Report Suggests DoD Should Study Lessons from Failed Anti-sequester Campaign

Faithful Intercepts readers no doubt are familiar with the dire predictions from civilian and uniformed Pentagon leaders about what will become of the U.S. military and American national security if all of sequestration’s $500 billion, decade-spanning cuts are enacted. Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Amos on Feb. 12 told a congressional panel it would be “ruinous” — though even some pro-military lawmakers and experts are skeptical about such gloomy claims.

When it came to convincing the political system to avoid the sequestration cuts, Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey recently admitted to a congressional panel that Pentagon leaders misplayed their hand. Well, Intercepts readers better hope Pentagon brass made a list of what went wrong — you know, ran what military types often (too often?) call a “lessons-learned drill.”

That’s because, according to one nonpartisan Washington think tank, deeper federal spending cuts will be needed to further pare the federal deficit and truly right the American fiscal ship. And, remember, even with sequestration the Pentagon’s baseline budget is projected to approach $600 billion per year later this decade. That’s one GIANT target. As we’ve all learned, when Washington takes on the difficult task that is deficit reduction, the GIANT targets are the easiest ones to hit. More

CAPE Director Christine Fox Leaving Pentagon

Christine Fox (DoD Photo)

Christine Fox, the director of DoD’s Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation office (CAPE), is leaving the Pentagon at the end of June, a defense official tells Intercepts.

Fox’s departure will follow the completion of the Strategic Choices and Management Review (SCMR), in which she plays a key role. The review will present options for areas to trim the Pentagon budget in the coming years. More

Photo of the Day: May 16, 2013

Georgian honor guards carry coffins of three soldiers killed in Afghanistan this week during a ceremony at an airport near the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, on Thursday. Three Georgian soldiers were killed in the Afghanistan's Helmand Province earlier this week when a suicide bomber detonated a vehicle laden with explosives. Georgian soldiers have been deployed in Afghanistan since 2004, the largest non-NATO combat troop commitment in the war-torn country. (AFP PHOTO/VANO SHLAMOV/Getty Images)

Today in Military History: May 15, 1942; Creation of Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps

On May 15, 1942 congress passes a bill establishing an all female corps in the U.S. Army and President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs it into law the next day. The bill creates the Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps (WAACs) and grants females official status in the military. The legislation was introduced a year earlier by the first women elected to Congress, Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers (R-MA).

Sen. Boxer on Benghazi: It’s All About GOP ‘Going After’ Hillary Clinton

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Congressional Democrats in recent weeks have wondered aloud just what is the endgame for their Republican cohorts in their renewed attacks on Obama administration officials past and present over the deadly Benghazi consulate attacks.

One, Senate Foreign Relations Committee member Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said Tuesday she believes the GOP’s efforts to find a smoking gun showing incompetence and/or a cover up at the highest levels of the administration is about one thing: Sinking a possible White House bid by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Speaking on the Senate floor, Boxer said, to her, the timing of last week’s House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing on Benghazi, other GOP efforts to paint the administration has hiding something, and a television ad (above) from American Crossroads, Karl Rove’s political organization, are anything but a coincidence.

“They are going after her for the 2016 election,” an agitated Boxer said. More

History Tuesday: The Origin of the term Drone

A U.S. Predator drone in Kandahar, Afghanistan, one of the hubs of the Obama administration's aggressive targeted-killing war against al-Qaida. (Veronique de Viguerie/Getty Images)

As reporters covering the Pentagon in the 21st century, writing about unmanned systems is a given. The problem we often have is what to call them.

What the average person on the street calls “drones” have different nomenclatures inside the five-sided building. And if you use the wrong term- say, calling something a UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle) versus RPA (remotely piloted aircraft) in a story – you’ll hear about it, either from irate officials or irate readers.

Which is why a letter in this week’s paper copy of Defense News caught our eye this morning. Titled “A Word With a History,” the letter, written by analyst Steve Zaloga of the Teal Group, lays out the history of the term “drone” and makes a compelling case for why we’re probably all over-thinking it.

Writes Zaloga:

“Drone is one of the oldest official designations for remotely controlled aircraft in the American military lexicon. in 1935, when the chief of naval operations  Adm. William Standley, visited Britain, he was given a demonstration of the Royal Navy’s new DH 82B Queen Bee remotely controlled aircraft that was used for anti-aircraft gunnery practice. On his return, Standley assigned an office, Cmdr. Delmer Fahrney at the Radion Division of the Naval Research Laboratory, to develop a similar system for US Navy gunnery training. Fahrney adopted the name drone to refer to these aircraft in homage to the Queen Bee. Drone became the official US Navy designation for target drones for many decades.

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F-22s Parked Less Than Six-Minute Flight from Iran

Five US Air Force F-22 Raptors on the ramp at Al Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates. (Google Earth)

At a dinner in downtown Washington Thursday, US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel touted the Pentagon’s deployment of advanced weaponry, including the Air Force F-22 Raptor, to the Middle East.

The stealthy fighters, as well other “high-end air, missile defense, and naval assets,” have been positioned in the region “to deter Iranian aggression and respond to other contingencies,” Hagel said during his remarks to The Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

It just so happens that satellite imagery of those F-22s in the Middle East has popped up on Google Earth. More

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