News
Obama Exempts Military Personnel From Cuts; Civilian Workers, Weapons At Bigger Risk
President Barack Obama will protect all accounts used to pay for military personnel from deep spending cuts that would kick in Jan. 2 if lawmakers fail to pass a $1.2 trillion deficit-reduction measure, placing a bulls eye on civilian employees and weapon programs/.../
White House to Exempt Military Personnel From Automatic Cuts
The White House Office of Management and Budget informed Congress today that it will exempt from potential automatic budget cuts billions of dollars earmarked for military pay and benefits.
Trucks, Not Limos
Senior serving officers in any country's armed forces tend to shun public controversy. But Admiral Jonathan Greenert, America's chief of naval operations, has stoked it in the latest issue of a specialist journal. His article appeared to question the value of the stealth technologies that underpin the biggest weapons project in history, the vast and costly F-35 Joint Strike Fighter programme/.../
The Risks Of Military Drawdowns
/.../The Pentagon is set to cut 100,000 ground forces and $487 billion over 10 years (without the budget sequester, which would raise the dollar figure to roughly $1 trillion). They must work out how to do so without compromising their ability to maintain America’s national security/.../
Virginia Has Most at Risk as Contracts Hit Cliff
Virginia, Maine, New Mexico and the District of Columbia have the most in federal contracts to lose from the looming threat of $1.2 trillion in automatic cuts to government spending.
US Navy Pushes Resurgence in DEW Interest
Advances in Directed Energy Weapon (DEW) technology during the last 20 years have repeatedly promised a revolutionary shift in modern warfare. However recent high-profile failures, costs of development programmes, bureaucratic inflexibility and institutional reluctance to embrace a shift in tactics could hinder users from developing and exploiting these technologies just as they are reaching maturity/.../