Veronica Daigle's Jan. 31 departure means four out of five Senate-confirmed positions in the office of the undersecretary for personnel and readiness are now filled by acting officials.
The budget the Pentagon will propose next week includes $5.7 billion in program cancellations throughout DoD's "fourth estate," in addition to more than $2 billion in programs it wants to move to the control of the military services.
The Defense Department's small contract approach to emerging technologies isn't helping attract business, a panel of analysts told Congress.
The Space Force is making sure its human capital ducks are in a row as it sets up.
An inaugural NDIA report says defense industry is financially strong and generally competitive, but points to workforce, cybersecurity challenges.
The Reston, Virginia-based firm won the largest portion of the long-awaited NGEN-R contract, valued at up to $7.7 billion.
The Army's strategy will work in five-year increments with two pilot programs at several bases.
The Air Force saw 137 service members and civilians kill themselves last year.
All but four presidential candidates support changing the way sexual assault and murder are prosecuted in the military.
The Army will launch an initial deployment of its contract writing system in February with expanded roll outs scheduled for June. The Navy, meanwhile, will test its electronic procurement system this summer and plans to increase the number of sites in late 2020.
The Pentagon published the 1.0 version of its Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification program on Friday after several months of listening sessions on draft editions. CMMC will make its way into Defense contracts later this year.
The leader of the Defense Department’s hub for integrating artificial intelligence into operations and functional purposes of the military will retire this summer.
U.S. Transportation Command said the restructuring it will achieve under the contract is the only way to create "meaningful accountability" in the military's system for moving household goods.
The basic requirement of weapons systems is to fire when you pull the trigger, and that's actually a tall order given the complexity of today's military systems.
Morale and supporting command roles are reasons for the likely change.