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Tag: Pentagon

  • Pentagon Blocks Contractor Push for Inflation Bailout

    Pentagon Blocks Contractor Push for Inflation Bailout

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    In a rare victory for taxpayers, the Pentagon announced last week that it will not give special treatment to weapons contractors based on their overwrought and inaccurate claims about the impacts of inflation on the arms industry.

    In a letter that responded to questions raised by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Pentagon acquisition chief Bill LaPlante flatly stated that ““DoD does not intend to enact a policy to increase contract prices due to inflation.” He further noted that contracting officers “should not agree to requests for adjustment due to changed economic conditions as cost impacts attributable to unanticipated inflation are not a result of contracting officer directed changes.”

    The Pentagon’s’ decision comes after a concerted campaign by the weapons sector’s top trade group, the National Defense Industrial Association, which had claimed – in a report that was replete with statistics but short on persuasive proof – that the Department of Defense would lose $110 billion in buying power from Fiscal Year 2021 to Fiscal Year 2023 as a result of the impact of defense procurement on everything from pay for military and civilian personnel to the costs of weapons procurement. The report then called for a $42 billion increase in the Pentagon’s Fiscal Year 2023 budget. The claims on inflation were used to plead for a series of pro-industry measures, including renegotiating existing contracts.

    The report and the lobbying that accompanied it were nothing short of a naked money grab, exaggerating the impacts of inflation in order to win longstanding concessions to an industry already flush with cash.

    To add insult to injury, it appears that two of the authors of the NDIA
    DIA
    report, including former deputy defense secretary and comptroller David Norquist, may have violated restrictions on post-government lobbying in their work related to promoting its findings. As Senator Warren noted, “NDIA is clearly trading on the white paper authors’ previous DoD service, noting that ‘all served as comptrollers in the Department of Defense, underlining the significance of the study. This statement alone makes a mockery of the purpose of post-government employment restrictions, which is to ‘prevent former Federal employees or officers exerting undue influence gained from Federal employment and using information gained while working for the Federal Government to unfairly benefit a new employer.’”

    As Warren has also pointed out, major defense contractors have enjoyed hefty profits despite the challenges posed by inflation and supply chain interruptions. They have also devoted billions to share buybacks rather than investments in research and development or more efficient production techniques. Furthermore the CEO’s of the top five military contractors – Lockheed Martin
    LMT
    , Boeing
    BA
    , Raytheon, General Dynamics
    GD
    , and Northrop Grumman
    NOC
    – have had no qualms about continuing to take huge compensation packages, to the tune of $20 million per year on average.

    There are still serious flaws in the weapons procurement process, including widespread price gouging by firms like TransDigm, which has imposed markups of up to 3,800 percent on basic spare parts. The Project on Government Oversight has published a useful guide to Congressional efforts to stop outrageous industry overcharges, including the Stop Price Gouging the Military Act, sponsored in the Senate by Sen. Warren and in the House by Rep. John Garamendi (D-CA). In addition to overcharges on smaller items, cost overruns on major systems have led to things like $13 billion aircraft carriers – a sum equivalent to the entire budget of the Centers for Disease Control.

    Major problems remain, but for now the Pentagon is to be applauded for standing up to the industry’s special pleading. Hopefully it will set the stage for additional reforms that will save billions for taxpayers while demanding better performance by the arms industry.

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    William Hartung, Contributor

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  • Can Putin’s ‘Butcher of Syria’ save Russia from another rout?

    Can Putin’s ‘Butcher of Syria’ save Russia from another rout?

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    Russia’s General Sergei Surovikin is no stranger to mass murder and spreading terror.

    In Chechnya, the shaven-headed veteran officer, who has the physique of a wrestler and an expression to match, vowed to “destroy three Chechen fighters for every Russian soldier killed.” And he’s remembered bitterly in northern Syria for reducing much of the city of Aleppo to ruins.

    The 56-year-old air force general also oversaw the relentless targeting of clinics, hospitals and civilian infrastructure in rebel-held Idlib in 2019, an effort to break opponents’ will and send refugees fleeing to Europe via neighboring Turkey. The 11-month campaign “showed callous disregard for the lives of the roughly 3 million civilians in the area,” noted Human Rights Watch in a scathing report.

    Now he is repeating his Syrian playbook in Ukraine.

    Two weeks ago, Vladimir Putin appointed Surovikin as the overall commander of Russia’s so-called special military operation, to the delight of Moscow’s hawks. Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov praised Surovikin as “a real general and a warrior.” He will “improve the situation,” Kadyrov added in a social media post.

