jynxyjoe
Queso King
To SIU, I'm not worried about us needing their technical support. For many reasons I'm not gonna delve into here. Simply put making parts out of nothing is huge business in this country. Since we will have all the plans for the aircraft and we will be doing the certification in this country I'm not at all, in the slightest, worried about needing EADS support. ESPECIALLY when it comes to military aircraft. If it was some part 25 certified piece and we may need a STC later to keep the fleet flying legally I'd have some concern. For instance when we did the F-22 project, and JSF, and I think everything in the last 20-30 years including the B-2, the government just laughs when we tell them what would need to be done to get things up to a Part 25 standard.
The 787 and whatever articles going with it will hopefully point out what a coupe this project has been. Boeing had a pretty good idea the WTO lawsuit would be tied up for years without any guarantee of a win. Thank you international law. Their complaint was that a government subsidized industry like EADS/Airbus will blow the doors off a company without direct government aid. EADS said we were outa our mind and we'd better just shut up because the argument is some sort of strawman because Boeing does take state and fed monies. Boeing did the suit anyway, but to hedged their bets when they gave most composite production over to Japan who will do exactly what EADS is doing. Boeing has been laughing all the way to the bank on that one.
EADS can't get a clear victory on this WTO dispute for a few reasons. One reason is a lot of the state and fed aid "going to Boeing" is also being sent right to Airbus through the same project. Perhaps one of the bigger reasons, I'm not a WTO lawyer obviously, is Boeing's ability to compete with Japan subsidizing most of the risk associated with this composite structure.
*cough cough* Not that this is was planned or anything...
Also when you get a couple EADS/Airbus/European gents in the same room and have an open and honest conversation about it, they don't know what to do to even the playing field and neither do we. Neither side wants a trade war thankfully.
The 787 and whatever articles going with it will hopefully point out what a coupe this project has been. Boeing had a pretty good idea the WTO lawsuit would be tied up for years without any guarantee of a win. Thank you international law. Their complaint was that a government subsidized industry like EADS/Airbus will blow the doors off a company without direct government aid. EADS said we were outa our mind and we'd better just shut up because the argument is some sort of strawman because Boeing does take state and fed monies. Boeing did the suit anyway, but to hedged their bets when they gave most composite production over to Japan who will do exactly what EADS is doing. Boeing has been laughing all the way to the bank on that one.
EADS can't get a clear victory on this WTO dispute for a few reasons. One reason is a lot of the state and fed aid "going to Boeing" is also being sent right to Airbus through the same project. Perhaps one of the bigger reasons, I'm not a WTO lawyer obviously, is Boeing's ability to compete with Japan subsidizing most of the risk associated with this composite structure.
*cough cough* Not that this is was planned or anything...
Also when you get a couple EADS/Airbus/European gents in the same room and have an open and honest conversation about it, they don't know what to do to even the playing field and neither do we. Neither side wants a trade war thankfully.