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DoD/News
Report: James Mattis Pushes for Munition Funding Increase in Fiscal 2018
by Ramona Adams
Published on May 25, 2017
Report: James Mattis Pushes for Munition Funding Increase in Fiscal 2018


Report: James Mattis Pushes for Munition Funding Increase in Fiscal 2018Defense Secretary James Mattis directed other Defense Department officials to allocate funds for the full production of six “preferred” munitions as they prepared a fiscal year 2018 budget plan, Defense News reported Tuesday.

John Roth, deputy comptroller for program budget at DoD, told reporters Tuesday that the department increased its funding request for selected munitions to $3.5 billion in a move to address inventory gaps.

The proposed budget would cover the procurement of Hellfire missiles worth $713.9 million; Joint Direct Attack Munitions worth $874.3 million; Guided Multiple Launch Rocket Systems worth $889.5; small diameter bombs worth $504.1 million; Tomahawk missiles worth $381.6 million; and Advanced Precision Kill Weapon Systems worth $200 million.

Roth added the figures reflect the maximum production capacity of companies that produce the six munition systems for the U.S. military.

DoD seeks $16.4 billion in funds to buy weapons such as tactical missiles, conventional ammunition and strategic missiles, reported Defense News.

DoD/News
Adm. Michael Rogers: $647M Cybercom Budget Request to Support Mission Force Operations
by Scott Nicholas
Published on May 25, 2017
Adm. Michael Rogers: $647M Cybercom Budget Request to Support Mission Force Operations


Adm. Michael Rogers: $647M Cybercom Budget Request to Support Mission Force Operations
Michael Rogers

U.S. Cyber Command chief Michael Rogers has said a portion of Cybercom’s proposed $647 million budget would finance efforts to integrate cyber-related technologies and operations against the Islamic State militant organization, DoD News reported Wednesday.

“We are particularly concerned as adversaries probe and even exploit systems used by government, law enforcement, military, intelligence and critical infrastructure in the U.S. and abroad,” Rogers told a House Armed Services subcommittee hearing Tuesday.

The U.S. Navy admiral said he expects the command’s cyber mission force to be fully operational at the end of the government’s 2018 fiscal year.

Cybercom formed the group to help develop defensive and offensive cyber tools as well as identify cyber workforce professionalization and acquisition strategies.

Rogers, an inductee into Executive Mosaic‘s Wash100 for 2017, added he believes partnering with companies and combining agile methods, technologies and command-and-control systems will increase the command’s potential to counter enemies in cyberspace.

Government Technology/News
Rep. Michael McCaul: Trump Administration Backs DHS Cyber Reorganization Proposal
by Ramona Adams
Published on May 25, 2017
Rep. Michael McCaul: Trump Administration Backs DHS Cyber Reorganization Proposal


Rep. Michael McCaul: Trump Administration Backs DHS Cyber Reorganization ProposalRep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas) has said the Trump administration is “fully supportive” of a proposed bill that would reorganize the Department of Homeland Security‘s cybersecurity functions, The Hill reported Wednesday.

McCaul, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, said at an event hosted by Defense Daily that he expects the bill to be introduced in the House within a week then advance to the Senate.

The bill was approved by the committee in June 2016 but did not reach the House floor for a vote.

The proposed legislation seeks to replace DHS’s National Protection and Programs Directorate with a new cyber-focused agency.

McCaul’s committee sent the draft bill to DHS in March to gain feedback from the new administration, the report stated.

DoD/News
John Roth: White House Seeks to Rebuild US Armed Forces via Fiscal 2018 Budget Plan
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 25, 2017
John Roth: White House Seeks to Rebuild US Armed Forces via Fiscal 2018 Budget Plan


John Roth: White House Seeks to Rebuild US Armed Forces via Fiscal 2018 Budget Plan
John Roth

John Roth, a Defense Department budget official who performs comptroller duties, has said the White House’s defense budget proposal for fiscal 2018 intends to rebuild the U.S. armed forces, build on “near-term readiness” efforts in fiscal 2017 and balance future requirements and current operations, DoD News reported Tuesday.

