The Star Malaysia

US Air Force in hot water over US$1,000 heatable mugs

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Washington: The US Air Force has found itself in a brewing scandal after it emerged that the service has been spending more than US$1,000 (RM4,169) to replace high tech coffee cups with fragile handles.

The mugs in question aren’t your usual porcelain caffeine containers, rather a special copper-and-chrome plated beaker that can plug into aircraft electrical systems to keep the cherished contents nice and warm.

According to Travis Air Force Base in California, which has “poured” over the numbers, the cups have risen in cost from US$693 (RM2,889) each in 2016 to US$1,220 (RM5,086) in 2018, due to a lack of replacemen­t plastic handles.

“Unfortunat­ely, when dropped, the handle breaks easily leading to the expenditur­e of several thousand dollars to replace the cup as replacemen­t parts are not available,” Technical Sergeant James Hodgman, a spokesman for Travis’s 60th Air Mobility Wing, wrote in a release.

The costly heated cups have become grounds for a grumble for at least one influentia­l lawmaker, namely senior Republican Senator Chuck Grassley.

The stirred-up senator wrote to Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson this month demanding answers about “yet another” report of wasteful Pentagon spending that he considered “reckless spending of taxpayer dollars”.

Wilson last week responded, saying it is “simply irresponsi­ble” to spend so much money on such matters, and blaming the price tag on many suppliers having either gone out of business or stopped producing certain parts.

She said the Air Force is working to remedy the issue by exploring several ways of making its own parts and carrying out in-house repairs.

“We recently demonstrat­ed capability to 3-D print replacemen­t handles for this item at a cost of about 50 cents each,” Wilson wrote.

US lawmakers have passed large increases in US defence spending under President Donald Trump, but have also bemoaned exorbitant costs of some items – including toilet seat covers for the C-17 cargo plane that cost US$10,000 apiece. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Heated situation: Certain US Air Force flight missions can last as long as 18 hours and require crew to heat up meals in mugs certified for safety. The US military’s need for coffee specifical­ly is well documented, going all the way back to the Revolution­ary War of 1775.
— AFP Heated situation: Certain US Air Force flight missions can last as long as 18 hours and require crew to heat up meals in mugs certified for safety. The US military’s need for coffee specifical­ly is well documented, going all the way back to the Revolution­ary War of 1775.

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