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by ethbr1 880 days ago
From memory, without looking back through Wikipedia, the original contract award was killed. Then Boeing won the new bid.

Acquisition at that level is extremely cutthroat, so who knows what happened.

The broader perspective is that the current major aircraft contracts are:

   - F-35 Lockheed-Martin
   - B-21 Northrop Grumman
   - KC-46 Boeing
   - X-37 (Space) Boeing
   - MQ-25 (Naval Refueling) Boeing
That seems like a pretty fair spreading of contracts among the remaining majors, especially if you had less faith in Boeing to produce combat equipment, but still wanted to maintain it as a company.
1 comments

We do know what happened though. Boeing used an insider to pass information about their competitors bids and then gave them a high paying job with a large sign on bonus.

They got the contract killed because they knew they could work up a furor about a European design being used by the US. Of course it's fine in the other direction.

There's legitimate reasons to not want to depend on an ally for equipment but in this case it seems that Boeing haven't been able to deliver on it at all. Losing might have been a good kick up the ass to improve for the next time this type of contract comes around.

I mean, the billions of dollars hole in their books in doing a decent job of that.

They've already made noise about 'being more selective about their bids in the future' or some such.

Which is honestly the way it should work. Because the US govt can't reform Boeing. Only Boeing can choose to do that internally.