News wires report that DOD acquisition chief Ken Krieg has told Congress that the Pentagon will continue the Space Based Infrared System, despite its history of cost overruns. However, it is stripping two satellites from the program and plans to work with lawmakers to develop a SBIRS rival to provide a competitive atmosphere. Air Force Secretary Michael Wynne told reporters at a Pentagon briefing that the problems befalling SBIRS stemmed from deficient engineering and design innovation. He wants the service to instill a higher level of technical maturity in its space efforts. “It’s time for us to freeze configurations at a mature level and get what we can get out of a robust satellite,” Wynne said. In his view, the service could have launched SBIRS earlier when it still hovered at the $2 billion mark, instead of letting it run to today’s $6 billion. The other $4 billion, said Wynne, should have gone to design another spacecraft.
Roth Talks Transition Amid Administration Change, COVID
Feb. 26, 2021
Acting Air Force Secretary John P. Roth is shepherding the Department of the Air Force through the first months of the year as the nation awaits President Joe Biden’s pick for a permanent Secretary. Handing off the Air Force and Space Force to a new administration, including several officials in…