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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: i-node who wrote (439508)12/10/2008 11:15:37 AM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1575191
 
Gates expected to use new clout to scale back Pentagon weapons plans

latimes.com
( Time to dump those defense stocks? )
From the Los Angeles Times

Sniper blimps and light planes could gain favor over pricier projects, such as high-tech jets and the Future Combat Systems program.

By Julian E. Barnes

December 10, 2008

Reporting from Washington — For months, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates has criticized the Pentagon's spending priorities but has done little to change them, choosing instead to leave the most difficult decisions to the next administration.

With the announcement by President-elect Barack Obama last week that Gates will remain in his job in the new administration, the Defense chief has been given broad new power to reshape how the Pentagon selects, designs and builds new weapons systems.

The decision to keep Gates could spell the end of the Army's $160-billion Future Combat Systems program and dim Air Force hopes for large numbers of new high-tech F-22 fighter jets. At the same time, smaller projects -- perhaps blimps or light planes useful for ongoing conflicts -- are likely to find new support.

"It is going to be more of a Wal-Mart approach than a Gucci approach," a senior Pentagon official said.

Gates explained his decision to remain at the Pentagon last week by citing acquisition reform and military modernization as crucial challenges.

Pentagon officials, meanwhile, are bracing to see how Gates translates his words into action. Many officials believe that, under President Bush, Gates "punted" on key decisions such as the competition to build a new refueling tanker and whether to halt production of the F-22.

"Now he is going to be the recipient of those punts, and he won't be calling a fair catch," said Geoff Morrell, Pentagon press secretary. "He is prepared to deal with them head-on."

The Pentagon's proposed budget for 2010 will be sent to lawmakers in February, but it is unlikely to reflect dramatic shifts in priorities because it is being prepared under Bush. But in coming months, officials will begin making the more difficult spending choices, in part because of the new administration and in part because of a shrinking pool of money.

"A combination of budget shortfalls and the demands of fighting two wars will force very hard choices on the services and the Pentagon," a senior Defense official said. "Choices that might have been finessed in the past can no longer be avoided."

The official, like several others interviewed for this article, spoke on the condition of anonymity because decisions on spending and weapons programs have not yet been made.

In Obama's administration, Gates will face two primary issues: how the Pentagon buys weapons and which weapons it chooses to buy. Gates has been a critic of both.

The acquisition system at the Pentagon, particularly within the Air Force and Navy, has been mired in controversy. Ships have been delayed because of construction defects and other problems.

The Air Force has been embroiled in controversy and delays over several weapons competitions, including over its aerial tanker.

Morrell said Gates was not trying to remake the entire purchasing system.

"He wants to get acquisition and procurement back on track," Morrell said. "He is not looking to build a new railway, but he is determined to put them back on the rails."

In past months, Gates has been harshly critical of the Air Force's expensive F-22 fighter plane, favoring the less costly F-35.

But in recent interviews, Gates has softened his tone on the F-22, appearing open to a compromise that would allow Air Force officials to buy some additional planes, though not as many as they wanted.

Some senior officials believe it is unlikely that the Obama administration will shut down F-22 production, a move that could eliminate thousands of manufacturing jobs during a time of economic crisis.

"My assumption is he isn't going to do anything too radical because the fiscal environment will be very sensitive to radical things," said a senior Pentagon official. "If he were to say, 'I am going to cancel the F-22 program,' adding 10,000 people to the unemployment line is not going to be well-received."

But the senior official and others said they believed that systems not yet in production could be in greater jeopardy.

Gates acknowledges the need for strategic bombers and billion-dollar ships. But he has questioned whether the most sophisticated weapons can best counter low-intensity threats.

During his first two years at the Pentagon, Gates pushed the bureaucracy to field specialized equipment in Iraq, such as mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles, or MRAPs, that have helped reduce the number of casualties from roadside bombs.

Gates believes that the Pentagon must improve its ability to develop cheaper and low-tech weaponry for counterinsurgency missions, such as those in Iraq and Afghanistan.

But the military services remain focused on big weapons programs -- ships, planes and new generations of tanks and troop transports, officials argue.

"There are still a lot of programs out there that are more focused on the Cold War mentality, as opposed to what the secretary has described over the last year," the senior Pentagon official said.

