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 Must Tell Story Better To Get $: Secretary Fanning

Army Must Tell Story Better To Get $: Secretary Fanning
Army Must Tell Story Better To Get $: Secretary Fanning

ARLINGTON: The Army must tell its story better to get the money it needs, the new Army Secretary said this morning, making messaging one of his main missions. “What I would have to do first of all is… tell the Army story,” Eric Fanning said, “and the reason to do that is to make sure that the Army…

Army Soldiers Will Fight: Buy Them The Tools To Win

Army Soldiers Will Fight: Buy Them The Tools To Win
Army Soldiers Will Fight: Buy Them The Tools To Win

Budget battles between the Army and what would become the Air Force date back to the court-martial of Billy Mitchell in 1925. In the late 1990s the two services hurled imprecations, arguments and doctrine at each other as they fought over a shrinking pool of money, a situation not unlike what we face today. Those stresses are…

Cyber, Guard, Rapid Acquisition: Fanning’s Priorities

Cyber, Guard, Rapid Acquisition: Fanning’s Priorities
Cyber, Guard, Rapid Acquisition: Fanning’s Priorities

UPDATED: Adds CSA Milley & Gen. Sullivan remarks WASHINGTON: The administration’s nominee for Army Secretary wants better defenses against cyber attack, a warmer relationship with the National Guard, and a fast-track for acquisition inspired by the Air Force’s Rapid Capabilities Office. Despite having held senior positions in both the Air Force and the Navy, Eric Fanning’s path…

Army 2016 Forecast: A Year of Peril

Army 2016 Forecast: A Year of Peril
Army 2016 Forecast: A Year of Peril

  The Army has gotten smaller every year since 2011, while the threats have gotten greater. Simply put, America’s Army – our nation’s foundational force since 1775 – is asked to face a dangerous and uncertain world with reduced and uncertain resources. It is confronted by turmoil abroad and hindered at home by politicians unable or…

Full Speed Ahead On Wargames: Gen. Odierno

Full Speed Ahead On Wargames: Gen. Odierno
Full Speed Ahead On Wargames: Gen. Odierno

ARLINGTON: The US Army is trying to reinvent itself, much as it did during the Great Depression. Even if the steep cuts called sequestration return in 2016 — as is current law — the Army would rather get smaller than shortchange innovation, Chief of Staff Ray Odierno said today. The service will hold annual wargames on…

AUSA: Seeking Stability (& Sanity) In 2015

AUSA: Seeking Stability (& Sanity) In 2015
AUSA: Seeking Stability (& Sanity) In 2015

The regular Army and the National Guard are increasingly at loggerheads — not because they don’t respect each other, but because both want to protect their funding, their mission, and their people from zero-sum budget cuts. We asked the chiefs of the two leading advocacy groups involved to present their very different views for the way…

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…

X-47B: Navy Drone Launches Off Aircraft Carrier; A New Tailhook Era

X-47B: Navy Drone Launches Off Aircraft Carrier; A New Tailhook Era
X-47B: Navy Drone Launches Off Aircraft Carrier; A New Tailhook Era

It’s hard enough for a human pilot to take off from the cramped and pitching deck of a US Navy aircraft carrier. Today, for the first time in history, a Remotely Piloted Aircraft did it. You can bet that military leaders in Beijing and Tehran sat up and took note as the batwinged X-47B drone…