On November 27, 2004, three soldiers in the United States Army serving in Afghanistan — Lieutenant Colonel Michael McMahon, Chief Warrant Officer Travis Grogan, and Specialist Harley Miller— died when the airplane that was transporting them crashed into the side of a mountain. The plane was owned and operated by defendant-appellant Presidential Airways, Inc. (“Presidential”).
1
The soldiers’ survivors (collectively, “McMahon”) filed a wrongful death action in state court against Presidential and appellants Worldwide Services, LLC; STI Aviation, Inc.; and Air Quest, Inc. (also subsidiaries of Presidential’s parent company, all hereinafter referred to collectively as “Presidential”).
2
After removing the case to the federal district court for the Middle District of Florida, Presidential moved to dismiss, arguing that the suit is barred by the principles of
Feres v. United States,
McMahon’s complaint alleges that Presidential entered into a contract with the Department of Defense (“DOD”) to provide air transportation and other support services in aid of the military mission in Afghanistan. A Statement of Work (“SOW”) governed the relationship between Presidential and the U.S. military. Presidential agreed to furnish “all fixed-wing aircraft, personnel, equipment, tools, material, maintenance, and supervision necessary to perform Short Take-Off and Landing (STOL) passenger, cargo, or passenger and cargo air transportation services” between various locations in Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, and Pakistan. DOD directed what missions would be flown, when they would be flown, and what passengers and cargo would be carried.
The SOW provided that Presidential would appoint a project manager to oversee its performance of the contract. Presidential was required to “develop and implement a commercial quality control plan to ensure safe and reliable air transportation in accordance with FAR 135 and 32 CFR 861.” FAR 135 is Part 135 of the civilian Federal Air Regulations, which governs the “commuter or on-demand operations” of commercial operators. 14 C.F.R. § 135.1. 32 C.F.R. § 861 contains the DOD’s own standards for commercial carriers. This regulation required Presidential to “supervise crew selection,” “ensure the risk associated with all flight operations is reduced to the lowest acceptable level,” “ensure that applicants [for flight crew] are carefully screened,” and “ensure[ ] the proper pairing of aircrews on all flights,” among other duties. 32 C.F.R. § 861.4.
The SOW also contained more specific restrictions on Presidential’s operations. It dictated how much rest crews had to receive between flights; described specifications for the planes Presidential was to use; and set out minimum and maximum limits on passengers and cargo per mission. Presidential had the ultimate authority to “refuse to fly any mission for safety reasons” (although each such mission had to be rescheduled).
*1337 McMahon alleges that on November 27, 2004, Presidential was scheduled to transport the three soldiers from Bagram Airfield in northern Afghanistan to Farah, in western Afghanistan. The aircraft chosen for the flight was a CASA 212-CC, twin-engine, turbroprop, fixed-wing aircraft registered with the FAA. McMahon claims that the flight crew requested a southern departure route from Bagram, but then in fact departed in the opposite direction, on a northerly route. McMahon alleges that the crew then turned west to go to Farah, entered a canyon of rapidly rising terrain, and (while attempting to execute a 180-degree turn) crashed into the face of a 16,580-foot mountain. None aboard survived.
The soldiers’ survivors filed suit against Presidential in state court, seeking damages under Florida’s wrongful death statute. Presidential removed the case to the federal district court for the Middle District of Florida under the federal officer removal statute. 28 U.S.C. § 1442(a)(1). The district court denied McMahon’s motion to remand the case to state court. McMahon then filed an amended complaint in the district court alleging that Presidential negligently hired and trained the flight crew, negligently assigned the flight crew, negligently planned the route, negligently equipped the aircraft, and otherwise negligently operated the aircraft. 3
Presidential moved to dismiss the case under Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). First, Presidential argued that it was entitled to immunity under the principles of
Feres v. United States,
In response, McMahon sought to convert the Rule 12(b)(6) motion to one for summary judgment by attaching affidavits and exhibits originally introduced in support of her motion for remand. The district court declined to convert the motion and, on Presidential’s motion, struck the extraneous evidence.
The district court then denied Presidential’s motion to dismiss. 4 The court rejected Presidential’s claim to Feres immunity because it concluded that Feres was only available in suits against the federal government or its employees. The court concluded that McMahon’s suit did not present a nonjusticiable political question because it did not yet appear that her tort claims against a private contractor would require the court to examine the judgments or strategy of the United States *1338 military. The court also refused to recognize a preemption defense based on the combatant activities exception, finding that preemption was not warranted for suits arising out of services contracts. 5 Presidential has brought this interlocutory appeal of the district court’s denial of its motion to dismiss.
We organize this opinion as follows:
I. Derivative Feres immunity
A. Interlocutory jurisdiction
B. Derivative Feres immunity
1. Feres doctrine
2. Derivative sovereign immunity
3. Application of Feres rationales to private contractor agents
4. Some form of immunity may be appropriate for private contractor agents
a. Incident-to-service test
b. Feres as a basis for private contractor immunity where sensitive military judgments may be involved
II. Political question doctrine
A. Interlocutory jurisdiction
B. Political question doctrine
1. Will the case involve a decision that has been constitutionally committed to anothеr branch?
2. Does the suit involve a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards?
3. Other Baker factors
III. Preemption based on the combatant activities exception
IV. Conclusion
We address each issue in turn.
I. Derivative Feres immunity
A. Interlocutory jurisdiction
We first consider our jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we have “jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of the district courts ..., except where a direct review may be had in the Supreme Court.” Normally, an order by the district court is not considered “final” and appealable unless it “ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing more for the court to do but execute the judgment.”
Digital Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc.,
Presidential instead argues that its appeal is proper under the collateral order doctrine. The collateral order doctrine—-a “practical construction” of the final decision rule—permits appeals from “a small category of decisions that, although they do not end the litigation, must nonetheless be considered ‘final.’ ”
Swint v. Chambers County Comm’n,
*1339
Presidential argued in the district court that it has immunity under the principles of
Feres v. United States,
Presidential’s claim to derivative
Feres
immunity qualifies as a collateral order. A party is entitled to a collateral order appeal when it has a substantial claim to a true immunity frоm suit: i.e., an immunity that not only insulates the party from liability, but also prevents the party from being exposed to discovery and/or trial.
6
Courts have recognized a number of immunities from suit, all of which protect important interests that would be irrevocably lost if the holder of the immunity were erroneously required to stand trial.
See, e.g., Puerto Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Auth. v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc.,
Presidential has made out a substantial claim to immunity from suit. The government’s
Feres
immunity from soldiers’ service-related tort claims is justified, in part, by the need to avoid judicial interference with military discipline and sensitive military judgments. Service-related tort claims are often “the types of claims that, if generally permitted, would involve the judiciary in sensitive military affairs at the expense of military discipline and effectiveness.”
