Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Carter outlines military acquisition improvements
 
Related Links
 Ashton B. Carter
Carter outlines military acquisition improvements

Posted 4/14/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Lisa Daniel
American Forces Press Service


4/14/2011 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- The Defense Department has made much progress toward buying and fielding equipment smarter and faster, the Pentagon's undersecretary for acquisitions, technology and logistics told a congressional panel April 13.

At a time when President Barack Obama and Congress look for ways to fix the nation's finances, Ashton B. Carter outlined progress to the House Appropriations Committee's defense subcommittee.

"I would point out that the answers to the nation's budget woes do not exist primarily in the Department of Defense, and within DOD they also do not exist solely or even primarily in acquisition," Mr. Carter said in a prepared statement.

The administration's proposed fiscal 2012 budget includes $78 billion cut from the predicted rate of growth in DOD overhead. Of that, $4 billion comes from acquisitions, all of which resulted from restructuring the F-35 Lightning II joint strike fighter program, Mr. Carter said.

Defense officials have made hard choices in canceling some weapons programs and restructuring others when the department was not getting a good return on investment, he said. The changes include:

-- Issuing a stop-work order on the F136 engine for the F-35, which was costing the department roughly $1 million per day and would require nearly $3 billion to bring to completion; and

-- Canceling the Marine Corps' expeditionary fighting vehicle and reallocating funds to existing Marine ground combat requirements. The EFV consumed more than $3 billion, would cost another $12 billion to complete, and if continued over two decades, would expend more than half of the Corps' procurement funds.

Mr. Carter said the department has demonstrated improved processes in the acquisition and management of several programs, including:

-- The KC-46A aerial refueling tanker, which he called a model of how a solicitation process should work when the contract was awarded in February;

-- The next two advanced extremely high frequency satellites, designed to reduce costs and allow for future investments that will lower risks in technology; and

-- The Navy's replacement to Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines, for which engineering tradeoffs have reduced average procurement costs by 16 percent.

Such improvements are being made by new Pentagon directives to oversee programs based on what they should cost, rather than accepting only what manufacturers say they will cost, and by demonstrating affordability throughout the process, Mr. Carter said.

Moving forward, Mr. Carter has directed department officials to more aggressively manage the more than $200 billion spent annually on services, which consumes just over half of all DOD contract dollars.

In other areas, the undersecretary asked the subcommittee to support Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates' initiative to revitalize the acquisitions workforce by supporting his fiscal 2012 budget request for $734 million for new hires.

Secretary Gates' plan to grow the acquisitions workforce by 10,000 workers is an exception to budget levels that freeze the remainder of department staff to fiscal 2010 levels, Mr. Carter said. The department has hired 4,200 people toward the 10,000 goal, he said.



tabComments
No comments yet.  
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
Avon Park Air Force Range receives Interior Secretary award

Former Little Rock AFB commander and spouse receive 2012 O'Malley award

Reservist sets latest mark in battle for Schriever track record

CSAF shares perspective during AETC Senior Leader Conference

Thule boilers save big in first year

Life Extension Programs modernize ICBMs

SecAF visits basic military training

Through Airmen's Eyes: Airman battles breast cancer

Remains of two Airmen lost in 1969 identified, honored

Top female AF general tells personal examples of women's progress in military

Wizards salute Andrews Airmen, service members

Online access simplifies dependent updates

Aviano unveils first locally painted F-16

'Green Flag' keeps Airmen, Soldiers mission ready

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Teal ropes to spotlight sexual assault response  37

Air Force Academy energy research will yield global benefits


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing