A bill that would remove sexual assault investigations from the military chain of command now has 46 Senate co-sponsors, including 10 Republicans.
The Marines are in the midst of a thorough testing program for something that might seem like a simple thing: A new workout uniform.
In today's Federal Newscast, two committee chairmen criticize the White House. A Navy plan to cut doctors is getting reexamined. The NSF wants to hand out $22 million to teams of problems solvers.
The Defense Department still wants to cut 18,000 medical billets.
Ellen E. McCarthy former assistant secretary of state for Intelligence and Research, joined Aileen Black on this week's Leaders and Legends to talk about leadership.
The new suite of tools tracks soldiers' movements and distills it into data.
The ruling by the Court of Federal Claims means Amazon will be allowed to present evidence that the multi-billion dollar award to Microsoft was tainted by improper political interference.
Procurement attorney Joseph Petrillo of Smith Pachter McWhorter joined Federal Drive with Tom Temin for the details.
U.S. armed forces could find themselves in hot conflict with PMCs - then what? Marine Corps Lt. Col. Joe Moye offered some answers on Federal Drive with Tom Temin.
The Army makes up a large chunk of the military's deployments, but does it need to be everywhere at once?
According to a First Command Financial Services annual survey of financial readiness, career military families are on the hole less financially literate than the general population.
Chinese fishing vessels are encroaching on foreign economic zones, and the Navy and Coast Guard are looking to state-of-the-art technologies to address it.
DoD hopes to have two formal strategies approved soon -- one classified and one unclassified -- to codify each of the lines of effort in its Joint All-Domain Command and Control (JADC2) project.
Congress has given DoD several tools to recruit and hire employees with cyber expertise. Recent statistics appear to show the Pentagon is beginning to take advantage of those authorities.
After weeks of wonder by the networking community, the Pentagon has now provided a very terse explanation for why it hired a shadowy company residing at a shared workspace above a Florida bank to manage a colossal, previously idle chunk of the internet that it owns