United States v. Johnson,
As we discuss more fully below, service-related tort suits against private contractors may sometimes threaten interference with sensitive military decisions. And, pursuant to the reasoning in
Stanley,
the litigation process itself could conceivably cause intolerable interference with those sensitive military judgments. Presidential has therefore stated a substantial claim to a true immunity from suit, such that an erroneous denial would be “effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.”
Sell,
Presidential’s claim also satisfies the second factor. Avoiding judicial interference with sensitive military judgments is clearly an “important” interest.
Id.
It is also “completely separate from the merits of the action,”
id.,
because whether the suit is service-related (the test for
Feres
immunity in its usual formulation) does not significantly overlap with the merits of the tort suit.
8
Finally, Presidential’s claim satisfies the first factor. Even if the district court reconsidered its decision after the motion to dismiss but prior to trial, its decision for the time being is “conclusive” because it threatens to expose the contractor to arguably harmful discovery in the interim.
Id.) see also Mitchell,
*1341 B. Derivative Feres immunity
Presidential’s primary argument on appeal is that it was a common law agent of the federal government at the time of the accident, and is therefore entitled to the sovereign immunity the government might have under the Feres doctrine. Presidential’s argument relies on the doctrine of derivative sovereign immunity. The existence and scope of derivative Feres immunity are questions of first impression in this Court. 10
1. Feres doctrine
The
Feres
doctrine is a judicially created exception to the federal government’s waiver of sovereign immunity for common law torts. In general, the United States has waived its sovereign immunity from state law tort suits “under circumstances where the United States, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred.” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1). The Federal Tort Claims Act contains a number of explicit exceptions to this waiver of sovereign immunity, such as the combatant activities exception, 28 U.S.C. § 2680(j), and the discretionary functions exception, 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a). The Supreme Court created another such exception in
Feres v. United States,
In
Feres,
the Supreme Court held that service members are barred from bringing suit against the federal government for injuries that “arise out of or are in the course of activity incident to [military] service.”
Id.
at 146,
The
Feres
doctrine has been controversial, even as applied to the government.
See United States v. Johnson,
But, as applied to the government,
Feres
remains the law. The Supreme Court’s latest formulation of the immunity is contained in
United States v. Johnson,
Second, the Court held that the uniform rule concerning the government’s liability for service-related injuries to soldiers must be one of no liability. The Court arrived at this conclusion by construing the statutory benefits the government provides to injured service members as a congressional cap on the government’s liability for soldiers’ service-related injuries.
See Johnson,
As the third and final rationale supporting the
Feres
bar, the Court has observed that service-related tort claims are often “the types of claims that, if generally permitted, would involve the judiciary in sensitive military affairs at the expense of military discipline and effectiveness.”
Johnson,
In sum, for these three reasons, Feres operates to bar all service-related tort claims brought by soldiers against the government. When a soldier incurs injuries incident to service, the United States is deemed not to have waived its sovereign immunity from suit. As a result, the soldier may not recover in a wide variety of tort suits against the government, ranging from suits based on combat activities, to suits based on training activities, to suits based on medical malpractice in a military hospital, to suits based on slips and falls attributable to the government’s negligence on military bases in the United States during peacetime. We must decide, in the instant case, whether this broad-based immunity extends, in whole or in part, to private military contractors.
2. Derivative sovereign immunity
Presidential claims that it is entitled to claim the whole of the government’s
Feres
immunity under the theory of derivative sovereign immunity. The doctrine of derivative sovereign immunity had its origin in
Yearsley v. W.A. Ross Construction Co.,
We have never upheld a claim of derivative sovereign immunity, although the theory has been presented to us on several occasions. We have, however, imposed a limitation on derivative sovereign immunity, if it in fact exists. In
Whitaker v. Harvell-Kilgore Corp.,
Presidential appears to acknowledge that status as a common law agent is necessary to a claim for derivative sovereign immunity. Presidential argues at length that it in fact was a common law agent at the time of the accident underlying this case. 14
But Presidential acknowledges no other limitation on the extent of derivative sovereign immunity. Instead, Presidential argues that status as a common law agent is a sufficient condition for derivative sover *1344 eign immunity. According to Presidential, so long as the government has sovereign immunity with respect to the conduct underlying the suit, and so long as the private contractor is a common law agent of the government, the private contractor shares in the government’s sovereign immunity. Presidential thus argues that, because the government likely would have Feres immunity from suit in this case (the soldiers were almost certainly injured “incident to service”), Presidential is derivatively entitled to that same immunity. The upshot of Presidential’s argument is that common law agents of the government would, like the government, have complete immunity from suits brought by soldiers for service-related injuries.
We think that the premise of Presidential’s position is quite clearly wrong. Status as a common law agent is
not
a sufficient condition for derivative sovereign immunity. If it were, then the law of federal
officer
immunity would be different in certain respects. A federal officer is simply a specialized common law agent, a servant or employee. If Presidential’s theory were true then, because the United States is immune from suit by default (absent its consent),
see Hercules, Inc. v. United States,
But it is simply not the case that federal officers share in the sovereign’s immunity whenever it has not been waived. Federal officers receive immunity in many situations. But unlike the immunity possessed by the government, that immunity must be affirmatively justified, and does not flow automatically from the government’s retained sovereign immunity.
See Westfall v. Erwin,
Because the government has immunity by default while an officer’s immunity must be affirmatively justified, there are, unsurprisingly, cases where the government is immune but the federal officer is not. An example from current law demonstrates that official immunity and sovereign immunity are not coextensive. Federal officers generally receive only qualified immunity in a
Bivens
action.
See Anderson,
If Presidential’s position were correct, then this result would not be possible, because the federal officer, as a special kind of common law agent, would be derivatively entitled to the same immunity the government possesses. Presidential’s premise of total derivative immunity for common law agents therefore cannot be correct.
Moreover, it is clear that if a federal officer cannot claim complete derivative immunity, neither can a mere common law agent. The result urged by Presidential would mean that, in a Bivens suit, a prison guard employed by the government would have only qualified immunity, while a private contractor who works in the prison but is no more than a common law agent would have absolute immunity (assuming the government has not waived it). That result cannot possibly be the law.
Instead, it must be that, just as in the area of official immunity, the immunity of a common law agent must be affirmatively justified. Just as with a federal officer, the immunity of a private party, even if a common law agent, must be carefully tailored to protect the governmental functions the private party is exercising. Predictably, courts have been just as vigilant about tailoring the immunity of a private party to its perceived justification as they have been in tailoring the immunity of federal officers.
