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- <text id=91TT0128>
- <title>
- Jan. 21, 1991: Death Of The A-12
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Jan. 21, 1991 January 15:Deadline For War
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 45
- Death of the A-12
- </hdr><body>
- <p>No more blank checks, insists Defense Secretary Cheney as he
- shoots down a $57 billion Navy attack bomber
- </p>
- <p>By ED MAGNUSON--Reported by Staci Kramer/St. Louis and Jay
- Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> With the U.S. poised on the brink of war, it seemed an odd
- moment to shake up the nation's military-industrial complex.
- But that did not deter Defense Secretary Dick Cheney last week
- from canceling the Navy's A-12 Avenger attack bomber and
- sending military contractors the clearest signal yet that the
- Reagan-era good times are over. The old buddy-buddy
- relationship between the Pentagon and arms makers who blithely
- exceed contract costs and expect taxpayers to pick up the tab
- has ended.
- </p>
- <p> As the tough-minded Cheney shot down a program that had been
- expected to produce 620 of the high-tech stealth aircraft at
- a cost of $57 billion, he implicitly emphasized another
- military reality of the 1990s: the U.S. simply cannot afford
- many of the multibillion-dollar weapons systems that were
- started during Reagan's $2 trillion defense buildup and now
- continue to escalate in price.
- </p>
- <p> The attempt by the Soviet Union to compete in this arms race
- contributed heavily to its economic collapse and may have
- hastened the end of the cold war. But if the military spending
- splurge is not sharply curtailed, it could endanger the U.S.
- economy as well. "We have an unusually large number of new
- programs that are hitting a decision on full-scale
- procurement," explains Gordon Adams, a private defense
- specialist. "This fiscal bow wave is hitting just as the money
- is running out."
- </p>
- <p> Cheney's abrupt action showed too that the shriveling of the
- defense budget is little affected by such immediate emergencies
- as a potential war in the Persian Gulf. For contractors, the
- long- and short-term trends are contradictory. As the
- developers of new weapons systems face increasingly tough
- times, suppliers who meet the needs of Desert Shield with such
- items as boots, camouflage netting and gas masks are enjoying
- an unexpected--but presumably brief--bonanza.
- </p>
- <p> Cheney reached his dramatic decision to scrap the A-12 after
- a tense six-hour debate in his Pentagon office. Navy Secretary
- Lawrence Garrett and his top acquisition officials tried to
- persuade the Defense Secretary and Joint Chiefs Chairman Colin
- Powell that the Avenger should be saved even though the program
- was running $2.7 billion over its fixed-price contract cost of
- $4.8 billion for development alone. It was also 18 months
- behind schedule.
- </p>
- <p> The Navy suggested the usual fix. It would buy fewer planes
- than planned and stretch out the delivery dates. Cheney could
- ask Congress to provide $1.4 billion in extra costs; the two
- manufacturers, McDonnell Douglas and General Dynamics, would
- then be covered and content. Development of the advanced plane
- could proceed. That was the way contractors and their military
- supervisors had long done business.
- </p>
- <p> But Cheney was not buying. If he did go to Congress and
- managed to scrape up the $1.4 billion, he kept asking, would
- the contractors then develop the eight prototypes and meet all
- the contract terms? Or would they run over budget again? "The
- bottom line was that no one could tell Cheney how much money
- it would take to finish the development program," explained a
- defense official. "They couldn't say that $1.4 billion would
- be enough. And he wasn't going to write any blank checks."
- </p>
- <p> Cheney decided he would not beg Congress for the money now,
- only to return later and plead for more. He ordered the Navy
- not to try an end run by seeking out friends on Capitol Hill
- to find the funds. Then he courageously killed the program.
- Said Cheney: "If we cannot spend the taxpayers' money wisely,
- we will not spend it."
