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DoD/News
Maj. Gen. Anthony Funkhouser Named USACE Deputy Commanding General for Military & Intl Operations
by Scott Nicholas
Published on April 17, 2017
Maj. Gen. Anthony Funkhouser Named USACE Deputy Commanding General for Military & Intl Operations


Maj. Gen. Anthony Funkhouser Named USACE Deputy Commanding General for Military & Intl Operations
Anthony Funkhouser

Maj. Gen. Anthony Funkhouser, former commanding general of the U.S. Army‘s Center for Initial Military Training, has been assigned as deputy commanding general for military and international operations at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Defense Department announced Friday.

The Army commissioned Funkhouser to the rank of second lieutenant at USACE after he graduated from the U.S. Military Academy in 1985.

He previously served as commandant and chief of staff at the U.S. Army Engineer School in Missouri, commander of USACE’s northwest division and chief of the joint capabilities division at the Joint Staff.

His combat and operational assignments have included positions within the 5th, 17th and 91st Engineer Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division, 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, 5th and 317th Engineer Battalion Corps.

Funkhouser is a licensed professional engineer in Virginia and a recipient of various military awards such as the Defense Superior Service Medal and Army Achievement Medal.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
GAO: Federal Agencies’ Annual IDIQ Contract Obligations Exceeded $130B in Fiscal Years 2011-2015
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 17, 2017
GAO: Federal Agencies’ Annual IDIQ Contract Obligations Exceeded $130B in Fiscal Years 2011-2015


GAO: Federal Agencies' Annual IDIQ Contract Obligations Exceeded $130B in Fiscal Years 2011-2015The Government Accountability Office has found that federal agencies spent more than $130 billion per year on indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contracts between fiscal years 2011 and 2015.

GAO said in a report published Thursday that figure represented about a third of the federal government’s total contract obligations.

The report also identified the departments of Defense, Veterans Affairs, Health and Human Services and Homeland Security as primary users of IDIQ contracts.

DoD constituted 68 percent of all IDIQ contract spending in the past five years with contracting officers citing flexibility as the main driver behind the adoption of such contracts.

The agency found that at least 85 percent of orders made under multiple-award contracts and approximately 70 percent of single-award IDIQ contracts between FY 2011 and FY 2015 underwent competition.

GAO reviewed 18 single-award IDIQ contracts at DoD and found that 10 of them were not competed.

“Prices on IDIQ contracts and orders at DOD were established at different points, depending on how well-defined the requirements were at the time of contract award,” the agency added.

DoD/News
Air Force Deploys F-35As to England for NATO Training Exercises
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 17, 2017
Air Force Deploys F-35As to England for NATO Training Exercises


Air Force Deploys F-35As to England for NATO Training ExercisesThe U.S. Air Force has fielded several Lockheed Martin-built F-35A Lightning II aircraft in England for the first time to carry out training exercises with NATO member countries, the Defense Department said Saturday.

The F-35A fighter jets from the 419th and 388th fighter wings at Hill Air Force Base in Utah arrived Saturday at England-based Royal Air Force Lakenheath and will stay for several weeks in Europe to train with allied countries as part of the European Reassurance Initiative.

The deployment seeks to help the Air Force demonstrate the fighter jet’s operational capabilities and streamline the requirements for positioning the aircraft in Europe as the continent prepares to get F-35As by early 2020s, DoD said in a separate news release published Friday.

The service branch’s Air Mobility Command supported the F-35A deployment in Europe and several refueling planes from four various military bases offered at least 400,000 pounds of fuel during the “tanker bridge” operation between the U.S. and Europe.

The military branch used C-5 Galaxy and C-17 Globemaster III aircraft to fly staff and maintenance equipment to England.

DoD/News
Rep. Bill Shuster Proposes Legislation to Retain Patriot Missile Variant in Army Inventory
by Ramona Adams
Published on April 17, 2017
Rep. Bill Shuster Proposes Legislation to Retain Patriot Missile Variant in Army Inventory


Rep. Bill Shuster Proposes Legislation to Retain Patriot Missile Variant in Army InventoryRep. Bill Shuster (R-Pennsylvania) has introduced a bill that seeks to prevent the U.S. Army from phasing out a variant of the Patriot missile system used to intercept ballistic missiles.