There are dozens of ideas that can be developed, if Gates and his new team decide to support them.

Some Army officials are pushing development of a small blimp equipped with an automated high-powered sniper rifle that could provide a form of inexpensive but effective air support for platoons in Afghanistan.

Others would like to see light, propeller-driven aircraft armed with precision bombs that could be provided to Afghan armed forces. Such an inexpensive plane could be effective against Taliban militants, for example, but would not threaten Afghanistan's neighbors.

Gates' philosophy and the current economic situation will work against weapons systems that are years away from production, instead favoring alternatives that can be built more quickly for use in current conflicts.

Instead of a new generation of troop transports and tanks that are part of the Future Combat Systems, the Army could be pressured to instead build more Strykers, an armored vehicle that has proved effective in Iraq.

Such a move would save money by shelving an expensive program but would create more jobs by immediately producing the less sophisticated weapon.

Also in danger may be new high-tech bombers that are still on the drawing board. They could be replaced by unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs, as Gates and others look for cheaper and more effective systems for the current fight and the current fiscal reality.

"A $100-million aircraft is not required to drop a bomb in this environment," the senior Pentagon official said. "A $5-million UAV does just as well, and sometimes better."

Barnes is a writer in our Washington bureau.

julian.barnes@latimes.com



To: i-node who wrote (439508)12/10/2008 11:18:56 AM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1575191
 
U.S. Forces Mistakenly Kill 6 Afghan Police Officers

By KIRK SEMPLE

KABUL, Afghanistan — United States forces killed six Afghan police officers and one civilian on Wednesday during an assault on the hide-out of a suspected Taliban commander, the authorities said, in what an American military spokesman called a “tragic case of mistaken identity.” Thirteen Afghan officers were also wounded in the episode.

A statement issued jointly by the American and the Afghan military commands said a contingent of police officers fired on United States forces after the Americans had successfully overrun the hide-out, killing the suspected Taliban commander and detaining another man.

The statement said the Americans had already entered the hide-out, a building in Qalat, the capital of the southern province of Zabul, when they came under attack by small-arms fire and rocket-propelled grenades from “a compound nearby.”

“Multiple attempts to deter the engagement were unsuccessful,” the statement said.

The Americans, concerned about women and children hiding in the building, returned fire using small arms and aircraft, the statement said, offering no further details about the level of force the Americans used.

After the firefight, the Americans discovered they had been shooting at Afghan police officers, the statement said.

But the deputy police chief of Qalat, said the police officers had been in a police station when they came under American fire, which destroyed the station.

The official, Jailoni Khan Farahi, also said that the volley of bullets and rocket-propelled grenades against the Americans had not originated from the police station but rather from a building nearby. He said he did not know who was occupying that building at the time.

While cases of Afghan security forces firing on coalition troops are rare, they have raised concerns in the American-led international force that insurgents may have infiltrated the Afghan Army and police force.

Zabul’s governor, Delbar Jan Arman, said a joint Afghan and American delegation of military and civilian officials was heading to the scene to investigate.

“Coalition forces deeply regret the incident of mistaken fire,” said Col. Jerry O’Hara, an American military spokesman. “Initial reports indicate this was a tragic case of mistaken identity on both parts.”

Friendly fire incidents between coalition soldiers and Afghan security forces have occasionally resulted in casualties, most often among Afghan police officers, who are not as well trained or equipped as the Afghan Army.

But rarely have so many Afghan security personnel died in one episode.

In October, an airstrike in Khost Province by coalition forces killed nine Afghan Army soldiers and may have resulted from mistaken identity, American and Afghan officials said.

In June 2007, American forces called in air support when Afghan police officers opened fire on them during a hunt for Taliban militants. Seven Afghan police officers were killed.

Khalid Fazly contributed reporting.



To: i-node who wrote (439508)12/10/2008 11:24:02 AM
From: michael971231 Recommendation  Respond to of 1575191
 
Thats all i am asking of the shorty/dierks group here who are screaming about obama like little children. They are the new anti-americans who are rooting against the US. BTW i said the same thing of scum like parsons who also root against the interests of the USA. So you are sort of a moderate. I have a big tent policy. Happy to have you in the fold.