Boeing is waiting on the Pentagon to issue the requirements for the forthcoming KC-X tanker competition, so the company still doesn’t know yet whether it will offer an aerial refueler based on its 767 or its larger 777 commercial aircraft. But what is already clear is that the company is committed to taking a lower risk approach this time around, Rick LeMaster, Boeing’s KC-X program manager, told reporters today at AFA’s Air & Space Conference and Technology Exposition in Washington, D.C. This means there will be no so-called “Franken-tanker” like Boeing offered in the last KC-X go-around, when it proposed a variant of the of the 767 with new wings and other new major components added to the baseline 767 design. Lemaster said this is “not the strategy” that the company will pursue. Continue
U.S. Indo-Pacific Command has two new squadrons of F-35s at its disposal in Alaska just as “quite a bit of action” has taken place in the combatant command’s area of responsibility and the “advanced threats” there are becoming “more lethal,” said the squadrons’ wing commander, Col. David J. Berkland. Berkland’s…