News
TRICARE’s High Price Tag Comes Under Scrutiny
The military's massive health insurance program offers millions of service members, retirees and their dependents quality care at relatively low cost. That's what the government aimed for when it created the Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services in 1966, now known as TRICARE. But the price of that success has been high for Uncle Sam: The $53 billion program now consumes 10 percent of the Pentagon's nonwar budget/.../
The Military Is Already Preparing For The Worst-Case Sequester Scenario
There's plenty of talk about the "fiscal cliff" -- which was avoided by a last-minute deal last month but that only delayed a huge Pentagon fear: Sequestration.
Hagel Seen as Able to Tackle Personnel Costs
The spiraling cost of personnel at the Defense Department isn’t a new problem, yet a solution has been elusive. Cutting benefits for service members during more than a decade of war has been politically unpalatable. As a result, the topic has largely been pushed to the side, left to be debated by budget wonks and defense policy gurus.
Budget Woes Could Affect AF’s KC-46
The KC-46 tanker program faces potential budget issues that could force a renegotiation of the Defense Department’s contract with Boeing, according to budget analysts.
Weight-Loss Surgery: Budget Shock Could Be Healthy
Deep and long-term budget cuts could be the best thing to happen to the U.S. defense enterprise in decades.
Pentagon Orders Planning for Civilian Furloughs, Other Cutbacks
If the automatic cuts currently scheduled to take place on March 1 stay in effect, DoD estimates its spending authority would be reduced by $45 billion in fiscal 2013. Compounding the problem, the cuts would have to be absorbed in just the final seven months of the year.