See, e.g., Mangold v. Analytic Servs., Inc.,
It is thus not enough for Presidential to point to its (alleged) status as a common law agent and the government’s (alleged)
Feres
immunity. For Presidential to show that it is entitled to the government’s
Feres
immunity, it must also show that the policies underlying the
Feres
bar extend to private contractor agents. This conclusion is not contrary to any derivative sovereign immunity case. None of these cases say that status as a common law agent is a sufficient condition for the agent to have the government’s immunity, only that it is a necessary condition.
See, e.g., Whitaker,
3. Application of Feres rationales to private contractor agents
To determine whether Presidential, a private contractor, is derivatively entitled to the government’s
Feres
immunity, we must decide whether and how the policies underlying
Feres
apply to private contractor agents. The first
Feres
policy is ensuring that the government faces a uniform rule with respect to injuries incurred by soldiers incident to service.
See Johnson,
While the uniformity rationale does continue to apply to the government, it does not apply at all to private contractors. To apply the rationale to private military contractors would be highly anomalous. Government agencies in general (apart from the military) do not have the benefit of a
Feres
bar, and therefore must face the non-uniform tort law of the various states (so long as an explicit FTCA exception does not apply).
See
28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). For example, the federal prison system must contend with non-uniform tort law.
See United States v. Muniz,
The second policy underlying the
Feres
bar is the cap on the government’s liability for service-related injuries, set at the amount of statutory benefits provided to the service member.
Johnson,
The cap policy also does not apply to the private contractor. The private contractor, unlike the government, has not had to pay anything to the soldier, and will not have to pay anything apart from what the soldier might recover in a tort suit. Nor is there any warrant to read the cap on the government’s liability as an implied cap on the private contractor’s. There is absolutely no indication that Congress, in providing statutory benefits for soldiers, intended them to substitute in any way for a remedy against private contractor agents of the military, or intended them to cap the liability of private contractors to soldiers they injure in the course of duty. We therefore decline to recognize the cap policy as a justification for applying the Feres bar to private contractors. 18
It is not surprising that the first two
Feres
policies apply only to the government, because they serve to protect distinctively
sovereign
interests — ensuring that the government is not crippled by a non-uniform standard for soldiers’ injuries incurred incident to service, and ensuring that the government’s liability is capped at the amount of statutory benefits it pro
*1348
vides to injured soldiers. The Supreme Court has itself implicitly recognized that these two
Feres
policies do not apply to individuals, such as private contractors. The Supreme Court has twice relied on the
Feres
policies, in another context, to refuse to create a
Bivens
cause of action against federal employees for service-related constitutional torts. On both occasions, it did not rely on the first two
Feres
rationales.
See Chappell v. Wallace,
On the other hand, we do believe that the third
Feres
policy potentially has some application to private contractor agents of the military. The third justification for the
Feres
bar is that it protects against interference with military discipline and sensitive military judgments.
Johnson,
The discipline strand of the third Feres rationale does not have application in the context of private contractors. In Shaw, we noted that the “essential military discipline” rationale itself embodies two concerns: “(1) the notion that a soldier might use the civilian courts to challenge the act or order of a superior officer; and (2) the idea that in a civilian suit of any sort involving a serviceman, members of the military might be compelled to testify against one another.” Id. at 742. We concluded that neither concern would justify protection of the military contractor. In the first place, the concern that a soldier might use a suit to challenge a superi- or officer is absent because a private contractor is not in the chain of command. Id. at 742-43. That observation is equally true where the private contractor happens to be an agent of the government. Because the private contractor agent is not in the chain of command, a soldier cannot use a suit against the contractor to “challenge the act or order of a superior officer.” Id. at 742.
In the second place, we concluded in
Shaw
that any risk to discipline from the process of trying a case against a private contractor was too remote to be accorded significant weight. Although we acknowledged that soldiers might have to testify on opposite sides in a suit against a private contractor, we stated that “the likelihood of any profound disruption of discipline is negligible from testimony in suits against military contractors.”
Shaw,
Our conclusion that the discipline policy does not have significant application to private contractor agents is fortified by the opinion of the four dissenters in Johnson, who set out several reasons why the discipline policy does not even apply strongly to the government itself. Justice Scalia said,
It is strange that Congress’ “obvious” intention to preclude Feres suits because of their effect on military discipline was discerned neither by the Feres Court nor by the Congress that enacted the FTCA (which felt it necessary expressly to exclude recovery for combat injuries). Perhaps Congress recognized that the likely effect of Feres suits upon military discipline is not as clear as we have assumed, but in fact has long been disputed .... Or perhaps Congress assumed that the FTCA’s explicit exclusions would bar those suits most threatening to military discipline, such as claims based upon combat command decisions, 28 U.S.C. § 2680(j); claims based upon performance of “discretionary” functions, § 2680(a); claims arising in foreign countries, § 2680(k); intentional torts, § 2680(h); and claims based upon the execution of a statute or regulation, § 2680(a).... Or perhaps— most fascinating of all to contemplate— Congress thought that barring recovery by servicemen might adversely affect military discipline. After all, the morale of Lieutenant Commander Johnson’s comrades-in-arms will not likely be boosted by news that his widow and children will receive only a fraction of the amount they might have recovered had he been piloting a commercial helicopter at the time of his death.
Johnson,
While we do not accept that the discipline portion of the third
Feres
rationale applies to private contractors, we do recognize that the other part — the risk of a tort suit interfering with sensitive military
*1350
judgments — does potentially apply to private contractor agents. As the Court in
Johnson
recognized, suits involving accidents that occurred incident to service may “implicate[] the military judgments and decisions that are inextricably intertwined with the conduct of the military mission.”
Johnson,
In the first place, there is a problem of institutional competence. Where sensitive military judgments are involved, courts lack the capacity to determine the proper tradeoff between military effectiveness and the risk of harm to the soldiers. For example, it is not possible for a court to develop a standard of care for a reasonably safe infantry assault on a fortified enemy outpost.
See Chappell,
When a private contractor agent is entrusted with making or executing such sensitive military judgments, courts would be similarly powerless to determine whether the agent appropriately balanced military effectiveness and the safety of the soldiers.
See Boyle,
Second, even if courts could determine what a “reasonable bombing” or a “reasonable intercept” would be, it would violate the separation of powers for cоurts to second-guess the military’s decision in a tort suit. These sorts of sensitive military judgments have been constitutionally committed to the political branches.
