $4.7 billion combined, including the Naval Air Systems Command’s foreign military sales portfolio.

He succeeded Capt. Jaime Engdahl, who will retire in July after a 27-year military career.

The service branch previously assigned Dougherty to various roles at NAVAIR such as airborne and rockets pyrotechnics integrated product team lead for the direct and time sensitive strike weapons program office; deputy director of development for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program office; and weapon systems integration and radar integrated product team lead for F/A-18 & EA-18G program office.

Dougherty also supported combat strike missions during Operations Southern Watch and Enduring Freedom as a pilot for Strike Fighter Squadron 125.

He has recorded more than 1,200 hours and 300 carrier landings as an F/A-18 command pilot.

DoD/News
Gen. John Hyten: US Should Increase Nuclear Modernization Spending by 3%
by Ramona Adams
Published on April 3, 2017
Gen. John Hyten: US Should Increase Nuclear Modernization Spending by 3%


Gen. John Hyten: US Should Increase Nuclear Modernization Spending by 3%
John Hyten

Air Force Gen. John Hyten, head of the U.S. Strategic Command, has said the federal government should boost spending on efforts to modernize the country’s nuclear arsenal by 2.5 percent to three percent, DoD News reported Friday.

Jim Garamone writes Hyten told audience at the annual Military Reporters and Editors meeting that nuclear modernization will require nearly six percent of the defense budget.

Hyten, an inductee into Executive Mosaic‘s Wash100 for 2017, added nuclear weapons currently account for approximately 3.5 percent of the budget.

“When you think of the survival of our nation — and I think that is the most important reason we have a military… the backstop of all of that is the nuclear enterprise,” he said.

Hyten noted submarines are the “most survivable” element of the nuclear triad while intercontinental ballistic missiles are the “most ready” and bomber aircraft are the “most flexible.”

DoD/News
Reports: Trump Eyes ‘Unilateral’ Action to Stop North Korea’s Nuclear Threats
by Scott Nicholas
Published on April 3, 2017
Reports: Trump Eyes ‘Unilateral’ Action to Stop North Korea’s Nuclear Threats


Reports: Trump Eyes 'Unilateral' Action to Stop North Korea's Nuclear ThreatsPresident Donald Trump has said he will take unilateral action to restrain North Korea’s nuclear weapons program if China does not cooperate with the U.S. to address the problem, CNN reported Monday.

Eli Watkins writes Trump will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping this week to discuss nuclear threats from North Korea and possible measures to reduce the U.S. trade deficit in China.

The U.S. thinks China should heighten financial pressure against North Korea given that China accounts for approximately 70 percent of North Korea’s trade, Watkins reported.

“China will either decide to help us with North Korea or they won’t… If China is not going to solve North Korea, we will,” Trump told the Financial Times in an interview.

Reuters reported Sunday that Trump’s national security advisers have begun to review economic and military  strategies they believe can disrupt North Korea’s missile and nuclear programs.

A U.S. government official told Reuters the review “de-emphasizes direct military action.”

The report said Trump and Xi could also discuss Chinese presence in the South China Sea, where nearly $5 trillion in ship-borne trade passes annually.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
GAO: DoD’s Weapon Acquisition Programs Rose to 79 in 2015
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 3, 2017
GAO: DoD’s Weapon Acquisition Programs Rose to 79 in 2015


GAO: DoD’s Weapon Acquisition Programs Rose to 79 in 2015The Government Accountability Office has found that the number of weapon programs under the Defense Department’s portfolio of defense acquisitions rose from 78 in 2014 to 79 in 2015.

GAO said in a report published Friday that DoD’s planned investments in weapons programs under the 2015 portfolio dropped to $1.44 trillion compared with $1.45 trillion in the 2014 portfolio.

The report also showed that the average schedule delay in the delivery of initial capability to service personnel also climbed by 2.4 months due to delays in some defense acquisition programs.

Seven of the 43 programs that GAO evaluated failed to implement some knowledge-based practices to acquisition such as the need to mature technology platforms before system development and completion of systems engineering assessments.

“As a result, these programs will carry unwanted risk into subsequent phases of acquisition that could result in cost growth or schedule delays,” the congressional budget watchdog said.

GAO also noted that most of DoD’s 43 weapon programs have generated savings worth approximately $21 billion as a result of the implementation of “should cost” analysis and other initiatives that seek to reform the acquisition process.

The agency added that it also found a decline in the number of programs that incorporate competition as part of acquisition strategies.

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