The Pentagon issues a jumbled list of contracts every business day around 5:00PM local time. Our project distills an entire month of these contracts into an accessible form.
The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) spent at least $10,635,283,000 on 142 individual contracts during October 2016. This amount does not include Foreign Military Sales transactions worth $481,384,637.
FOREIGN MILITARY SALES (FMS) – Through FMS, the U.S. government procures and transfers materiel to allied nations and international organizations.
CFM International Inc. received $14,724,356 to provide Australia with supplies and services required for CFM56 engine field assessment, unscheduled engine repair, and technical assistance. Non-competitive, per FAR 6.302-1a2.
Conti Federal Services received $64,580,000 for construction at site 13414 in Israel.
Lockheed Martin received $31,069,159 to provide shipboard testing and integration in support of Japan’s Aegis modernization program.
Lockheed Martin received $20,564,338 to upgrade Italy’s C-130J Operational Flight Trainer and Cockpit Avionics Part Task Trainer.
Lockheed Martin received $11,815,569 for engineering & logistics on MK 92 Fire Control System life-cycle maintenance (overhaul, install, maintain) to USA and FMS (Poland, Saudi Arabia).
Nibor Enterprises Inc. received $11,470,618 to work on “projects 13372, 13416, and 13493” for Israel.
Northrop Grumman received $14,375,411 to provide Japan E-2D spares and support equipment
Swiftships LLC received $14,591,075 for continuous lifecycle support (maintenance, repairs, platform overhaul support) on Iraqi Navy patrol boats, offshore vessels, and defender boats. Work at Umm Qasr Naval Base, Iraq.
Textron (AAI) received $206,561,704 to provide Australia with RQ-7B Shadow contractor logistics sustainment services.
http://www.newsbud.com/2016/11/07/newsbud-exclusive-report-a-distillation-dod-spending-spree-for-october-2016/
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