On the surface at least, it looks like Gates is gearing up to take on the Military-Industrial-Congressional Complex in the upcoming Obama administration. It should be interesting to watch how this goes. On one hand, with the downturn in the economy, DoD is going to be under a lot of pressure to cut costs which will help Gates in cracking skulls on the service heads. Yet at the same time, during a period of economic slowdown, the "Congressional" piece of the iron triangle is going to probably push back HARD, especially in those cases where the particular program falls into the district of an influential congressional leader.Defense procurement is broken to the point where its crippling our ability to field new equipment, and I'm glad that Gates is going to take the challenge on. It'll be a nasty fight though, and I wish him the best.Here's an article from Aerospace Weekly & Space Technology, one of the main publications that cover the aerospace industry.
12/8/2008 12:14:42 PM
Article continued...
12/8/2008 12:15:08 PM
Im interested to see how this turns out, the current system seems pretty entrenched.Im definitely a supporter of anything that makes our service people more effective and safer, which I think prioritizing the way they spend money could go a long way in doing
12/8/2008 1:51:36 PM
So much money is wasted thrown away it's incredible. Honestly, the DoD can do a lot to improve wasteful spending, but most of the crap comes from congress and it's regardless of political party. You have some incredibly stupid/wasteful programs, but at the same type you have programs that seem silly (such as the Future Force Warrior), but will probably pay dividends in the future. You can't just cut a programs because it isn't dong much now, or you are going to cut our edge against other countries. It's a hard nut to crack, because it's so convoluted and it's hard to tell what's worthwhile and what's pure shit.
12/8/2008 7:43:35 PM
You know, the sad thing is that a lot of these costs are being driven by insane, bleeding-edge technological requirements. Its a shame on both sides: the military for asking for platinum-plated weapon systems and the contractors for going along with it.I suppose its not too big a surprise though. We're in a "buyer's market" right now for the arms trade where a company losing a single competitive bid could literally spell out the death, or at very least the loss of thousands of jobs, for a major arms contractor. Thus, contractors are going to be overly ambitious bidding these contracts.
12/9/2008 11:20:07 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YKFAqoGRBs8&feature=related
12/11/2008 2:53:00 PM
First, Gates statements don't sound like they go nearly far enough. If what ends up happening is that projects have to go through 3 or 4 separate bureaucracies to get approved, then this will be a failure.If you could find a magical way to get rid of all the incompetents and crap projects in DoD, I am absolutely certain that you could cut the budget by 50% AND get better results. That's how screwed up DoD procurement is. DoD is worse than other branches because cutting defense has the stigma of looking unpatriotic and DoD can hide a lot of failures behind classification.As stated above, though, they need to couple new procurement with something to GET RID OF INCOMPETENT EMPLOYEES. This is a fundamental government problem. (And im not talking about simply substituting contractors without a big change in incentive structures )I am not sure that new procurement procedure above will do fuck all if your work force and management is polluted by people who have no incentive to do a good job or improve themselves. (Granted, it may prevent leech contractors from bilking the government as much as they do). The talent level of your employees and the ability of those employees to apply their talents determine organization success. For DoD, large chunks of their organizations are dysfunctional.After you fix those two things [understatement], you can move on to giving your employees the leeway to be innovative.So in summary, you basically need several big revolutions to fix DoD waste. Or you need a big war -- a lot of fat gets cut out when you quickly need to figure out a better way to kill something.[Edited on December 11, 2008 at 7:41 PM. Reason : .]
12/11/2008 7:37:54 PM
For those interested in acquisition reform:http://www.defensedaily.com/publications/dd/New-Acquisition-Panel-To-Look-At-Hill-Meddling-Chairman-Says_5973.htmlMy personal instinct says its asking the foxes to investigate the failures of hen house security.
3/10/2009 11:16:50 AM