News
The Pentagon’s Decade-Long Spending Spurt Is Over: Welcome To The New Austerity
Since late 2011, defense contractors big and small have been planning for the previously announced reduction in defense spending of $487 billion over 10 years. But they could lose an additional $492 billion under sequestration, the automatic spending cuts that kick in on Jan. 2 if lawmakers on Capitol Hill and the White House fail to reconcile their differences.
Debt Reckoning: Military Looks To Phase In Spending Cuts
In last year’s budget talks, Congress set up the prospect of $500 billion in automatic cuts in military spending to help pressure political leaders to reach a broader deficit-reduction deal.
The End Of Advantage: Enemies May Catch Up With US Technology—Or Surpass It
The idea that militarily relevant technology, from missiles to GPS guidance, is proliferating ever more rapidly around the globe is not a new one. Nor is anyone predicting that the United States will be technologically backwards in 2030. But leading thinkers are increasingly concerned that, in a few key areas, potential adversaries, especially China, will erode America's technological advantage, catch up, or even surpass us.
Where’s The Beef? Krepinevich Slams Vagueness Of US Strategy
Where's the strategic beef? That's what Andrew Krepinevich wants to know.
No Guarantee of Troops in Afghanistan Past 2014
The debate about U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan beyond 2014 is ramping up, with dueling defense experts suggesting a force of more than 30,000 or fewer than 10,000.
How ‘Fiscal Cliff’ is Already Hitting Defense Industry
/.../For their part, some defense contractor executives are now making it a point to stress that sequestration, if a fiscal cliff deal isn’t reached by Jan. 1, would be less of a “guillotine” than a “speed bump.”