See Stanley,
It would similarly violate separation of powers for the courts to interfere with sensitive military judgments made or executed by private contractor agents of the military. The military has the constitutionally exclusive authority to make those kinds of judgments, and judicial oversight of the private contractor agents the mili *1351 tary uses to execute those judgments would likewise violate separation of powers principles.
This sensitive-military-judgments strand of the third
Feres
rationale embodies concerns about justiciability and separation of powers. It is thus related to the political question doctrine, which is a constitutional restraint on the jurisdiction of the federal courts.
See Baker v. Carr,
4. Some form of immunity may be appropriate for private contractor agents
We thus acknowledge that private contractor agents may be entitled to some form of immunity that protects their making or executing sensitive military judgments, and that overlaps and possibly extends beyond the protection provided by the political question doctrine. The question then becomes whether the Feres “incident to service” test is the proper way to protect private contractor agents performing such functions.
a. Incident-to-service test
We think it quite clear that the incident-to-service test sweeps far too broadly to protect this concern. Some suits barred by the incident-to-service test simply do not involve sensitive military judgments that courts lack the competence or authority to deal with. For example, where a private contractor agent is running a mess hall on a peacetime base, and a soldier gets food poisoning attributable to the contractor’s negligence, the suit would be barred under the “incident to service” test. But in such a suit, there is no concern about interfering with sensitive military judgments. Courts do not lack well-developed standards for dealing with “negligent food service.” Nor does it offend separation of powers for a court to say that a private contractor agent must pay for its negligence in serving tainted food to soldiers. Because “incident to service” necessarily includes a large number of these non-sensitive military judgments, it is far too broad to protect contractors from suits that might interfere with sensitive military judgments.
Proof that some suits “incident to service” do not offend separation of powers or present justiciability problems is easily found in the fact that civilians are not barred from bringing some such suits against the government, even though a soldier would be. It is well-established that
Feres
applies only to soldiers, and therefore does not bar civilian suits along some portion (probably a large portion) of the incident-to-service spectrum.
See, e.g., Boyle,
This means that some number of “incident to service” suits must not inherently offend separation of powers or present problems of justiciability. If they did, civilians too would be barred from suing the government. But, as Judge Calabresi has observed, “[I]n any number of civilian cases, the alleged judicial inquiry into (and interference with) military affairs, occurs anyway. And if this interference occurs regularly in any event, it cannot possibly raise the constitutional concerns that warrant tortured statutory construction and judicial abstention.”
Taber,
The government, of course, does receive immunity in service-related suits brought by soldiers, even when they do not implicate sensitive military judgments. For example, the soldier may not sue the government in the mess hall hypothetical discussed above, if it is the government that is operating the mess hall. But that is because the government’s Feres immunity is supported by policies other than protecting sensitive military judgments: namely, the uniformity, сap, and discipline policies. First, the government needs a uniform rule, even where sensitive military judgments are not implicated. Second, the soldier’s statutory benefit represents the cap on the government’s liability. And third, the suit may impair discipline because it would pit the soldier against his employer and may involve conflict with his superior officer or another soldier.
As discussed above, these rationales do not apply to a private contractor. Immunity for private contractors is justified only by the need to protect the making and execution of sensitive military judgments. And, as demonstrated above, a number of “incident to service” suits — probably a substantial number — do not implicate sensitive military judgments, because they can be brought by civilians. 20 As a result, the derivative Feres immunity of private contractors cannot possibly extend to the out *1353 er limits of “incident to service.” We therefore hold that private contractors, even if they are agents, are not entitled to immunity from all service-related suits brought by soldiers.
b. Feres as a basis for private contractor immunity where sensitive military judgments may be involved
As demonstrated above, private contractors are, at most, entitled to a more constricted form of derivative Feres immunity. The Feres “incident to service” test is too broad for the purpose of protecting private contractor agents performing sensitive military functions. But a narrower formulation might conceivably be appropriate for the purpose of protecting this kind of military judgment.
It might be said that the political question doctrine, with its explicit concerns regarding justiciability and separation of powers, exhausts the category of military judgments insulated from judicial review. We are, however, willing to entertain the possibility that the political question doctrine, while it informs this strand of Feres, does not necessarily exhaust the category of sensitive military functions that should be protected from judicial scrutiny. We might, for example, accord derivative Feres immunity to a private contractor agent across some speсtrum narrower than “incident to service” but possibly broader than political question. This might conceivably include suits involving quintessential or peculiarly military judgments that courts should not hear as a matter of prudence, rather than a matter of constitutional law.
Even if such an immunity is warranted, however, we do not believe that the
Feres
doctrine is an appropriate ground upon which to build it. The reason is that an immunity built on
Feres
would only prevent
soldiers
— and would not prevent civilians — from bringing suit against private military contractors making or executing sensitive military judgments. The immunity would necessarily, operate in this way because derivative immunity can be no broader than the sovereign immunity that grounds it, and the government’s
Feres
immunity only extends to suits brought by soldiers.
See, e.g., Boyle,
This consequence means that derivative Feres immunity.is an inappropriate vehicle for a “sensitive military judgments” immunity for private contractor agents. In the first place, it would not be effective to protect sensitive military judgments from judicial review because it would not bar suits brought by civilians that implicate such judgments. As an example, any such immunity, as applied to the plane crash in the instant case, would not apply to civilians on board the plane. The employees *1354 of Presidential itself (three of whom perished in the accident) could sue Presidential for Presidential’s negligence. Those suits would not be barred by the hypothetical derivative Feres immunity tailored to protect sensitive military judgments. Yet they would present the very same threat of subjecting sensitive military judgments to second-guessing by a court.
On top of the ineffectiveness of an immunity grounded on Feres, it would also be inequitable because it would single out soldiers for special disfavor in the courts of law. As noted above, Feres applies only to soldiers, so derivative Feres immunity, even if restricted to sensitive military judgments, could apply only to soldiers as well. But that would have consequences that belie common sense. For example, assume the hypothetical situation of a sensitive military function being performed by a private contractor agent that does not fall within the category of cases barred by the political question doctrine. 21 Assume also three people injured by the contractor’s performance of the sensitive military function: a soldier, a civilian employee of the private contractor, and a journalist. If we extended Feres derivatively to the private contractor, the soldier could not sue the contractor. The employee of the private contractor could sue because, by hypothesis, the suit would not be barred by the political question doctrine. And so could the journalist, for the same reason. There is simply no principled reason why this result should obtain. We refuse to single out soldiers who sacrifice their lives and limbs for our country for special disfavor, even for the laudatory purpose of protecting sensitive military judgments from judicial interference.
