How do I get an outside line? montelukast fexofenadine and acebrophylline tablets The chief Warlord at Eglin is a 40-year-old lieutenant colonel named David Berke, a combat veteran of both Afghanistan and Iraq. As we walked around the Warlordsâ hangarâwhich for a maintenance facility is oddly pristine, like an automobile showroomâBerke made clear that he and his men are intently focused on their mission: training enough Marine pilots and maintainers to meet the 2015 deadline. Asked whether Washington-imposed urgencyârather than the actual performance of the aircraftâwas driving the effort, Berke was adamant: âMarines donât play politics. Talk to anyone in this squadron from the pilots to the maintainers. Not a single one of them will lie to protect this program.â During the day and a half I spent with the Warlords and their air-force counterparts, the Gorillas, it became clear that the men who fly the F-35 are among the best fighter jocks America has ever produced. They are smart, thoughtful, and skilledâthe proverbial tip of the spear. But I also wondered: Whereâs the rest of the spear? Why, almost two decades after the Pentagon initially bid out the program, in 1996, are they flying an aircraft whose handicaps outweigh its provenâas opposed to promisedâcapabilities? By way of comparison, it took only eight years for the Pentagon to design, build, test, qualify, and deploy a fully functional squadron of previous-generation F-16s.
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