- </p>
- <p> The action was especially gutsy since there are no firm
- plans for an alternative to the Avenger. It was meant to
- replace the fabled but aging A-6 Intruder, first deployed in
- 1963, as the Navy's basic carrier-based attack bomber. The
- stress of jarring carrier landings for such a long time has so
- weakened at least one-third of the Intruders that their pilots
- have been ordered to restrict certain maneuvers lest the planes
- fall apart.
- </p>
- <p> The Avenger was designed to carry a bomb load much farther
- than the Intruder, which can tote 10,000 lbs. over 650 miles.
- The new aircraft had been seen as ideal for delivering bombs
- deep into the Soviet Union after leaving its carrier. Its
- profile on radar screens was less than 20% that of the
- Intruder.
- </p>
- <p> With the warming of U.S.-Soviet relations, Navy critics
- contend, the Avenger had lost the urgency of its main mission.
- Yet its demise was prompted mainly by a series of scandalous
- failures that were typical of the way the military acquires
- most of its big-ticket weapons systems. When the A-12 contract
- was let in 1988, the McDonnell Douglas-General Dynamics team
- bid $1 billion less than its competitor, a Grumman-Northrop
- consortium. Since the bid was unrealistically low, the Avenger
- contractors quickly ran into excessive costs and slipped behind
- schedule.
- </p>
- <p> If that was to be expected, the subsequent behavior of
- McDonnell Douglas and General Dynamics, both based in St.
- Louis, was not. According to reports last year by the Navy and
- the Pentagon's inspector general, the two contractors hid these
- problems from the Navy officers supervising the work. The
- manufacturing executives falsified some of their reports,
- according to the Navy, because they were under intense pressure
- from their corporate bosses to "maximize cash flow."
- </p>
- <p> The Navy failed to detect the continuing deception because
- of a persistent Pentagon problem with its advanced projects:
- so much of the work was highly classified that there were not
- enough competent auditors with clearance to examine the bills.
- </p>
- <p> When top Navy and Pentagon officials belatedly learned of
- the Avenger mess, they downplayed it and ignored the
- implications. That led Cheney last April to assure Congress
- that the program was on track in both time and cost. After he
- learned that this was untrue, two high Navy officers were
- removed from supervising the contract and censured; in
- addition, an admiral was fired, and the Pentagon's top
- procurement officer resigned. The Justice Department has begun
- a criminal investigation of whether the contractors overcharged
- the Navy. And the Pentagon said it will try to recover the
- funds already spent in excess of the contract terms.
- </p>
- <p> Spokesmen for the two contractors insisted that they had not
- defaulted on the contract and said they would seek payment of
- all their claims against the government. They attributed the
- problems to a recent Pentagon practice that they consider
- unrealistic: insisting that a fixed price be determined in
- advance for projects that are, as a General Dynamics spokesman
- said, "on the cutting edge of technology."
- </p>
- <p> Both companies began carrying out previously announced
- contingency plans to lay off large numbers of workers.
- McDonnell Aircraft Co. started to hand out pink slips to some
- 5,000 workers, mostly in St. Louis, while General Dynamics
- targeted 4,000 employees for dismissal in Fort Worth and Tulsa.
- </p>
- <p> But if there was gloom over the crash of the Avenger,
- McDonnell Douglas and General Dynamics have other military
- projects going to keep them in business. The two companies
- expect to benefit marginally by selling arms to Saudi Arabia
- as part of a $7.1 billion package approved by the
- Administration last fall in a Desert Shield trade-off. McDonnell
- Douglas will sell 12 Apache helicopters to the Saudis for $144
- million, and General Dynamics will provide 150 M-1A2 tanks
- costing $480 million.
- </p>
- <p> Cheney's crackdown on the A-12 was actually in line with the
- get-tough policy he has been pursuing for months. He had
- previously approved the killing of the Marine Corps's V-22
- Osprey vertical-takeoff plane, the Navy's Lockheed P-7
- antisubmarine patrol aircraft, the Army's FOG-M (fiber-optic
- guided missile) and an Air Force plan to place the MX missile
- on rails. Said a Pentagon official of the new procurement mood:
- "Programs that are bleeding cannot survive."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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