    But reversing a series of stunning battlefield Ukrainian victories and shifting the tide of the war may be beyond even the ruthless Surovikin. Ukrainians have shown throughout the year they’re made of stern stuff and aren’t going to be intimidated by war crimes — and they’ve endured bombing and bombardments before by equally unscrupulous Russian generals.

    But Western military officials and analysts note there are already signs of more tactical coherence than was seen under his predecessor General Alexander Dvornikov. “His war tactics totally breach the rules of war but unfortunately they proved effective in Syria,” a senior British military intelligence officer told POLITICO.  “As a war strategist he has a record of effectiveness — however vicious,” the officer added. 

    Surovikin and other officials point to the targeting of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure with a massive wave of attacks the past week. Strikes at the weekend resulted in power outages across the country leaving more than a million households without electricity, the deputy head of the Ukrainian presidency, Kyrylo Tymoshenko, said Saturday.

    “These are vile strikes on critical objects,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address. “The world can and must stop this terror,” he said. “The geography of this latest mass strike is very wide,” Zelenskyy added. “Of course we don’t have the technical ability to knock down 100 percent of the Russian missiles and strike drones. I am sure that, gradually, we will achieve that, with help from our partners. Already now, we are downing a majority of cruise missiles, a majority of drones.”

    Intercepting a majority of what’s being fired by the Russians at Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, though, isn’t enough to halt the disruption Surovikin is endeavoring to provoke with the strikes. The scale of the damage caused to Ukraine’s power system at the weekend exceeded what was inflicted in the first wave of strikes on energy infrastructure on October 10, according to a Telegram post by Ukrenergo, the state grid operator.

    Cheap shots

    Around a third of the country’s power stations have been destroyed since the attacks started, Ukrainian authorities say.

    And for Russia the cost of the aerial assault is cheap, relying as it does on Iran’s Shahed-136 unmanned aerial vehicles, basically flying bombs nicknamed “kamikaze drones” because they are destroyed on impact.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin with then-PM Dmitry Medvedev and Sergei Surovikin in 2017 | Pool photo by Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP via Getty Images

    The drones, which have a flying range of 2,500 kilometers, loiter over a target until ordered to attack. With a wingspan of 2.5 meters they can be difficult to identify on radar and cost only an estimated €20,000 to make, compared, say, to cruise missiles costing up to €2 million to produce.

    Last week the White House said Iranian drone experts — trainers and tech support workers — have been deployed on the ground in Russia-annexed Crimea to help launch attacks on Ukraine. “Tehran is now directly engaged on the ground, and through the provision of weapons that are impacting civilians and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine,” said national security spokesman John Kirby.

    But turning to Iran for assistance also demonstrates a Russian weakness, says a Pentagon adviser. That they are using Iranian drones suggests they really are running out of missiles. “I don’t think their capabilities are anyway as good as they claim. I’ve always thought that the Russians were a bit of a hollow force. They don’t have depth in range with capabilities and they can’t really apply them very effectively. The fact that they’re going to Iranians for drone technology, that’s a pretty sad statement about the once vaunted Russian military-industrial or Soviet military-industrial complex,” the adviser told POLITICO.

    And while the drones are helping to cause considerable damage, their light explosive payloads at 36 kilograms present the Russians with a problem – they are not powerful enough to cause “decommissioning” damage to big power stations and so are being aimed at smaller sub-stations instead. Eventually, too, Western and Ukrainian experts will find ways to jam the GPS system the drones depend on to shift them off target. So, they may have a short shelf life of effectiveness, say Western officials.

    Not having sufficient depth in terms of capabilities isn’t the only problem facing Russian generals. One of the most debilitating problems for the Russians has been the lack of small-unit leadership and competent supervision on the battlefield.

    Ukrainian servicemen and police officers stand guard in a street after a drone attack in Kyiv on October 17, 2022 | Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images

    The Ukrainians since 2014 have been steeped in U.S. military doctrine and training, which focuses on building a professional corps of corporals and sergeants who understand the big picture and are given the delegated authority to make decisions on the battlefield as they lead their units, according to John Barranco, an analyst at the Atlantic Council who oversaw the U.S. Marines’ initial operations in Afghanistan after the 9/11 terror attacks and served in Iraq.

    The failure of the Russians to build up such a cadre has plagued them in Ukraine and it isn’t a deficiency Surovikin has time to rectify. In fact, the situation is likely to worsen with the Kremlin now throwing into inadequately battle-trained conscripts from Putin’s partial mobilization order.

    Russian retreat

    After just a handful of days’ training, conscripts are already dying. And draftees are being sent to what is now the crucial front in this stage of the war — the southern port city of Kherson — where Russian authorities have ordered all residents to leave ahead of a closing advance by Ukrainian troops.

