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Thursday, March 20, 2008
Hugh Hewitt :: Townhall.com Columnist
Airbus v. Boeing: What Do Voters Think?
by Hugh Hewitt
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The recent award of a $35 billion dollar contract to Airbus-Northrop Grumman shocked more than the Boeing executives and employees who have always supplied the United States Air Force's tanker fleet.

It also sent the Pentagon-watchers into a tizzy of speculation and gossip.

Was Boeing being punished for the past corrupt practices of long-gone and rightly punished bad executives?

Had Boeing arrogantly ignored pushes and nudges from the Air Force?

Had the Air Force changed the rules in the middle of the process?

All these questions and more will be answered via the bid protest process launched by Boeing. But assume for the moment that the general Accounting Office rejects the protest and allows the contract to stand. Should the United States Congress intervene even if the GAO delivers a clean bill of health for the process.

There are lots of reasons to shake your head at the prospect of a French-led consortium building the next fleet of supertankers for our air force. The French have not exactly been the best of allies in the long war, and have been of almost no help at all in Afghanistan. The new president is a sharp uptick, yes, but even if became the new John Howard, would it send a good signal to our allies concerning the costs and benefits of cooperating with U.S. foreign policy to cut Airbus in on the biggest contract in a long, long time?

Doesn't selecting Airbus suggest that there is no way the Americans will ever put bad conduct of an ally ahead of its bottom line, and thus increase the likelihood of future bad conduct by other allies?

Then there is the question of national industrial policy -or rather the lack of it. Even confirmed free traders --and I am one of them-recognize the difference between massive military contracts and the ordinary flow of goods and services across global markets. To have a preference for retaining the basic industrial capacity that allows for a robust national defense sector is not to contradict free trade principles, but is rather to limit their application at that point where the national security may be eroded by shipping jobs and capacity overseas. I asked one friend within Boeing for an assessment of this argument. His reply:

It is yet one more blow to our aerospace capability, and in this case, a big blow in terms of loss of skilled jobs. A continuing erosion of our capabilities has other long term consequences such as fewer engineering students. Continued...

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About The Author

Hugh Hewitt is a law professor, broadcast journalist, and author of several books including A Mormon in the White House?: 110 Things Every American Should Know about Mitt Romney.

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Subject: This article is incipid! Get the Facts!
A thoughtful diligent search for the Air Force's next tanker has been turned into a political issue because darling, law breaking, crooked, unprepared Boeing did not get what they had no right to receive. The news on the Airbus Northrop Grumman proposal is lacking the facts which have been replaced by political high stakes deception at any price spin, something the crooked Boeing Company has become quite good at when dealing with government contracts. The Northrop Grumman plan is to have the planes build in the US, in Alabama. Boeing bought out all of their competition in the US way back in the 90's and now they are feeling entitled to something they did not earn, and because the Air Force wants to have the job done correctly instead of dealing with Boeing who makes you take it or leave it. The Air Force said leave it Boeing. The planes are generic aircraft which will be moved into a Northrop Grumman Facility in Mobile Alabama and be fitted as a tanker. The parts will be cheaper to the taxpayer, the planes will be built faster, this award recognizes going above and beyond to listen and provide exactly what the Air Force asked for. Boeing was asleep through the whole thing expecting to win without competing or answering the Air Forces Questions. Northrop Grumman will employ more Americans building the tankers than would have Boeing, and we get a competitor on the north american continent to Boeing. I think this is a wake up call to Boeing to get their act together and stop distorting the truth about the tanker contract. The right thing was done but Boeing is going to make sure we waste billions more in an already strained budget with their self-centered whining, they only care about the Boeing Co not America best interests.

How dumb can we be?
Apparently the Conservative boycott against France because they did not support US efforts to remove Saddam worked, They got a new pro-US president. Nicolas Sarkozy has changed French policy toward the US. Does that mean that we destroy the US defense industry to help the French? I don't think so!
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