News
Defense Drawdown: It’s Been All Talk, Now It’s Time to Walk
U.S. military spending peaked in 2010 at $668 billion. It has dropped slightly since then, as the military started withdrawing troops from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Army Fights to Keep Heavy Armored Brigades; GCV at Stake
The battle over the Army's Ground Combat Vehicle isn't only about one war machine and what it may weigh (80-plus tons) or cost ($13 some million). It's just one front in a larger war over the Army's armored heart and its role in the nation's strategy.
Next Few Weeks Critical to Defining DoD in Second Obama Term
In some ways, a second Obama term is likely to mean some degree of continuity in the Defense Department. But the shape and size of the government's largest and most complex department over the next few years will depend to a large degree on what happens over the next few weeks/.../
The Next Sec Def: Will Obama Choose Change or Stability?
Officially, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta isn’t going anywhere.
Why Pentagon Won’t Say How It Would Cut $55 Billion Starting Jan. 1
Why, in a building filled with US military commanders who pride themselves on preparing for every contingency, particularly those considered dire, is there such a reluctance to plan – or at least to acknowledge any planning – for severe spending cuts mandated under this Washington budgetary regimen known as sequestration?
The Defense Budget Challenges Obama Faces
The results of last night's election ensure that there will not be radical departures from recent discussions surrounding the size of the Defense Department's budget moving forward. What remains to be seen, of course, is whether some form of principled compromise can be reached before sequestration will kick in and remove another roughly $500 billion in defense spending over the next decade. (And right now any such compromise seems to be far from certain.) Regardless, serious thought and planning needs to go into preparing for current and future security threats, challenges, and opportunities because other state and nonstate actors internationally have designs and strategies that they are working to implement whether we like it or not, and we will have less resources to counter them.