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- NATION, Page 50Over the Side
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- A bomber program stalls, and an admiral gets sacked
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- Embarrassing the boss is never a good move. In September,
- Defense Secretary Dick Cheney fired General Michael Dugan as
- Air Force Chief of Staff for disclosing sensitive Air Force war
- plans for the Persian Gulf. Last week Vice Admiral Richard C.
- Gentz, head of the Naval Air Systems Command, became another
- casualty. He was sacked because he was in charge of an
- oversight system that failed to alert the Pentagon to problems
- in the Navy's A-12 attack-bomber program. That led Cheney to
- assure Congress in April that the plane was on schedule and on
- budget. In fact, the development turned out to be 18 months
- behind and $1.3 billion over its estimated cost of $4.38
- billion.
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- Navy Secretary H. Lawrence Garrett III ordered Gentz to
- retire by next February, ending a 33-year career. His top two
- subordinates overseeing the A-12 Avenger, a carrier-based plane
- that will use stealth technology, were censured. A Navy report
- accused the Avenger's developers, McDonnell Douglas and General
- Dynamics, of falling behind on the aircraft and concealing this
- from the Navy. The report also blamed the excessive secrecy
- surrounding the A-12 program for the failure of high-level
- Pentagon officials to spot flaws sooner in the contractors'
- rosy estimates.
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- The Avenger program is now expected to be reviewed, but not
- scrapped. The Navy still wants to buy 620 of the planes,
- costing at least $92 million apiece, to replace the aging A-6
- Intruder as the fleet's most potent attacker by 1995.
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