Roth told reporters Tuesday at the Pentagon that DoD aims to create a “bigger, more lethal force” by fiscal year 2019 by leveraging the developments to be made in FYs 2017 and 2018.

He called for a reversal of defense sequestration to help advance DoD’s strategy to re-establish military readiness.

President Donald Trump’s proposed defense base budget of $574.5 billion exceeds the budget cap by $52 billion under the Budget Control Act of 2011.

Roth said DoD should now start the analysis process to facilitate a new round of base closures and realignments by 2021.

Army Lt. Gen. Anthony Ierardi, director of force structure, resources and assessment of the Joint Staff, joined Roth at the news briefing.

Government Technology/News
USMC, MIT Design Wearable Tech to Monitor Marine Agility, Mobility Changes
by Scott Nicholas
Published on May 25, 2017
USMC, MIT Design Wearable Tech to Monitor Marine Agility, Mobility Changes


USMC, MIT Design Wearable Tech to Monitor Marine Agility, Mobility ChangesThe Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the U.S. Marine Corps have developed a boot insert prototype designed to collect information on user mobility and agility changes in an  effort to help USMC plan the material composition and format of Marines’ protective gear.

The Marine Corps Systems Command said Wednesday its Marine Expeditionary Rifle Squad collaborated with MIT’s Lincoln Laboratory to create the Mobility and Biomechanics Insert for Load Evaluation prototype which works to help boost user health and performance.

MoBILE uses scale-like load sensors placed within boot insoles to measure users’ weight during various activities such as standing, running and walking to capture data that will be transmitted to a master microcontroller for processing.

MERS Director Mark Richter said the tool will work to help the service branch obtain data about the readiness and performance of Marines.

James Balcius, a MERS naval aerospace operational physiologist, noted the MoBILE platform is designed to also gauge how carrying the weight of equipment can affect a user’s normal gait.

DoD/News
U.S., Saudi Arabia Agree to Establish Cooperation Against Terrorist Financing Networks
by Ramona Adams
Published on May 24, 2017
U.S., Saudi Arabia Agree to Establish Cooperation Against Terrorist Financing Networks


U.S., Saudi Arabia Agree to Establish Cooperation Against Terrorist Financing NetworksU.S. and Saudi Arabia have entered into an agreement to establish a multinational alliance that will identify and implement measures against terrorist financial networks.

The Terrorist Financing Targeting Center will promote collaboration between U.S., Saudi Arabia and Gulf countries including Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates in efforts to counter terrorist networks, Saudi Arabia’s embassy said Tuesday.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the department will contribute the expertise of its office of terrorism and financial intelligence to TFTC.

The department will co-chair TFTC alongside Saudi Arabia’s ministry of interior.

The center aims to address terror threats such as the Islamic State militant group, al Qaeda, Hizballah, Lashkar-e-Tayyiba, the Taliban and the Haqqani network.

TFTC will also work to identify, track and exchange information on terrorist financial networks; coordinate actions; and offer support to regional partners that need to boost their capacity to defeat terrorist financing.

The participating nations have a long-term goal of bringing experts together in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

DoD/News
Adm. Michael Rogers: Cybercom Needs Funds to Start Command Designation Change
by Ramona Adams
Published on May 24, 2017
Adm. Michael Rogers: Cybercom Needs Funds to Start Command Designation Change


Adm. Michael Rogers: Cybercom Needs Funds to Start Command Designation Change
Michael Rogers

Adm. Michael Rogers, head of the U.S. Cyber Command, has said at a House Armed Services subcommittee hearing that his organization seeks a $647 million budget for fiscal 2018, up 17 percent from the command’s current spending level, Nextgov reported Tuesday.

