This article is included in these additional categories: Daily Rapid Fire | Fuel & Power | General Dynamics | India | IT - Cyber-Security | IT - Networks & Bandwidth | IT - Software & Integration | Official Reports | People | Procurement Innovations | Think Tanks
Rapid Fire June 7, 2012: CEO Turnover

For more on this and other stories, please consider purchasing a membership.
If you are already a subscriber, login to your account.
If you are already a subscriber, login to your account.
Jay L. Johnson will retire from his position as Chairman and CEO of General Dynamics at the end of the year. Phebe N. Novakovic, President and COO since last month, will replace him. CACI’s CEO Paul M. Cofoni is also leaving, to be replaced by Daniel D. Allen. The GAO says recent overseas posture choices announced by the Obama administration – the Navy’s stationing in Rota (Spain), a reduced Army presence in Europe – remain to be fully costed. A little more than a year after Ambassador Tim Roemer quit, it’s unclear whether US SecDef Panetta has much to show for his visit to India. He tasked his deputy Ashton Carter to facilitate high tech military exports, but then these are difficult even with countries much closer to the US than India. Times of India | LA Times. The $400+M fire onboard USS Miami apparently started in a vacuum cleaner, making it the most expensive vacuum cleaner in recorded history. The US Navy’s Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR) posted several updates pertaining to its ongoing NGEN intranet $4.5B RFP. Bidders have until June 11 to ask questions. FBO | SPAWAR. The Brookings Institute writes [PDF] that agile procurement […]
One Source: Hundreds of programs; Thousands of links, photos, and analyses
DII brings a complete collection of articles with original reporting and research, and expert analyses of events to your desktop – no need for multiple modules, or complex subscriptions. All supporting documents, links, & appendices accompany each article.
Benefits
- Save time
- Eliminate your blind spots
- Get the big picture, quickly
- Keep up with the important facts
- Stay on top of your projects or your competitors
Features
- Coverage of procurement and doctrine issues
- Timeline of past and future program events
- Comprehensive links to other useful resources
Monthly
$59.95/Per Month
- Charged Monthly
- 1 User
Quarterly
$50/Per Month
- $150 Charged Each Quarter
- 1 User
Yearly
$45/Per Month
- $540 charged each year
- 1 User
2 years
$35/Per Month
- $840 Charged every other year
- 1 User