As a result, we must hold that derivative Feres immunity does not exist in this case. Three of the four recognized Feres rationales do not apply to private contractors. And while protecting sensitive military judgments could conceivably ground an immunity, Feres is an inappropriate vehicle because it would single out soldiers and would not protect sensitive military judgments in suits brought by anyone else (including journalists or private contractor employees).
This is not the first time that
Feres
has been found to be an inappropriate ground upon which to build a protection for private contractors who are involved with sensitive military judgments. In
Boyle v. United Technologies Corp.,
[I]t seems to us that the Feres doctrine, in its application to the present problem, logically produces results that are in some respects too broad and in some respects too narrow. Too broad, because if the Government contractor defense is to prohibit suit against the manufacturer whenever Feres would prevent suit against the Government, then even injuries caused to military personnel by a helicopter purchased from stock ... would be covered. Since Feres prohibits all service-related tort claims against the *1355 Government, a contractor defense that rests upon it should prohibit all service-related tort claims against the manufacturer — making inexplicable the three limiting criteria for contractor immunity .... On the other hand, reliance on Feres produces (or logically should produce) results that are in another respect too narrow. Since that doctrine covers only service-related injuries, and not injuries caused by the military to civilians, it could not be invoked to prevent, for example, a civilian’s suit against the manufacturer of fighter planes, based on a state tort theory claiming harm from what is alleged to be needlessly high levels of noise produced by the jet engines. Yet we think that the character of the jet engines the Government orders for its fighter planes cannot be regulated by state tort law, no more in suits by civilians than in suits by members of the Armed Services.
Boyle,
The reasons why the Supreme Court rejected Feres as a basis for the military contractor defense in Boyle are essentially the same reasons why we refuse to ground the hypothesized “sensitive military judgment” immunity on Feres today. The Court in Boyle recognized that reliance on Feres would produce results that are too broad, because the “incident to service” test would include suits against contractors that did not implicate the policies the Court was concerned about in Boyle. Similarly, in this case, an immunity built on Feres would be too broad, because “incident to service” would cover tort suits that do not implicate sensitive military judgments. Then in Boyle, the Court held that a defense grounded on Feres would be too narrow because, even where the policies the Court was concerned about were present, civilians could still bring suit, thus vitiating the purpose of the immunity. Here too, an immunity built on Feres would be too narrow because it would only protect against suits implicating sensitive military judgments that are brought by soldiers, and not against those brought by civilians, or even employees of the private contractor itself.
We emphasize that we do not mean to foreclose the possibility of an immunity that is broader than political question but narrower than “incident to service.” We simply hold that any such immunity must, if it is to have any basis in reason, apply to civilians as well as soldiers: including the employees of private contractors, and other civilians. On the other hand, we readily acknowledge that this form of immunity may not exist if the political question doctrine is enough to protect private contractor agents performing sensitive military functions.
But we decline in the instant case to reach out and (a) decide whether such an immunity exists, or (b) assuming it exists, define the scope of such immunity.
22
*1356
At every stage of this litigation, Presidential has relied exclusively on derivative
Feres
immunity. We do not ordinarily entertain arguments when they were not presented to the district court.
See Access Now, Inc. v. Sw. Airlines Co.,
Moreover, not only has Presidential relied exclusively on Feres derivative immunity, it has relied exclusively on the broadest form of that immunity. Presidential did not even propose the limited version of derivative Feres immunity we hypothesized (and rejected) above — i.e., the kind that theoretically protects only sensitive military functions. Instead, Presidential has argued during this entire litigation exclusively for the broad, “incident to service” form of derivative Feres immunity. Such a broad immunity is triply flawed: it does not further the only Feres rationale that applies to a private contractor; it is ineffective because it only applies to soldiers; and it is inequitable because it singles out soldiers who give their bodies and lives for their country for special disfavor. 23 Given that Presidential consciously relied exclusively on Feres (and the broadest form of it at that), we will hold Presidential to its choice, and refuse to develop a hypothetical alternative kind of immunity out of whole cloth.
We thus expressly do not decide whether there is a “sensitive military function” immunity that protects a private contractor agent, and that exceeds the bounds of the political question doctrine. We decide only that derivative Feres immunity is an inappropriate vehicle for such an immunity (if it in fact exists). To recognize a derivative Feres immunity for private military contractors would provide a protection which is both too broad and too narrow in light of the justification therefor; and to do so would be in significant tension with the Supreme Court’s Boyle decision. Because derivative Feres is the only kind of immunity that has been argued to us, we will not reach out to address the question of what other immunity might be available for private contractor agents. 24 We therefore turn to Presidential’s contention that *1357 this suit is barred by the political question doctrine.
II. Political question doctrine A. Interlocutory jurisdiction
We must first determine whether we have jurisdiction over the order denying Presidential’s motion to dismiss on political question grounds. This Court has not addressed whether a denial of a motion to dismiss on political question grounds is immediately appealable,
25
and need not do so here. We may exercise pendent appellate jurisdiction over an order that is “inextricably intertwined with an issue that is properly before this Court on interlocutory appeal.”
S & Davis Int’l, Inc. v. Yemen,
Here, the political question issue is inextricably intertwined with the issue of derivative
Feres
immunity. As discussed above, the only
Feres
policy that has significant application to private contractors is the need to avoid judicial interference with sensitive military judgments. The political question doctrine, grounded in the separation of powers, also operates to insulate sensitive military judgments from judicial review.
See Aktepe v. United States,
B. Political question doctrine
Presidential argues that the case must be dismissed because its resolution will require the court to decide a political question. A federal court has no authority to review' a political question.
See Marbury v. Madison,
In
Baker v. Carr,
[1] a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department; or [2] a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it; or [3] the impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion; or [4] the impossibility of a court’s undertaking independent resolution without expressing lack of the respect due coordinate branches of government; or [5] an unusual need for unquestioning adherence *1358 to a political decision already made; or [6] the potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various departments on one question.
Id.
at 217,
Presidential argues that adjudication of the instant case, involving an accident that occurred in Afghanistan during wartime, will require the district court to decide a political question. It is undoubtedly true that military activities often give rise to political questions. In one case involving the military, we observed that “[t]he interjection of tort law into the realms of foreign policy and military affairs would effectively permit judicial reappraisal of judgments the Constitution has committed to the other branches.”
Aktepe,
1. Will the case involve a decision that has been constitutionally committed to another branch?
The first
Baker
factor asks whether there is “a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department.”
