In the News

Sequestration Drama Could Delay 2013 Budget

  • November 6, 2011
  • The Hill

Lawmakers could wait to void automatic Pentagon cuts that a debt-panel failure would trigger until well after the 2012 election, meaning the final 2013 military spending bill would be passed months late, says a plugged-in defense think tank.

In the News

U.S. Military Retirees Fret About Healthcare Fees

  • November 2, 2011
  • Reuters

In an era of government belt-tightening, support appears to be growing for reining in the spiraling expense of military healthcare. In recommendations to the budget-cutting congressional “super committee” in September, President Barack Obama proposed two steps to offset rising military healthcare costs/…/

In the News

U.S. Military Chiefs Warn Budget Cuts Will Cancel Weapons

  • November 2, 2011
  • Bloomberg

The chiefs of the U.S. military said they may have to end new weapons programs, close bases and cut civilian personnel as early as next year if Congress allows about $1 trillion in defense cuts during the next decade.  The heads of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force, in testimony today before the House Armed Services Committee, joined Defense Secretary Leon Panetta in warning against the reductions.

Analysis

The Terrorist Threat Beneath The Waves

  • November 2, 2011
  • Wall Street Journal

The world’s vast undersea energy infrastructure—oil and gas platforms, wellheads, pipelines and pumps—is now vulnerable to attack by cheap submarines and unmanned vehicles.

In the News

Planning? Don’t. Strategy? It Would Be Good To Have One

  • November 1, 2011
  • Aviation Week

In the 1961 farewell speech where President Eisenhower made the “military-industrial complex” famous, Ike was going to add “Congressional” and struck it out minutes before he spoke, according to his military aide, Brig Gen Andrew Goodpaster. Goodpaster, who died in 2005, made the observation in a 1993 interview, according to a new report by Barry Watts and Todd Harrison of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, “Sustaining Critical Sectors of the US Defense Industrial Base”.

In the News

Lessons From The Last 10 Years Of Warfare

  • November 1, 2011
  • Washington Post

For the past 10 years, the United States has engaged in constant warfare. Does that mean the next 10 years will be the same, even after U.S. combat troops are out of Iraq and Afghanistan? Put it a different way: We have spent trillions of dollars to create the most professional and powerful military force in the world to fight those wars. It continues to cost hundreds of billions more each year to help sustain this all-volunteer force.

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