Business

Amos' Marines Could Go Even Smaller, to 120,000

All due respect, but Commandant Amos isn’t going deep enough. The Marine Corps can drop to 120,000 using MEUs. Here’s how. By Aaron Haubert

Policy

A September to Surrender: Syria and Summers Spell Second-Term Slump

Is Obama's power eroding quicker than before, or is this just typical of this stage in the presidency? By Major Garrett

Threats

Dempsey: Securing Syria’s Chemical Weapons Is ‘Feasible’

Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey says securing Syria’s chemical stockpile will be ‘challenging’ during the ongoing civil war, but it’s ‘feasible.’ By Stephanie Gaskell

Business

Inside Obama’s Syria Deliberations: ‘The Promise of More Discussion’

Insiders detail a reluctance to engage in military action, and a disconnect between the president and the national security options prepared for his review. By Gayle Tzemach Lemmon

Business

OMB Puts Agencies on Standby for Possible Shutdown

As the fiscal year comes to an end, Pentagon officials were put on alert to prepare for a government shutdown. By Charles Clark

Business

Navy Yard Tragedy Prompts Larger Review of Base Security

A new report from the Pentagon Inspector General suggests that an agency responsible for security at Navy installations had not done enough to mitigate risk. By Charles Clark

Business

New Study: Budget Cuts and Strategic Uncertainty Could Deplete the Defense Industrial Base

Think tank analyst says that the Pentagon needs to do more to protect crucial parts of the supply chain in this time of uncertainty. By Charles Clark

Business

It Isn't the Military's Place to Weigh In on the Syria Debate

Too many servicemembers are violating ethics by making their opinions publically known. By James Joyner

Business

Destroying Chemical Weapons is Really Expensive

Even then, efforts to obliterate the armaments is worth each and every dollar. By Ben Freeman and Faris Alikhan

Business

Exclusive Interview: Pentagon Comptroller Bob Hale Braces for Sequestration, Round 2

Pentagon Comptroller Bob Hale on budget cuts driving strategy, lessons learned and how he's preparing for another round of budget battles in Congress. By Stephanie Gaskell

Business

America Needs a Robust Crisis Response Force

With a sequestered budget, a force design of 174,000 is right sized to allow the Marine Corps to remain America’s crisis response force.

Business

Protect Retirement Benefits for Current Service Members, Obama Says

President reminds military compensation and retirement modernization panel about grandfather clause. By Kellie Lunney

Business

Sequester Forces Intel Agencies to Take More Risks, Clapper Says

Automatic cuts' effect on intelligence-gathering won’t be obvious right away, Clapper warns. By Charles S. Clark

Policy

Syria Tells You Everything You Need to Know About Barack Obama

The president's policy towards Syria only puts his best and worst attributes on full display. By Ron Fournier

Policy

Kennedy's Battles With the Brass

JFK fought to rein in the military on multiple occasions. His actions may have prevented nuclear war. By Robert Dallek

Business

One Veteran’s Battle to Bring His Afghan Interpreter to the United States

It took five years, amid constant death threats from the Taliban, to get one Army unit’s Afghan interpreter and his family to the United States. There has to be a better way. By Matt Zeller

Policy

Americans Staunchly Opposed to Military Intervention in Syria

New poll suggests that Americans want Obama to find another way to avert a military response to the crisis in the Middle East. By Ronald Brownstein

Business

How the Military’s 'Bro' Culture Turns Women Into Targets

A testosterone fueled environment is hindering efforts for the military's female personnel to combat sexual assault in their ranks. By Sara Sorcher

Business

GAO Report Slams Navy’s New Ford-Class Aircraft Carriers

After delays and cost overruns, the USS Gerald Ford is now estimated to run $12.8 billion -- 22 percent more than planned, according to the Government Accountability Office. By Stephanie Gaskell

Business

How Can Today’s Navy ‘Learn on the Run’?

Unrelenting U.S. Navy deployments and maintenance cycles shouldn’t get in the way of planning for the future. By Thomas Hone and Robert Holzer