Policy

Trump Instructs Pentagon to Curb Watchdogs' Access to Secret Military Reports

Transparency groups decry move as hindering the work of inspectors general.

Ideas

Trump Escalates His Assault on Civil-Military Relations

The president’s public disparagement of retired generals compounds the damage he has done.

Ideas

Meet the New (Acting) US Defense Secretary

With no military experience and just a year and a half in government, the former Boeing executive Patrick Shanahan has yet to develop a foreign-policy vision of his own.

Ideas

A Giant Repair Job Awaits the First Post-Trump SecDef

It will be a rebuilding project the likes of which has not been seen since the Vietnam War.

Policy

Hard-Nosed Pentagon Negotiator Removed From Job; Racked Up Huge Travel Costs

Shay Assad also backed a controversial plan to slow payments to defense contractors.

Policy

The ‘Nightmare Scenario’ Has Happened and You’re to Blame

Trump’s withdrawal from from Syria is what military leaders feared — and exactly what he promised.

Ideas

James Mattis’s Final Protest Against the President

The defense secretary, who resigned on Thursday, was one of the last senior officials in the government who could constrain Donald Trump.

Policy

Mattis Resigns Over Disagreements with Trump

In two-page resignation letter, defense secretary cites need to treat allies with respect, potential adversaries with resolve.

Science & Tech

The Pentagon Doesn’t Know All the Software on Its Networks—And That’s a Problem

The Defense Department faces “unnecessary” risk without a complete software inventory, according to the agency’s inspector general.

Business

Civilians Are Cheaper Than Contractors for Most Defense Jobs, Internal Report Finds

Contractors are particularly more expensive in the capital and Southeastern regions, according to a report obtained exclusively by Government Executive.

Threats

ISIS Is Not Defeated. Pulling US Troops From Syria Would Jeopardize Everything

I just returned from my fifth trip to Northeast Syria in 18 months. If the US quits now, there are four winners: ISIS, Assad, Russia, and Iran.

Policy

Trump’s Space Force Request Is Coming — But Final Form Remains Hazy

Will his proposed space organization more resemble the Air Force or the Marines? Pence didn’t say.

Policy

The Biggest Difference Between Inhofe and Smith? How Much Danger They Think the US Faces

The incoming SASC chair says “we live in the most dangerous world of my lifetime.” His HASC counterpart calls that “simple paranoia.”

Ideas

Pentagon Needs Better System to Track Fraudulent Spending

The incoming Congress should tie defense budgets to accounting improvements.

Ideas

The Divide Between Silicon Valley and Washington Is a National-Security Threat

Closing the gap between technology leaders and policy makers will require a radically different approach from the defense establishment.

Ideas

Academic Paywalls Harm National Security

Embracing the open-access movement would help defense leaders make America safer and strengthen their ties with the tech industry.

Policy

New Armed Services Chair Says He Will Fund Military, Not Drive Foreign Policy ‘Like McCain Did’

'My job is to make sure we have the resources...I try not to get into debates,’ Inhofe says in an exclusive interview.

Ideas

Pentagon to Take Over All Security Clearances in Nine Months, Officials Say

The move will mean absorbing the National Background Investigations Bureau and its 2,000 employees.

Policy

From Small Wars to Great Power, Trump’s Africa Reset Could Change US Military’s Role

The U.S. is cutting 10 percent of its counterterrorism troops in Africa. Will China and Russia fill the gap?