Despite Trump’s Signature, NDAA Fights Still Brewing
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The White House only has a few objections to this year’s NDAA, and lets Congress know what they are as the Senate gears up for debate.
Trump Takes NDAA Victory Lap, But 2020 Looms
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With the two-year budget relief ending in 2020, and a new Space Force to fund, the good times might not last long.
Pence: ‘We Must Have American Dominance In Space’
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The “separate but equal” sixth service (don’t forget the Coast Guard) will be created in stages, because, as Pence finally admitted publicly, it “requires Congressional action.” And, as the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Paul Selva, admitted today, if Congress passed the relevant laws in a year that would “unprecedented.”
Nuke Sub Launch Tube Problems Found: ‘Warning Flags Are Up’
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WASHINGTON: The Navy has discovered problems with the welds on 12 nuclear missile launch tubes, some for America’s $122.3 billion Columbia-class submarine program and others for the Royal Navy’s Dreadnought submarines. The issue is serious enough that Rep. Joe Courtney, top Democrat on the House seapower subcommittee, told me “the warning flags are up.” There is… Keep reading →
What Really Matters In The Defense Authorization Act & What Didn’t Get Done
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Most coverage of the annual defense policy bill has focused on program changes: more ships (including six icebreakers!), no change to F-35’s, more RDT&E, no JSTARS recap, a growl (but no more) on ZTE, and many more (the bill and report run 2,500 pages). Less discussed, but of more import in the long run, are the… Keep reading →
House OKs More Subs, Pumps $250M More Into Industrial Base
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CAPITOL HILL: In the drama-free weeks leading up to Thursday’s overwhelming passage of the compromise $716 billion defense policy bill by the House of Representatives, lawmakers sent a pretty clear signal to the White House: we want more submarines. With concerns rising over the growing prowess of Russian and Chinese undersea capabilities, and standoff air… Keep reading →
Mattis Makes New Plea To HASC For Russian Sanctions Relief
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CAPITOL HILL: Defense Secretary James Mattis fired off a new letter to House Armed Services leadership on Tuesday, asking lawmakers again to vote in favor of waivers for certain countries Washington is trying to sway into its orbit, but who continue to do business with Russian defense firms. The letter was delivered to HASC chairman Rep.… Keep reading →
Congress Halts F-35 Turkey Transfers, Punts On Space Force
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CAPITOL HILL: The Senate and House have come together on a $716 billion defense spending report that would prohibit the transfer of F-35 jets to Turkey, expand American aid to Asian allies to counter China and add ships and other technology funding lines above the White House request. The National Defense Authorization Act Report was… Keep reading →
Pentagon Wants Industry to be Smart on Cyber, But No Plan Yet
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Under constant cyber attack, the Pentagon is struggling to find ways to incorporate cyber security as part of the contracting process.
Navy Needs Plan To Update Old Ships’ Weapons: Hill Staff
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“What’s missing at this point is what the Navy’s modernization strategy is,” the staffer said. The ships in question have enough margin for growth that they could accommodate upgrades, but how much does it cost to keep upgrading old ships? How does the cost:benefit ratio of such upgrades compare to spending the same amount on new vessels? The Navy’s plan is appealing “philosophically,” the staffer said, “but the devil’s in the details.”