Baker,
In
Aktepe v. United States,
We held that the suit implicated the first Baker factor. We observed that the text of the Constitution explicitly invests the political branches with authority over the military, and as a result, “[t]he Supreme Court has generally declined to reach the merits of cases requiring review of military decisions, particularly when those cases challenged the institutional functioning of the military in areas such as personnel, discipline, and training.” Id. at 1403. To decide the Turkish sailors’ negligence action, the court would have had to determine whether various members of the U.S. military exercised reasonable care during a training exercise. Id. at 1404. That would have required reexamination of core military decisions, including “Navy communication, training, and drill procedures.” Id. Because those decisions are committed to the political branches, we dismissed the case on political question grounds. Id.
On similar grounds, the Fourth Circuit dismissed a case involving military judgments in
Tiffany v. United States,
The Fourth Circuit held that the suit was barred by the political question doctrine. “The decisions whether and under what circumstances to employ military force are constitutionally reserved for the executive and legislative branches .... The strategy and tactics employed on the battlefield are clearly not subject to judicial review.” Id. at 277. Because the suit would have required the court to apply negligence standards to NORAD’s strategy and tactics in the sensitive area of national security, the Court held that the suit was barred. Id. at 278. Like the Aktepe Court in the context of military training, the Tiffany Court held that military judgments in the sensitive area of air defense were unreviewable.
The instant case is at least one step removed from both
Aktepe
and
Tiffany
because it is against a private contractor, Presidential. Presidential is not, itself, a coordinate branch of the United States government. Nor is it, like the military, part of a coordinate branch of the United States government. To invoke the first
Baker
factor, Presidential must therefore carry a double burden. First, it must demonstrate that the claims against it will require reexamination of a decision
by the military. See Baker,
We hold that Presidential has not satisfied the threshold requirement for invocation of the first Baker factor, at least on the limited record now before us that the instant case will require reexamination of any decision made by the military. 28 McMahon alleges that Presidential negligently staffed, equipped, and otherwise operated the flight in question. These allegations relate to areas of responsibility reserved to Presidential by the Statement of Work (SOW). On the most general level, the SOW required Presidential to “[pjrovide all fixed-wing aircraft, personnel, equipment, tools, material, maintenance, and supervision necessary to perform Short Take-Off and Landing (STOL) passenger, cargo, or passenger and cargo air transportation services” for the missions DOD requested (emphasis added). The SOW then required Presidential to “assign a Project Manager (PM) authorized to manage and administer all terms and conditions- of this contract.” The SOW thus envisioned that Presidential was to have general responsibility for making the decisions regarding the flights it provided to DOD.
The SOW further gave Presidential the ultimate responsibility of ensuring the safety of the flights it was operating. ' It provided that “[t]he contractor shall develop and implement a commercial quality control plan to ensure safe and reliable *1361 air transportation in accordance with FAR 135 and 32 CFR 861,” and thus required Presidential to operate in a way that complied with those regulations. Presidential’s supervisory authority is made especially clear by 32 C.F.R. § 861, which contains the DOD’s own standards for commercial carriers. This regulation required Presidential to “supervise crew selection,” “ensure the risk associated with all flight operations is reduced to the lowest acceptable level,” “ensure that applicants [for flight crew] are carefully screened,” and “ensure[ ] the proper pairing of aircrews on all flights,” among other duties. 32 C.F.R. § 861.4. Finally, the SOW also provided that “[t]he contractor may refuse any mission for safety reasons.” The existence of this power tends to show that Presidential, and not DOD, was ultimately responsible for ensuring that the flights it provided were operated in a reasonably safe manner.
While Presidential had these general supervisory responsibilities according to the SOW, the military’s duties (according to the SOW) were relatively discrete. The military chose the start and end points of the flights, and chose when the flights would be flown (qualified by Presidential’s power to decline a mission for safety reasons). The military also imposed certain constraints on Presidential’s exercise of its supervisory responsibilities. It limited the working hours of Presidential’s pilots; specified minimum requirements for the aircraft; set out minimum and maximum amounts of passengers and cargo; and сontained a provision requiring Presidential employees to comply with General Order One (which contained general rules of conduct for all service members in Afghanistan). Finally, the military took on certain responsibilities while Presidential employees were on the base. For example, the SOW provided that DOD would provide protection for the contractor while it was on military bases.
It is not evident that McMahon’s allegations relate to any of these discrete areas of military responsibility. 29 She does not challenge the military’s scheduling of the flights; the force protection the military provided on the base; or the military’s generalized restrictions on Presidential employees while they were on the base pursuant to General Order One. Rather, her allegations relate principally to the operation of the flight, for which Presidential retained residual responsibility under the terms of the SOW. McMahon alleges “[n]egligent failure to use reasonable care by entrusting an aircraft to a flight crew inexperienced in flying the mountainous terrain of Afghanistan”; “[n]egligent failure to conduct a formal route study”; “[n]egligent failure to properly supervise route planning and flight planning activities”; “[n]egligent failure to properly plan and execute the ... flight”; and other challenges to the operational details of the flight. None of these allegations relate to the military’s discrete areas of responsibility under the SOW. Nor is McMahon challenging, on any level, the military’s ultimate, decision to use private contractors to transport soldiers in Afghanistan. Rather, she is challenging the way in which Presidential performed the duties it was given by the military. At this stage of the proceeding, Presidential has therefore not shown that resolution of McMahon’s negligence claims will require reexamination of any decision made by the U.S. military. 30
*1362
In this respect, the case is far different from
Aktepe.
There it was obvious, even from the complaint, that the suit would require the court to review actual, sensitive judgments made by the military.
See Aktepe,
Presidential’s inability to identify a military judgment that would be implicated by the case also makes it different from the district court cases that have dismissed suits against a private military contractor on political question grounds. In
Whitaker v. Kellogg Brown & Root, Inc.,
By contrast, Presidential has not shown that the military retained control or responsibility over the aspects of Presidential’s operations that McMahon is challenging in the instant case. At this early stage of the litigation, we therefore cannot say it is evident that McMahon’s suit will call into question decisions made by the military, much less the kind of military decisions that might be insulated by the political question doctrine. McMahon’s allegations involve decisions that (on the record before us) Presidential was responsible for making. As a result, this prong of Baker does not, as yet, justify dismissal. 31
*1363 2. Does the suit involve a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards?
The second
Baker
factor applies when there is “a lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving” the case.
Baker,
In Aktepe, we found that the political question doctrine applied, in part because there are no judicially manageable standards to apply to the training activities of the United States military:
In order to determine whether the Navy conducted the missile firing drill in a negligent manner, a court would have to determine how a reasonable military force would have conducted the drill .... Decisions relative to training result from a complex, subtle balancing of many technical and military considerations, including the trade-off between safety and greater combat effectiveness .... [C]ourts lack standards with which to assess whether reasonable care was taken to achieve military objectives while minimizing injury and loss of life.
