AUSA Annual Conference Grows For 1st Time In 6 Years

AUSA Annual Conference Grows For 1st Time In 6 Years
AUSA Annual Conference Grows For 1st Time In 6 Years

WASHINGTON: DC’s biggest defense conference just stopped getting smaller. The Association of the US Army’s annual meeting is a cultural touchstone for the largest service and a leading indicator for the health of the defense industry. Like the Pentagon budget, AUSA attendance peaked during the troop surge in 2010, then shrank rapidly with the drawdowns,…

Army Grapples With Cyber Age Battles In Megacities

Army Grapples With Cyber Age Battles In Megacities
Army Grapples With Cyber Age Battles In Megacities

High-tech warfare at knife-fight ranges: that’s the ugly future of urban combat. If you thought Baghdad was bad, with its roughly six million people, imagine a “megacity” of 10 or 20 million, where the slums have more inhabitants than some countries. Imagine a city of the very near future where suspicious locals post every US…

The Army’s Plan For Cyber, One Bright Spot In Its Budget

The Army’s Plan For Cyber, One Bright Spot In Its Budget
The Army’s Plan For Cyber, One Bright Spot In Its Budget

WASHINGTON: In an Army budget outlook that’s otherwise as grim as television tuned to a dead channel, there is one bright spot: cyberspace. “You know, we say that ‘flat is the new growth’ in DoD,” Vice-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. James “Sandy” Winnefeld, said at yesterday’s Bloomberg conference. “[Even] special operations forces”…

Who Should Decide The Army’s Future? Active Vs. Guard

Who Should Decide The Army’s Future? Active Vs. Guard
Who Should Decide The Army’s Future? Active Vs. Guard

The National Guard has lost the budget battle inside the administration. But it has hardly lost the war. “We are disappointed by today’s budget preview, but we are not surprised. Nor are we defeated,” declared retired Maj. Gen. Gus Hargett, president of influential National Guard Association of the United States, in a statement released shortly…

Rep. Smith Warns Congress: Close Bases Or DoD May Do It Without Us

Rep. Smith Warns Congress: Close Bases Or DoD May Do It Without Us
Rep. Smith Warns Congress: Close Bases Or DoD May Do It Without Us

Yesterday, Hill staffer Vickie Plunkett made some mid-sized waves at the Association of the US Army’s winter conference when she noted that the military can legally close bases and arsenals without seeking congressional approval — and publicly urged the Army to “take your chances” and try it. This afternoon, we got this remarkably supportive reaction…

Military Can Close Bases WITHOUT Congress’s OK: ‘Take Your Chances,’ Says Hill Staffer

Military Can Close Bases WITHOUT Congress’s OK: ‘Take Your Chances,’ Says Hill Staffer
Military Can Close Bases WITHOUT Congress’s OK: ‘Take Your Chances,’ Says Hill Staffer

AUSA WINTER, HUNTSVILLE, ALA.: Fear is in the air. “The commercial base will disappear,” Boeing executive James Moran believes. It’s not just sequestration, the retired brigadier general said this morning at the Association of the US Army’s winter conference. There is real anxiety among defense contractors that as budgets tighten, the Army will starve private…

Army Taps Controversial Generals: What McMaster & Mangum Mean For The Future

Army Taps Controversial Generals: What McMaster & Mangum Mean For The Future
Army Taps Controversial Generals: What McMaster & Mangum Mean For The Future

[UPDATED 6:30 pm] HUNTSVILLE, ALA.: The ever-beleaguered Army has a reputation — not undeserved — for being bland, conformist, and bureaucratic, an organization where brilliant mavericks are forced to retire at colonel and the guys who make general don’t rock the boat. Just ask any of the long-serving and long-suffering officers convening here in Huntsville, home…