Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
In today's Federal Newscast, Democratic lawmakers are worried the President's desired military parade would cost too much money.
The Army is giving soldiers electronic warfare weapons to fight near-peer competitors.
ALTESS, an Army-operated cloud environment, saw its largest growth ever over the past year as data center closures forces legacy applications to new homes.
James Geurts, the new assistant secretary of the Navy for research, development and acquisition believes the Navy can move faster than initially planned in its "cloud first" strategy.
The Pentagon awards a contract to REAN Cloud that could be worth up to $950 million while also facing a protest of a supporter services contract.
Many a styrene cup of coffee will have been consumed on this one
Two years after consolidating cloud transition efforts within a single office, the Navy is taking an opposite tack, letting its system commands become their own "cloud brokers."
The DoD IG says he could easily use 100 more employees to keep up with investigations.
Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) introduced a bill to expand federal expedited hiring authority for military spouses. He hopes the bill will be folded into the 2019 defense authorization bill.
The House passed a six-week extension for civilian agencies and full-year appropriations for the Defense Department. The Senate is nearing a two-year spending cap deal.
The Army has fallen short in dealing with retaliation against whistleblowers. Example? The Teresa Gilbert case.
The Trump administration's plan to grow the military will cost $683 billion, according to CBO.
The Air Force is creating exemptions for some transition classes.
The Defense Department is worried about some of the misconceptions civilians have about the military.