Even before the Fiscal 2017 National Defense Authorization Act is voted on, and two months before inauguration day, some lawmakers are hoping the next administration files a supplemental budget request. House Armed Services Committee Chairman Rep. Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) said Wednesday he hopes President-elect Donald Trump submits a supplemental request focusing on programs that were not fully funded in the 2017 authorization bill. The House and Senate Armed Services Committees on Wednesday laid out their compromise language for the bill, which includes a pay raise but no increases for programs such as the F-35. Thornberry said it was “disappointing” that in order to finalize the compromise, lawmakers could not include funding levels the House was seeking in its version. The next administration could use a supplemental request to “make up some of that ground,” Thornberry said at a Foreign Policy Initiative event in Washington, D.C.
The Air Force’s plans for its portion of joint all-domain command and control have taken a major step forward. The service awarded an indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity, multiple-award contract worth up to $950 million to 27 companies. The IDIQ deal will give 27 contractors the opportunity to compete for work…