The Patriot Inventory Protection Act would keep the MIM-104 Patriot Guidance Enhanced Missile TBM in the Army’s inventory in an effort to mitigate a potential shortage of Patriot missiles and bring work to the Letterkenny Army Depot, Shuster’s office said April 6.

Letterkenny primarily serves as the Army’s missile depot and GEM-T is a major driver of the depot’s workload.

Shuster’s office noted it would cost approximately $359,000 to recertify each GEM-T while the price of a new missile system could amount to $5 million.

The Army decided not to recertify the system in fiscal 2013 due to spending challenges that the military branch attributed to the implementation of the Budget Control Act, Defense News reported Thursday.

Jen Judson writes a congressional staffer said the service branch wants to retain the GEM-T variant if funds become available.

The proposed legislation would require the Army to evaluate its capacity to meet requirements and operational needs if GEM-Ts were taken out of the inventory, Judson reported.

DoD/News
Navy Tests MQ-8C Autonomous Helicopter Aboard Montgomery LCS
by Scott Nicholas
Published on April 13, 2017
Navy Tests MQ-8C Autonomous Helicopter Aboard Montgomery LCS


Navy Tests MQ-8C Autonomous Helicopter Aboard Montgomery LCSThe U.S. Navy has evaluated the launch-and-recovery functions of a Northrop Grumman-built MQ-8C Fire Scout helicopter and its interoperability with a littoral combat ship as part of an interface test.

The Navy said Tuesday its MQ-8C unmanned autonomous helicopter has returned from the USS Montgomery after the helicopter completed more than 37 recovery missions over a seven-day period to assess the helicopter’s capacity for continued operations in environments with electromagnetic interference, pitch, roll and wind challenges.

Fire Scout functions alongside the Sikorsky-built MH-60 manned helicopter to help extend the range and endurance of ship-based operations as well as provide situational awareness and precision target data to the service branch.

Richard Gorman, Fire Scout lead assistant program manager for test and evaluation, said the test will help establish the flight envelope for the execution of MQ-8C deployments aboard littoral combat ships.

Capt. Jeff Dodge, Fire Scout program manager, said the evaluation also helped the service branch verify the helicopter’s capacity to serve as a Navy maritime platform.

DoD/News
Adm. Paul Zukunft: Budget Uncertainty Would Affect Coast Guard Readiness
by Ramona Adams
Published on April 13, 2017
Adm. Paul Zukunft: Budget Uncertainty Would Affect Coast Guard Readiness


Adm. Paul Zukunft: Budget Uncertainty Would Affect Coast Guard ReadinessAdm. Paul Zukunft, commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard, has said a lack of full-year appropriations would harm the service branch’s readiness programs, DoD News reported Wednesday.

Lisa Ferdinando writes Zukunft told reporters Wednesday that a continuing resolution would “sideline” military branches including the Coast Guard and that his biggest concern is to achieve budget certainty.

A continuing resolution that currently funds government operations is set to expire April 28.

The report said the Coast Guard aims to grow its fleet of 58 fast-response cutters; add a ninth national security cutter; and expand its fleet of six icebreakers for missions in the polar regions.

Zukunft added the branch faces an increasing backlog of shore maintenance works.

Civilian/News
Matt Goodrich: Agencies to Evaluate Low-Impact Cloud Services Under FedRAMP Tailored Baseline
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on April 13, 2017
Matt Goodrich: Agencies to Evaluate Low-Impact Cloud Services Under FedRAMP Tailored Baseline


Matt Goodrich: Agencies to Evaluate Low-Impact Cloud Services Under FedRAMP Tailored Baseline
Matt Goodrich

Matt Goodrich, director of the General Services Administration‘s Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program, has said agencies will play a role in the assessment of low-impact, software-as-a-service offerings via the program’s “tailored” certification process, GCN reported Wednesday.

