There is word that wiki-leaks is coming apart at the seams. The Associated Press says WikiLeaks is unraveling from internal turmoil and power struggles. Key staffers at the website have reportedly deserted the organization out of anger that founder Julian Assange unilaterally decided to publish tens of thousands of classified documents before enough work was done to protect the names of informants. Assange, a 39-year-old Australian, founded WikiLeaks in 2006 for people wishing to anonymously publish material that companies and governments want kept secret.
David Wennergren is the new assistant deputy chief management officer for the Office of the Deputy Secretary of Defense.
The Pentagon suspended its certification of Lockheed\'s system for tracking the progress on the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and the F-16 Fighting Falcon programs today, underscoring DoD\'s tough talk about running weapon buys as efficiently as possible.
The Defense Department announced reassignments for its Seniors Executive Service.
Christine Parthemore, a fellow at the Center for a New American Security, discusses with the DorobekINSIDER the findings of a CNAS study about DoD\'s transition away from reliance on oil.
The Air Force is adopting what it calls a \"New Energy Culture\" to reduce the force\'s energy use.
Deputy Defense Secretary says information technology, and the world\'s reliance on it, has redefined the front lines of national security.
Rep. Jim Moran tells Federal News Radio if you take 395 through Arlington, your commute may be about to get two to three hours longer every day.
The Defense Department is observing National Domestic Violence Awareness Month by reminding the military community about resources and programs to help in preventing or stopping domestic violence.
Learn more in today\'s DoD Report
Tight security measures both tighten the leashes of executives, while driving them out of the office.
The Defense Department announced that Cyber Command did not achieve its October 1st deadline for being fully operational.
Maryland\'s 17 military installations employ 3.4 percent of Maryland\'s work force, pay nearly $10 billion in wages a year and spend about $6.6 billion annually with other businesses in the state.
NextGov\'s Bob Brewin analyzes the future of the former DoD CIO nominee.