Requirements Creep Doomed the Electric BUFF: Snowballing requirements doomed the B-52 Standoff Jammer project, according to Gen. Michael Moseley. The original idea called for about a $1 billion project to develop interchangeable pods that could fulfill “a very narrow slice” of the SOJ requirement, said the USAF Chief of Staff at a Capitol Hill seminar Tuesday. But by the time the Air Force formally killed the project early this year, it had swelled to an overly ambitious $7 billion project. “We couldn’t afford it,” Moseley said. Asked why the Air Force couldn’t contain the requirements creep as it was happening, Moseley said “I don’t know. It’s a good question.” The Air Force is looking at a variety of options to replace the capability, but Moseley notes that “the desired effect” rather than a platform, will drive the solution this time. The service is considering a podded system that could be deployed on the F-15E or an unmanned air vehicle.
After months of debate and sometimes public tension, the Space Force and Intelligence Community are making progress on establishing ways to work together, officials said this week—to the point where one predicted there will soon be “a sharing of data like we've never seen before.”