    Kherson city is the only regional capital Russia has managed to seize since the invasion began. It was a key prize in establishing a land bridge between Crimea and Ukraine’s south, as well as opening the way for a potential assault on the major Black Sea port of Odesa.

    But a Ukrainian counteroffensive that started in the summer is now bearing down on Kherson city. Russia’s tactical position in the area is highly compromised, with units of paratroopers dug in on the west bank of the Dnieper River, where they are highly vulnerable. “From a battlefield geometry point of view, it is a terrible position for the Russians,” Jack Watling, a land warfare expert at Britain’s Royal United Services Institute, told POLITICO.

    Watling, who’s been conducting operational analysis with Ukraine’s general staff, says the Russians on the west bank are among their most capable troops but can’t be resupplied reliably “at the scale needed to make them competitive” and they won’t be able to counterattack.

    “The Ukrainians have the initiative and can dictate the tempo,” Watling said. “From a purely military point of view, the Russians would be much better off withdrawing from Kherson city and focusing on holding the river [from the east bank] and then putting the bulk of their forces on the Zaporizhzhia axis, but for political reasons they have been slow to do that and seem to ready to fight a delaying action.”

    A view taken on October 19, 2022 shows a road sign reading “Kherson” in the town of Armyansk in the north of Moscow-annexed Crimean peninsula bordering the Russian-controlled Kherson region in southern Ukraine | AFP via Getty Images

    That seems in line with what Ukraine’s general staff reported at the weekend. Russian troop movements have been occurring in the Kherson region with some units preparing for urban combat, while others have been withdrawing.

    In short, Surovikin is being forced to try to pull off one of the most difficult of military maneuvers — an orderly retreat to reposition forces, including draftees with scant training and units that have no cohesion. When more experienced Russian troops tried the same move near Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine last month, they suffered a rout.

    Thuggery alone won’t save Russian conscripts from motivated and agile Ukrainian forces. Whether Surovikin has the tactical skills to navigate a dangerous retreat will be what counts.

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    Jamie Dettmer

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  • Russia defense chief makes unfounded claims of Kyiv ready to use ‘dirty bomb’

    Russia defense chief makes unfounded claims of Kyiv ready to use ‘dirty bomb’

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    Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu on Sunday had telephone calls with his French, British and Turkish counterparts in which he made unfounded claims that Ukraine might be preparing to use a “dirty bomb,” according to Russian readouts of the conversations.

    The conversations took place after Russian President Vladimir Putin recently raised the prospect of using nuclear weapons in the war he launched against Ukraine. And after Shoigu faced intensifying political pressure over a series of disorderly retreats in Ukraine.

    The calls came as Russia continues a mass evacuation of civilians from occupied Kherson in southern Ukraine and defense analysts believe that the movement of people is setting the scene for Moscow to withdraw its troops from a significant part of the region. But among EU diplomats, there are fears that Moscow is only setting the scene for things to get worse.

    During the call with French Defense Minister Sébastien Lecornu, they discussed the situation in Ukraine, “which is rapidly deteriorating,” according to the Russian readout of the call. And Shoigu conveyed “his concerns about possible provocations by Ukraine with the use of a ‘dirty bomb’,” the Russian ministry said without giving any further detail.

    The same content of the readout was provided on the call with Turkish Defense Minister Hulusi Akar.

    The Russian readout of the call with U.K. Defense Minister Ben Wallace talks only about the risk of a “dirty bomb.” However, in none of the readouts does Moscow provide any evidence for its claims.

    The U.K. said that “Shoigu alleged that Ukraine was planning actions facilitated by Western countries, including the U.K., to escalate the conflict in Ukraine,” according to a U.K. statement. “The Defense Secretary refuted these claims and cautioned that such allegations should not be used as a pretext for greater escalation,” it said.

    No statement on the call was immediately made available by the defense ministries of France and Turkey.

    On Friday, Shoigu spoke with U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin for the first time since May, and, according to a Pentagon readout, in the call “Austin emphasized the importance of maintaining lines of communication amid the ongoing war against Ukraine.”

    Shoigu spoke with Austin again on Sunday, according to the Russian defense ministry. In this case, the Russian readout says only that “they discussed situation in Ukraine.”

    A dirty bomb is a bomb that combines conventional explosives, such as dynamite, with radioactive materials. For Dara Massicot, an analyst at U.S. research company Rand Corporation, “this reads like Russian false flag groundwork.”