Aktepe,
Presidential has not only failed to show the existence of a military judgment that might be implicated by this suit, it has also failed to show that the case will require the application of judicially unmanageable standards. Unlike
Aktepe
and
Tiffany,
it is not evident on the limited record in the instant case that a court would have to develop a concept akin to a “reasonable intercept” or a “reasonable military training exercise.” The allegations do not involve combat, training activities, or any peculiarly
military
activity at all.
32
McMahon alleges that Presidential negli
*1364
gently staffed, equipped, and otherwise operated its flights. As in any tort suit involving a plane crash, the court will simply have to determine whether the choices Presidential made were negligent. It is well within the competence of a federal court to apply negligence standards to a plane crash.
See Baker,
We readily acknowledge that flying over Afghanistan during wartime is different from flying over Kansas on a sunny day. But this does not render the suit inherently non-justiciable. While the court may have to apply a standard of care to a flight conducted in a less than hospitable environment, that standard is not inherently unmanageable.
See Linder v. Portocarrero,
3. Other Baker factors
Finally, Presidential has not yet demonstrated that the other
Baker
factors apply to this case, fоr essentially the same reasons discussed above.
35
As the case ap
*1365
pears to be an ordinary tort suit, there is no “impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion.”
Baker,
Finally, we note that to this point the United States has not intervened in the instant case, despite an invitation to do so. We have previously found the opinion of the United States significant in deciding whether a political question exists.
See Occidental,
We expressly do not (and could not) hold that this litigation will not at some point present a political question. The existence of a political question deprives a court of jurisdiction.
See Made in the USA Found.,
But at this juncture, when almost no discovery has been completed, we cannot say that resolution of this case will require the court to decide a political question. The evidence before us does not show a conflict between the allegations in the complaint and decisions made by the U.S. military. It would be inappropriate to dismiss the case on the mere chance that a political question may eventually present itself.
See Ibrahim,
*1366 III. Preemption based on the combatant activities exception
Finally, Presidential argues that McMahon’s state law tort claim is preempted pursuant to a rationale based upon the combatant activities exception to the FTCA. We have considerable doubt that this theory is inextricably intertwined with the arguable claim of derivative
Feres
immunity upon which our appellate jurisdiction is based. In any event, we decline to exercise discretion to entertain this theory pursuant to the doctrine of pendent appellate jurisdiction.
See Honduras Aircraft Registry,
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Three Presidential employees, including the two pilots and a flight mechanic, also perished in the crash.
. McMahon also brought suit against Black-water Lodge & Training Center, Inc., but her claims against Blackwater were dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction.
. McMahon does not allege that combat activities in Afghanistan had anything to do with the plane crash, and does not allege that any action performed, dictated, or controlled by the military caused the accident.
. Before ruling on Presidential’s motion to dismiss, the district court invited the United States to intervene in the case. The government declined to intervene, but did request that four security-related documents remain undisclosed under a protective order.
Because the district court had, on Presidential’s motion, struck McMahon’s extrinsic evidence, the court looked only to the face of the complaint, the contract, and the Statement of Work in denying the motion to dismiss. The district court considered the SOW because both parties had cited it during the hearing on the motion, and thus had waived any possible objection to its being considered.
.
But see Hudgens v. Bell Helicopters/Textron,
. A substantial claim to immunity from suit, not immunity itself, is the basis for a collateral order appeal.
See Nixon v. Fitzgerald,
Of course, the natural result of our disposition is that an interlocutory appeal by a private mililaty contractor asserting derivative
Feres
immunity will, in the future, be unnecessary because the claim to immunity based on
Feres
will no longer be substantial in this Circuit. We have previously held that we had collateral order jurisdiction over an "important issue of first impression” even though there would, as a practical effect, be “little need for future interlocutory appeals” under our disposition of that case.
United States v. Wilk,
.We recognize that a party must do much more than allege a “right not to stand trial” in order to bring a collateral order appeal. The Supreme Court has observed that "virtually every right that could be enforced appropriately by pretrial dismissal might loosely be described as conferring a 'right not to stand trial.' ”
Digital Equipment,
But among the "particular valuefs] of a high order” that the Court has deemed to satisfy the third
Cohen
factor is "honoring the separation of powers.”
Id.
at 352,
. As we discuss below, we ultimately reject Presidential's claim of entitlement to the full range of the service-related Feres immunity, and indeed reject any derivative Feres immunity at all for private military contractors. However, our ultimate rejection of Presidential’s position does not retroactively nullify the substantial claim as of the filing of the appeal.
. Two circuit courts have concluded, for essentially the same reasons, that the denial of a different sort of immunity also grounded in the
Feres
policies is immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine.
See Dibble v. Fenimore,
. The Supreme Court adverted to the issue in
Boyle v. United Technologies Corp.,
. The meaning of "incident to service” has been a matter of much dispute. But it is quite clear that it operates broadly to bar most tort claims that arise in the course of a soldier's duties, whether in peacetime or wartime, in combat or on a base.
See, e.g., Feres,
. This support for overruling
Feres
itself is all the more significant because of the Supreme Court's normally strong presumption of
stare decisis
in the area of statutory interpretation.
See IBP, Inc. v. Alvarez,
. As some have observed, the uniformity policy, by itself, might have led the Court to develop a federal common law of tort liability incident to service, rather than barring such suits altogether.
See Taber v. Maine,
. Although the balance of Part I.B of this opinion repeatedly refers to private contractor agents of the military, we expressly have not determined that Presidential has adduced sufficient evidence of control to establish agent status. In light of our disposition, we need not make that determination.
. The Court’s decision in
Westfall v. Erwin,
. It is true that in
Shaw
we opined in dicta about the scope of derivative
Feres
immunity, saying, “To evaluate a
Yearsley
claim in the military contractor context, a court would appear to be obliged to take three steps. First, it would apply the
Feres
doctrine to determine whether the government itself could be sued in that situation. If not, the court would then invoke a second body of doctrine, the law of principal and agent, to inquire whether the contractor actually acted as an agent of the government. Precedent in this Court makes it clear that ... a firm must be more than simply an independent contractor to be regarded as the government’s agent .... Finally, if the contractor proved agency status, the court would inquire whether the agent acted within the course and scope of its duties.”
Shaw,
. We also note that private companies in general must face the varying tort law of the fifty states (so long as they have sufficient contact with the state to justify personal jurisdiction under due process principles). Presidential has not provided any reason why it is in a different position from any other private corporation, or should receive speciаl treatment.
