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USMC Plans To Cut 15,000 After Iraq, Afghan Wars

Dakota Wood, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, said the Marine Corps likely hopes to preserve a balanced force while bringing down its total size and supporting efforts to round out Marine Corps Special Forces Command at 2,700 personnel, as well as standing up a promised cyber force.

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Fearing a Wage Freeze

Politics aside, however, a military pay freeze likely would not harm the Defense Department, said Todd Harrison of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, who has analyzed various proposals to cut defense spending. “Given the fact that military and DoD civilian pay raises have exceeded raises in the private sec­tor each year for much of the past decade, and recruiting and retention are robust due to high unemployment in the private sector, a temporary freeze in non-combat compensation would not likely have an adverse effect on the military,” Harrison said in a November report

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National Security Implications of the Crisis in Egypt

When it comes to Egypt, the investments we've made in international military education and training really pay off in situations like this

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Lack of Budget Will Soon Hurt USAF: Officials

The lack of flexibility is an enormous problem, said Mark Gunzinger, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a Washington think tank. “When you move money around like that, it is very difficult to do long-term strategic plans, or even implement existing plans when you’re not sure what the funding levels are going to be,” he said.

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Analysts Expect ‘No Surprises,’ Further Program Kills in DoD Request

Gates plans to take some of those monies and shift them to other needs — but some lawmakers and analysts say the secretary might lose a good chunk as Congress grapples with paring the federal deficit. “I don’t expect any major surprises” next week when the next budget plan is made public, said Jim Thomas of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. “I don’t think there will be more immediate program cuts,” Thomas added Sunday during “This Week in Defense News.”

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Aging Fighter Jet Gets New Lease on Life

But F/A-18 workers were spared. “The aircraft has been a good insurance policy for the Navy,” said Todd Harrison, a defense analyst for the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. “The F/A-18 will be in demand for as long as there are problems with the F-35 program. And if you look how that program has gone over the last several years, there’s no telling how long that will be.”