Sarah Friedman writes GSA introduced the FedRAMP Tailored baseline in an effort to help providers complete the approval process for low-risk cloud services within approximately four weeks.

“Agencies will be doing a good percentage more of the work during the assessments to reduce the cost –  not only for vendors but also to reduce cost for agencies to begin to use a service,” Goodrich was quoted as saying by GCN.

The FedRAMP office plans to gather input from cloud service providers and agencies on the proposed baseline during virtual and in-person forums that are scheduled to be held Tuesday in Washington, D.C., Friedman reported.

GSA extended the deadline for a public comment period from March 17 to April 24 and aims to implement new regulations for low-impact cloud service offerings in late summer.

DoD/News
Report: Army Plans Military Transition Assistance Center in San Antonio, Texas
by Scott Nicholas
Published on April 13, 2017
Report: Army Plans Military Transition Assistance Center in San Antonio, Texas


Report: Army Plans Military Transition Assistance Center in San Antonio, TexasThe U.S. Army wants to establish a facility in San Antonio, Texas, that will offer housing, healthcare and employment assistance to military veterans as they transition back into civilian life, Fox San Antonio reported Wednesday.

Emily Baucum writes the service branch aims to open the military transition support center near Fort Sam Houston next year.

Kevin Wolff, Bexar County commissioner, said the local government will be in contact with active-duty military units before they transition out of service in an effort to help them identify housing, physical and mental healthcare and job opportunities, according to the report.

The report noted that the service branch might apply the concept nationwide if the San Antonio facility produces positive results.

Government Technology/News
John Felker: DHS’ NCCIC Adopts Automated Indicator Sharing Tool for Cyber Defense
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 13, 2017
John Felker: DHS’ NCCIC Adopts Automated Indicator Sharing Tool for Cyber Defense


John Felker: DHS’ NCCIC Adopts Automated Indicator Sharing Tool for Cyber Defense
John Felker

The Department of Homeland Security’s National Cybersecurity and Communications Integration Center has begun to adopt new automation cyber platforms that work to help identify data at risk for cyber attacks and protect networks from hackers, Federal News Radio reported Wednesday.

David Thornton writes John Felker, NCCIC director, said that one of those platforms is the automated indicator sharing tool.

“The idea with AIS is when we come across something we think is an indicator of compromise that we have assessed is worth sharing, it gets plugged into the system and shared automatically on a machine-to-machine basis,” Felker told the station.

“And those indicators can come from anywhere we’re connected to, and those indicators can provide potential actions for cyber defenders to take to defend their network.”

He noted that there are approximately 140 partners in both private and public sectors that adopt AIS via the Einstein program and continuous diagnostics and mitigation efforts as well as share cyber data to create a database of threat actors and indicators for cyber defense personnel, the report added.

DoD/News
James Mattis: US Missile Strike on Syria’s Airfield a ‘Measured Response’ to Chemical Weapons Attack
by Jane Edwards
Published on April 12, 2017
James Mattis: US Missile Strike on Syria’s Airfield a ‘Measured Response’ to Chemical Weapons Attack


James Mattis: US Missile Strike on Syria’s Airfield a ‘Measured Response’ to Chemical Weapons Attack
James Mattis

Defense Secretary James Mattis has said that Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government is responsible for the April 4 chemical weapons attack on its citizens and called the U.S.-led missile strike on April 6 against the Middle Eastern country’s Shayrat air base a “measured military response,” DoD News reported Tuesday.

Terri Moon Cronk and Lisa Ferdinando write Mattis said Tuesday during a joint press conference at the Pentagon with Gen. Joseph Votel, commander of the U.S. Central Command, that the regime’s attack is a violation of the international law.

“In response to the attack, our government began a deliberate process, led by the National Security Council, to recommend diplomatic and military options to the president,” Mattis told reporters.

Mattis said in a statement released Monday that the measured response seeks to deter Assad’s regime from using chemical weapons in future attacks.

He added that the missile strike at Shayrat airfield led to the destruction of 20 percent of Syria’s aircraft, air defense systems as well as ammunition and fuel sites.

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