. Another reason for finding that the cap policy does not apply to a private contractor flows from the best explanation of the cap policy — that it roughly approximates the state worker’s compensation system for the military. Judge Calabresi put forth this explanation of the cap policy in
Taber
v.
Maine,
But this policy of approximating worker’s compensation clearly does not apply to the private contractor. The soldier is not the employee of the private contractor, and therefore should not be required to have exclusive resort to a remedy that approximates worker's compensation. This is another reason why the second Feres policy cannot apply to a private contractor.
. We recognize that this discussion of the
Feres
"essential discipline” rationale in
Shaw
was part of our discussion of the military contractor defense. Our conception of that defense was later overturned in
Boyle. See Boyle,
. Indeed, the four dissenters in
Johnson
criticized
Feres
itself for this very reason.
See Johnson,
. Of course, such cases must exist if the immunity is to have independent force. If the political question doctrine exhausted the category of sensitive military judgments, this hypothetical immunity would not even be necessary.
. We are not at all sure (especially given the complete lack of briefing) that an immunity extending beyond the political question doctrine would be recognized. Political question is a broad doctrine that can be flexibly applied to protect sensitive military judgments and areas where courts lack the competence to apply standards of care. The United States is always capable of intervening where its interests are at stake in a suit against a private contractor, and we might find such intervention persuasive where a contractor advances a political question argument.
We also note that our resolution of this issue is consistent with the extant cases. No federal court, district or appellate, has accorded derivative
Feres
immunity to a private contractor agent. On the other hand, several courts have used the political question doctrine to protect sensitive military judgments from being subjected to judicial scrutiny in suits that were brought against private contractors.
See, e.g., Fisher v. Halliburton, Inc.,
*1356
. Of course, the potential benefits to Presidential (if it had succeeded on the "incident to service” argument) are equally clear. An immunity defined only by "incident to service” would have givеn Presidential immunity from almost all tort suits that would arise out of its military contractor business, even those that do not involve sensitive military judgments.
. Although courts in other situations have fashioned judicially created immunities,
see Feres,
it is not appropriate for us to do so in the present context. Moreover, the creation of such an immunity would of necessity involve policy judgments. It is much to be preferred for such policy judgments to be resolved by Congress.
See Westfall,
.
But see Doe v. Exxon Mobil Corp.,
. No Court of Appeals has yet upheld the dismissal of a suit against a private military contractor on political question grounds.
See Doe v. Exxon Mobil Corp.,
. All the district court cases dismissing suits against private military contractors on political question grounds have found, as they must, that the suit would involve reexamination of a decision
by the military. See Fisher,
. On appeal, Presidential has asked us to consider evidence beyond what the district court considered — primarily declarations from its employees which Presidential suggests tend to demonstrate that the military made certain decisions with respect to the operation of the flight on the day in question. McMahon moved to strike these declarations (and other pieces of extraneous evidenсe) on the basis that they were not considered by the district court. McMahon's motion has been carried with the case. For several reasons, we decline to consider this evidence in the first instance, and accordingly grant McMahon's motion to strike.
In the first place, even if, as Presidential argues, we may have authority to entertain such evidence to ascertain subject matter jurisdiction, we believe Presidential invited the district court to restrict the scope of the evidence it considered. Presidential itself moved in the district court to strike the extraneous evidence it now wishes us to consider. Presidential first asked the magistrate judge to strike such evidence, and appealed the magistrate judge’s denial of that motion to the district court. Although Presidential now claims that it narrowed its objection to the extraneous evidence in the district court, our review of the record persuades us that Presidential invited the district court to do exactly what it did, i.e., consider only the complaint, the contract, and the Statement of Work. In the district court, Presidential did acknowledge that the court could consider facts extraneous to the complaint in ruling upon subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1). But Presidential repeatedly insisted that it was not relying upon any such extraneous facts, and ultimately urged the court to reverse the magistrate judge’s denial of Presidential’s Motion to Strike. Accepting Presidential’s invitation, the district court did grant Presidential’s motion to strike the extraneous evidence. In its final ruling on the motion to dismiss, the district court indicated that, notwithstanding its previous grant of Presidential’s Motion to Strike, it would consider the Statement of Work because both Presidential and McMahon had referred to it in the hearing on the motion to dismiss.
As a result of all this, the district court considered only the complaint, the contract, and the Statement of Work in ruling on Presidential’s political question argument. We decline to attempt to evaluate in the first instance evidence which Presidential invited the district cоurt to ignore. We prefer instead to have the benefit of the district court’s evaluation and findings of fact. In addition, McMahon should have an opportunity to have discovery to rebut any such extraneous evidence, before such evidence is used to dismiss the case on political question grounds. We therefore consider only the contract and the Statement of Work and the allegations in McMahon’s complaint in our discussion of Presidential’s political question argument.
. Even if one allegation did implicate a discrete area of military responsibility, and even if the court’s consideration thereof were barred, other allegations would have to be evaluated pursuant to the
Baker
factors.
See Linder v. Portocarrero,
. To take a discrete example, McMahon alleges that Presidential negligently chose pilots who had limited experience flying missions in *1362 Afghanistan. There is no indication in the SOW that the military had any role in choosing the pilots. If, as McMahon alleges, the crash was caused by the inexperience of the particular pilots Presidential chose, then the prosecution of this suit would not require the court to second-guess any decision made by the U.S. military. McMahon's other allegations also relate to Presidential's overarching duty of providing "supervision necessary to perform” dre missions DOD ordered. As a result, it is not evident that her allegations will involve a political question, and dismissal on that ground would be premature.
. Of course, if further development of the record on remand prompts the district court to determine that a decision or judgment of the military caused (in whole or substantial part) the injuries to McMahon, then a different issue may well be presented. The district court will have to evaluate the circumstances pursuant to the standards set out in
Gilligan v. Morgan, Baker v. Carr, Aktepe v. United States,
and other relevant precedents.
See Baker,
. The district court cases that have dismissed suits against private contractors on political question grounds all involved combat activities.
See Fisher,
. As noted above, it is not even evident that this case will involve a challenge to a military decision, or a decision by Presidential which was controlled by the military.
. Our decision in this regard is strengthened by the fact that this is a suit for damages. As the Ninth Circuit noted in rejecting a political question argument in
Koohi v. United States,
. A plurality of the Supreme Court has stated that the
Baker
factors are listed in decreasing order of importance.
See Vieth v. Jubelirer,
. We emphasize that our decision is based only on the record considered by the district court: the complaint, the contract, and the SOW. Presidential remains free to argue that other evidence justifies dismissal on political question grounds. The Supreme Court has indicated that the political question issue necessitates a "discriminating inquiry into the precise facts ... of the particular case.”
Baker,
