I would guess you're not going to see a lot of folks announce orders during this period for Boeing products.

Spinning it off kind of just gives the problems to your shareholders, and a joint venture really doesn't do much for you. The optimal plan would be to sell it and use the cash to reduce debt.

I assume part of it has to do with the budget.

I don't lose any sleep whether they miss by 2 or 6 or 8 cents. The concern is how this ends, do they come back as one team, or do they come back one at a time with an attitude. That could impact [on whether] you recover in the quarter.

This is an area where you could say the performance appears not to have been great. Someone in the Army or the company should have figured out what the requirements were.

There's probably going to be more money coming to the industry, but it's difficult to put precise numbers on it right now.

In normal market it could get back to 60.

Funding for weapons has been moving up for four years. This creates momentum for bigger numbers in the future.

Versus the positions as we went into the strike, Boeing certainly looks like they did give more, ... would cost both sides more, so getting it settled earlier is definitely better.