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    Jacopo Barigazzi

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  • Elon Musk balks at funding Ukraine’s Starlink satellites, as envoy tells him to ‘fuck off’

    Elon Musk balks at funding Ukraine’s Starlink satellites, as envoy tells him to ‘fuck off’

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    Elon Musk said on Friday he’s “just following the recommendation” of a Ukrainian diplomat who told the SpaceX founder to “fuck off,” by seeking to offload responsibility for funding his Starlink internet terminals in Ukraine.

    Musk’s trolling came after Ukraine’s former Ambassador to Germany Andrij Melnyk and the country’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reacted with hostility to Musk last week tweeting a series of Kremlin talking points, which he presented as a plan for peace in Russia’s war on Ukraine. This raised concerns in Kyiv and among its allies as to whether Musk was still on Ukraine’s side in the war.

    Musk’s tweet came in response to a CNN report that SpaceX had warned in a letter, dated September 8 and sent to the U.S. Department of Defense, that it can no longer afford to provide its Starlink terminals, which are crucial for Ukraine’s military communication.

    “We are not in a position to further donate terminals to Ukraine, or fund the existing terminals for an indefinite period of time,” SpaceX said in the letter, which was signed by the company’s director of government sales, adding that the Pentagon should take over the funding.

    The Starlink satellite communication system has been crucial not only for Ukraine’s military communication, but also for the government to maintain contact with commanders, for Zelenskyy to conduct interviews with journalists, and for civilian communications, connecting loved ones via the encrypted satellites.

    Funding the systems would cost more than $120 million for the rest of the year and the price tag could reach almost $400 million for the next 12 months, according to SpaceX.

    Ukraine has received around 20,000 Starlink satellite units. Musk said last week that the “operation has cost SpaceX $80 million and will exceed $100 million by the end of the year.”

    Musk was initially lauded for providing the Starlink terminals to Ukraine, but according to the SpaceX letter, the vast majority were partially or fully funded by other parties, including the U.S. government, the U.K. and Poland. Poland is the largest single contributor and has paid for almost 9,000 terminals, which cost $1,500 and $2,500 for the two models sent to Ukraine, according to the documents.

    Those governments also paid for a third of the internet connectivity while SpaceX funded the rest, making up the more expensive part of the bill, according to SpaceX.

    Among the documents seen by CNN is also a request from Ukrainian General Valeriy Zaluzhnyi to SpaceX for almost 8,000 more Starlink terminals. SpaceX reportedly responded by recommending the request be sent to the U.S. Department of Defense.

    The spat comes shortly after recent reports of Starlink outages, which have disrupted crucial Ukrainian military communication on the front lines.

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    Wilhelmine Preussen

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  • MicroAutomation’s Delivery & Support Services Team Receives Mission Excellence Award From the Pentagon Force Protection Agency

    MicroAutomation’s Delivery & Support Services Team Receives Mission Excellence Award From the Pentagon Force Protection Agency

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    Press Release


    May 6, 2022

    MicroAutomation, advanced technology experts for next-generation crucial communications, previously announced in March of 2022 that their JITC Certified Next Generation 9-1-1 (NG9-1-1) call handling solution, Omni911, was successfully deployed at the Pentagon and is supporting the Pentagon Force Protection Agency (PFPA) with highly reliable life-safety crucial communications services. 

    Upon a successful implementation, several members of the MicroAutomation Delivery and Support Services Team received a Mission Excellence award from the PFPA for their superior and distinguished service and support for implementing Omni911 and leading a seamless integration.

    “We are very pleased with the dedication and resilience of our Delivery and Support Services team throughout the implementation with the PFPA,” said Carl Aanderud, VP, Delivery & Support Services. “We had many dedicated team members committed to completing the project, and I would like to recognize and thank our Delivery and Support Services team for their efforts.”

    MicroAutomation offers a Department of Defense JITC-certified E-911 and NG9-1-1 solution for Emergency Operations Centers and Public Safety Answering Points for all departments of the United States military and national defense agencies. As a full-service integrator, we offer a wide range of public safety technology services including complete system design, end-to-end telephony integration, custom programming, and comprehensive customer support as part of our 9-1-1 solutions.

    About MicroAutomation

    MicroAutomation’s team of experts provides next-generation automation and efficiency for crucial communications. Our automated solutions are designed with users in mind by making communication experiences effortless for both our clients and their end customers. MicroAutomation leverages proven technologies and best practices to create and implement reliable and effective emergency response and enterprise contact center solutions for agencies and Fortune 500 companies throughout the world for a broad range of industries including: public safety 9-1-1 centers, healthcare, retail, hospitality, utilities, the Department of Defense, and other targeted industries. For more information, please visit www.MicroAutomation.com.

    Source: MicroAutomation

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