15 juillet 2022 | International, C4ISR, Sécurité

US urges speed in Booz Allen antitrust case as NSA intel contract nears

U.S. attorneys argue a speedier clip is necessary to preserve competition on a National Security Agency contract dubbed Optimal Decision, which deals with signals intelligence and simulation services.

https://www.c4isrnet.com/industry/2022/07/14/us-urges-speed-in-booz-allen-antitrust-case-as-nsa-intel-contract-nears/

Sur le même sujet

  • Can Tempest and FCAS projects both succeed in Europe?

    29 juin 2020 | International, Aérospatial

    Can Tempest and FCAS projects both succeed in Europe?

    By Flight International 26 June 2020 For some, a time of global economic crisis might not feel like the perfect moment for nations to invest huge sums of money to develop a new class of combat aircraft only due to enter use around 2035-2040. Currently, six European governments and their national defence industry champions are involved in the early phases of two competing – and comparable – projects to deliver such a capability. In the opinion of Airbus Defence & Space chief executive Dirk Hoke, Europe's current trio of advanced fighters – the Dassault Rafale, Eurofighter Typhoon and Saab Gripen – represent a wasteful replication of industrial effort – and all lose out by battling for the same orders. Hoke is championing a future combat air system (FCAS) project now combining the resources and know-how of French and German industry, and also later incorporating Spain. With its Tempest development having drawn interest from Italy and Sweden, the UK is not only turning away from its co-operation with Germany and Spain on Eurofighter, but applying the afterburners on their separation. Key players behind both efforts are united in their calls to “avoid the mistakes of the past”. For some, that refers to compromised yet complex requirements, sprawling manufacturing and final assembly arrangements, and political interference during export activities, while for others, a simple lack of harmony was at fault. Getting everyone to agree that having multiple final assembly lines for a fighter with a comparatively small production volume is an inefficient luxury is one thing – agreeing which will lose the strategic capability is quite another. International partnering spreads a programme's investment burden, but elements of the Eurofighter set-up and the Airbus Defence & Space A400M airlifter serve as cautionary tales. Three can be a crowd, but a lack of agreement among four or seven involved nations can cause lengthy delay and spiralling costs. Surely Europe can comfortably support two next-generation combat aircraft programmes? Indeed, those involved in FCAS and Tempest eye them as offering a real opportunity to power part of their nations' economic recovery in the post-coronavirus era. For an alternative view should the projects eventually have to merge, a unified solution could serve all 27 EU member states, plus the UK. Such a prospect could make the US-led Lockheed Martin F-35 programme look like a bureaucratic cakewalk by comparison. https://www.flightglobal.com/defence/can-tempest-and-fcas-projects-both-succeed-in-europe/139007.article

  • How the US replaced Russia’s RD-180 engine, strengthening competition

    11 janvier 2024 | International, Aérospatial

    How the US replaced Russia’s RD-180 engine, strengthening competition

    Opinion: The Vulcan launch and engine development should be considered a success story for U.S. industrial policy.

  • What TRADOC has been doing about recruiting and retention

    20 octobre 2021 | International, Aérospatial, Naval, Terrestre, C4ISR, Sécurité

    What TRADOC has been doing about recruiting and retention

    An update of measures Army leaders are taking to improve recruiting and retention.

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