In the News

The Pentagon Says This Man Can Fix Its Personnel System

  • April 16, 2015
  • Defense One

It’s not the highest-profile office within the Pentagon but it has outsized influence on the nearly 3 million troops who serve. It’s the Office of Personnel and Readiness, or P&R, which oversees everything from pay and compensation to housing, healthcare, education and military supermarkets.

In the News

What is the Future of Naval Warfare?

  • April 15, 2015
  • Franz-Stefan Gady
  • The Diplomat

A new study by the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA) tries to sketch out the future of naval warfare and how it is impacted by the growing dissemination of precision-guided weapons.

In the News

CSBA Study Finds Large, Long-Range Aircraft Would Do Better In Combat

  • April 15, 2015
  • Inside Defense

A future fighter aircraft is likely to need more range and payload than speed and agility as countries like Russia, China and Iran invest in long-range air defenses that can keep high-value support assets including aerial refueling tankers up to 1,000 nautical miles away from their military installations, but stealth remains critical despite advances in radar technology, according to a new Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments study.

In the News

Despite Wider Cuts, Special Operations Command Budget Outlook Remains Rosy

  • April 14, 2015
  • National Defense Magazine

On the surface, Special Operations Command is holding its own in a time of fiscal austerity.As far as what is requested at the beginning of the budget cycle and what is eventually enacted, it normally receives what it asks for along with a little bit more.

In the News

No Man’s Sea: CSBA’s Lethal Vision Of Future Naval War

  • April 14, 2015
  • Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.
  • Breaking Defense

WASHINGTON: The seas are shrinking. As missiles grow longer-ranged and more precise, as sensors grow ever sharper, there are ever fewer places for a ship to hide. “A ship’s a fool to fight a fort,” goes an old naval adage, because a land base can carry more ammunition and armor than anything that floats. Admirals have always been uneasy about bringing their fleets in range of shore-based weapons. But what does the US Navy do when those weapons can find you hundreds or thousands of miles out to sea?

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