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Home > CENTERS AND INSTITUTES > INSS > NDU PRESS > RESEARCH AND CASE STUDIES > ICAF-CASE-STUDIES

ICAF Case Studies

 
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  • The Iron Triangle Manifested: U.S. Air Force Tanker Lease 2001–2005 Case Study by Shahnaz M. Punjani

    The Iron Triangle Manifested: U.S. Air Force Tanker Lease 2001–2005 Case Study

    Shahnaz M. Punjani

    The proposed lease of the KC–767 tanker aircraft was one of the most infamous procurement scandals of the post–Cold War era. Interactions within the military-industrial-congressional complex led to legislation permitting the Air Force to lease tankers from Boeing using an operating lease rather than standard procurement. Following the outcry from Congress, industry, the media, and numerous watchdog groups, Congress and the Department of Defense (DOD) launched a wave of investigations and hearings. During the lease debate, participants reached a number of compromises documented in congressional legislation. However, this was not sufficient to continue the lease process. After nearly 4 years, Congress cancelled the tanker lease and directed the Air Force to pursue a traditional procurement approach.

  • The Surge: General Petraeus and the Turnaround in Iraq by William A. Knowlton , Jr.

    The Surge: General Petraeus and the Turnaround in Iraq

    William A. Knowlton , Jr.

    When General David H. Petraeus, USA, took command of Multi-National Force–Iraq (MNF–I) on February 10, 2007, beginning his 3d tour and 28th month in Iraq, the situation was grim. Increasing sectarian violence had led to an escalation of killings of civilians in Iraq, with up to 150 corpses being found daily in Baghdad.1 The government of Prime Minister Nouri alMaliki was viewed by almost everyone as ineffective at best, and the U.S. military strategy was not well defined and clearly not working. Iraq appeared to be sliding out of control toward civil war or disintegration, and the United States appeared to be headed inexorably toward defeat— another Vietnam. Popular sentiment held that the best course of action was to cut our losses and disengage from a fight we were losing. General George Casey, USA, the outgoing commander of MNF–I, had supported a gradual drawdown of U.S. forces and a handoff of security tasks to Iraqi forces even as the situation got worse

 
 
 

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