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Is the Pentagon’s Budget About To Be Nuked?
...Meanwhile, an August 2015 study by the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments found that upgrading and maintaining the US nuclear force posture will cost more than $700 billion over the next 25 years.
Unraveling the Mystery of DoD’s Third Offset Strategy
There is a tendency “of calling anything that is high tech or anything that involves an advanced capability as part of the third offset strategy and that’s either to say we are not funding it enough or look the investments aren’t really panning out and just painting with a really broad brush as to what the third offset strategy really is,” Katherine Blakeley a research fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments told Federal News Radio.
Reshape US Army, Asian Alliances To Deter China: CSBA
The US Army must play a larger role in the Pacific to deter China, one of DC’s leading defense experts is telling Congress today. That larger role requires politically and fiscally difficult decisions to build new kinds of units and base them in new places, Andrew Krepinevich told me in advance of his Capitol Hill briefing. The core of Krepinevich’s vision: Army missile batteries — for anti-air, anti-ship, missile defense, and long-range strike — regularly deploying to, or even permanently based in, West Pacific nations.
US Buildup in Philippines Raises Stakes in Region
Jan van Tol, a senior fellow at another Washington think tank, the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, said that operating from bases on Palawan would put U.S. forces close to the disputed Spratly Islands, where China has been reclaiming land and building airfields and other facilities. “More visits to the Philippines means more ships in the South China Sea,” he said in a telephone interview Tuesday.
US Defense Secretary Announces Navy Can Blow Up Anything It Wants, Any Time It Wants
February 3, 2016
Trouble Ahead for Defense Budget, Analyst Says
But, that slight deficit may begin a trend that diverts the department’s funding requests further and further away from its planned spending as the years progress, said Katherine Blakeley a research fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.