He told subcommittee members that the proposed funding increase would primarily support preparations to elevate Cybercom’s status from a sub-unified military command of to a full combatant command.

Rogers, an inductee into Executive Mosaic‘s Wash100 for 2017, added that President Donald Trump will determine when the elevation should occur.

Cybercom aims to buy cyber defense tools from the private sector in the next few months under an expanded authority granted by Congress in the 2016 National Defense Authorization Act.

The 2016 NDAA allocated $75 million for the command’s annual cyber technology purchases over five years.

DoD/News
Air Force Would Defer A-10, U-2 Retirement Plans Under Trump Budget
by Ramona Adams
Published on May 24, 2017
Air Force Would Defer A-10, U-2 Retirement Plans Under Trump Budget


Air Force Would Defer A-10, U-2 Retirement Plans Under Trump BudgetA fiscal 2018 spending plan released by the Trump administration does not provide  retirement dates for the U.S. Air Force‘s A-10 Warthog and U-2 reconnaissance aircraft fleets, Defense News reported Tuesday.

Defense News obtained budget documents that say the Air Force plans to allocate money for its fleet of 283 A-10s; extend the service of U-2 planes; and continue sensor upgrades to RQ-4 Global Hawk unmanned aircraft systems.

Lawmakers have previously introduced measures to keep the Air Force from retiring A-10 and U-2 platforms.

Trump’s budget request would allocate $183 billion for the Air Force, up from the $171 billion in fiscal 2017 appropriated funds, reported Defense News.

The proposed Air Force budget includes $24.7 billion for procurement; $49.2 billion for operations and maintenance; and $25.4 billion for research, development, testing and evaluation programs.

The Next Generation Air Dominance, Long Range Standoff Weapon, B-21 and Air Force One replacement acquisition programs would get funding increases under the budget proposal.

Civilian/News
Public Sector Vet George Nesterczuk to Be Nominated OPM Director
by Scott Nicholas
Published on May 24, 2017
Public Sector Vet George Nesterczuk to Be Nominated OPM Director


Public Sector Vet George Nesterczuk to Be Nominated OPM Director
George Nesterczuk

George Nesterczuk, owner of Nesterczuk and Associates and a three-decade government veteran, will be nominated to lead the Office of Personnel Management.

Nesterczuk has more than 30 years of organizational management and policy development consulting experience, the White House said Tuesday.

He served as a senior adviser to the OPM director from 2004 to 2006 and led the agency’s efforts to help establish the Defense Department‘s National Security Personnel System.

He also previously managed the equal employment opportunity programs, governmentwide training activities, labor management relations and the Senior Executive Service during his career with OPM.

Nesterczuk served as staff director for the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee’s civil service subcommittee and technology adviser to the secretary of the Transportation Department.

His industry career includes time as vice president of Global USA, senior scientist at EG&G and executive VP and chief scientist of Atlantic Science.

Government Technology/News
WH Budget Request Includes $228M Central IT Modernization Fund
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 24, 2017
WH Budget Request Includes $228M Central IT Modernization Fund


WH Budget Request Includes $228M Central IT Modernization FundThe White House’s proposed fiscal 2018 budget includes $228 million for a central fund to support updates to the federal information technology infrastructure, Federal News Radio reported Monday.

The Office of Management and Budget and the General Services Administration will manage the IT Modernization Fund that would serve as a “proof of concept” in which an interagency board of experts will assess business cases and decide on IT projects that need funding.

“Assuming a five-year repayment, we believe the fund will help address about $800 million in modernization projects over 10 years,” said a senior official with OMB.

“We are looking for things that could be common platforms, that multiple agencies have similar needs and things that are not putting all the eggs in one basket when it comes to the fund,” the official added.

The official said some of the agency projects that ITMF could support include help desk consolidation, initiative to facilitate email migration to the cloud and IT programs that cost between $3 million and $5 million, the report added.

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