Daily Report

Oct. 27, 2011

The Outside View

Cuts of roughly $1 trillion to the defense budget over the next 10 years would cost the nation more than one million jobs, slow US economic growth, and reverberate throughout non-defense sectors, said three noted academics Wednesday. "We're talking about cuts in defense spending . . . in an environment in which the economy already has a 9 percent unemployment rate and many others who are on part time work. So we're making worse the weakness of the American economy by cutting spending," Martin Feldstein, Harvard University economics professor, told the House Armed Services Committee. He was discussing the impact of sequestration, the 2011 Budget Control Act's provision that would take up to $100 billion from the Pentagon's budget annually over that span if lawmakers cannot agree where to slash federal spending. Stephen Fuller, economics professor at George Mason University in Virginia, said in Fiscal 2013 alone, the projected growth of the nation's GDP would fall by 25 percent from 2.3 percent to 1.7 percent. "More fundamentally, we are going to live in a world that is more hostile to our economic and democratic values," said Peter Morici, University of Maryland economics professor, warning of the consequences of a weakened US military. (See also The Ugly Truth.) (Feldstein statement) (Fuller statement) (Morici statement)

Raptors Return to Flight

The Air Force’s F-22s are flying again, officials at JB Langley-Eustis, Va., and JB Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, told the Daily Report Wednesday. Both bases temporarily grounded their Raptor fleets last week after two Virginia-based pilots experienced hypoxia-like symptoms during a training...

Pursuing Energy Security

As the Air Force “aggressively” pursues greater energy security, it will focus on building resiliency into the full range of its mission activities, said Kevin Geiss, USAF’s deputy assistant secretary for energy, Wednesday. The service also seeks to reduce its...

New Numbers on US, Russian Strategic Nuclear Arms

The State Department released the newest set of data on the aggregate numbers of US and Russian strategic nuclear arms. According to the data, current as of Sept. 1, the United States has 1,790 nuclear warheads on 822 deployed launchers...

An Energetic Plan

Within the next five years, half of the jet fuel that the Air Force consumes domestically each year will be synthetic fuel blends, said Kevin Geiss, the service’s deputy assistant secretary for energy. Speaking Wednesday at an AFA-sponsored event in...

Building an Efficient, High-Performance Engine

The science and technology phase of the Air Force’s Adaptive Versatile Engine Technology, or ADVENT, program is expected to wrap up in Fiscal 2013, according to Kevin Geiss, deputy assistant secretary of the Air Force for energy. Under ADVENT—an Air...

Bridging the Gulf Coast

A Mississippi Air National Guard C-17 assigned to the 172nd Airlift Wing in Jackson left New Orleans, wending its way along the Gulf of Mexico coast to Alabama, on a diplomatic tour of past disasters. “The C-17 ride was an...

Part-time Peacekeepers

The National Guard is “ideally suited” for peacekeeping missions, said Amb. David Satterfield, director general of the Multinational Force and Observers. “You have proved yourself in the most challenging of combat situations around the world, and you are proving yourself...

Of Tinsel and Tubing

Lockheed Martin technicians will begin assembling the GeoEye-2 Earth-imaging satellite at the company’s facility in Sunnydale, Calif., upon arrival of the satellite’s integrated propulsion system by month’s end, announced the company. “Completion of the propulsion system installation and the start...

More Indonesian Falcons?

Indonesia’s government said it was prepared to accept a US offer for 24 surplus F-16s, reported The Jakarta Post, Wednesday. This announcement came on the heels of Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s visit to the country on Sunday during his tour...