Top general: 5 bad habits for the Pentagon to fix
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| Washington
Gen. Martin Dempsey, the nation鈥檚 top ranking military officer, says there are at least five areas in US defense operations where bad habits have developed, which tighter Pentagon budgets will force the military to fix.
General Dempsey, who is chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, earlier this month told The New York Times that, 鈥淲e鈥檝e been living with unconstrained resources for 10 years, and, frankly, we鈥檝e developed some bad habits,鈥 which he vowed to overcome.
At a lunch with reporters hosted by the Monitor Tuesday, Dempsey was asked to be specific about the bad habits he saw. which, he cautioned, were 鈥渘ot an all inclusive list.鈥
Here, in the general鈥檚 own words, is the list, in the order he gave it.
- 鈥淚n our acquisition programs 鈥 there is certainly room to become more efficient.鈥
- 鈥淥ver the years, our health-care costs have exceeded expectations in a, no-pun intended, unhealthy way.鈥
- 鈥淥n infrastructure 鈥 and these are places where we could use the help of the United States Congress, actually 鈥 we haven鈥檛 had to reduce the scope and scale of our infrastructure accounts. I think we will have to do so under the budget authorities that we see coming our way.鈥
- 鈥淓ven in operations, I think there [are] times when we probably overinvested. We might be able to accomplish the task in different areas of the world with fewer resources, if we forced ourselves to think about how to do that.鈥
- 鈥淥ur reliance upon contractors is excessive, in particular in certain aspects of the use of contractors.鈥
Dempsey noted that under the Budget Control Act of 2011 鈥渨e were tasked to find $487 billion鈥 in savings. In addition, the budget sequester will cut defense spending another $42.7 billion in the current fiscal year and, if it continues until 2023, 鈥渢akes you to another $500 billion,鈥 Dempsey said.
鈥淚t is not just a clich茅 to say that when you have all the resources you need, you no longer have the responsibility to think. So we are thinking,鈥 Dempsey told a roomful of reporters. 鈥淲e are trying to think our way through this challenge. And I think we will find opportunities to retain our level of effectiveness while becoming more efficient.鈥
But the general warned that, at some point, efficiency savings would be insufficient to meet the budget targets, and defense capabilities would be affected. 鈥淵ou know, you can鈥檛 wring that towel out too tightly,鈥 he said of efficiency gains. And speaking of the combined cuts imposed by the Budget Control Act and by sequestration, he added, 鈥淭here is a point at which you just can鈥檛 do that by becoming more efficient.鈥
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has ordered Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter and Dempsey to conduct a review of strategic choices facing the Pentagon with a target completion date of May 31.
鈥淲hat you will see come out of the [Defense Secretary鈥檚] strategic choices management review is that we will have to look at those places where we have grown most and decide whether that growth is justified, and my suspicion is we will find that, in many cases, it is not all justified,鈥 Dempsey said.聽