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Special Operations Command's commando aircraft are in jeopardy
The special operations community needs the Armed Overwatch program, but now the government watchdog is doubting how many aircraft are needed.
www.sandboxx.us
US Marines test radars, networks for expeditionary base operations
The 31st MEU continued the Marine Corps' push to experiment with expeditionary advanced base operations during its two deployments in 2023.
www.defensenews.com
WASHINGTON — Something as seemingly simple as picking the right commercial boat radar could make or break the U.S. Marine Corps’ vision for future operations: small units dispersed on islands and beachheads across contested waters, all looking for enemy ships and planes while gathering information to create a common picture of the theater.
But identifying the best radar is more complex than it sounds, according to Col. Matthew Danner, who leads the Japan-based 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit.
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) recommends the US Special Operations Command (SOCOM) slow down its Armed Overwatch program and conduct further planning and analysis of the command’s actual requirements.
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In its latest report on the Armed Overwatch program, GAO found that when SOCOM and the Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) conducted their analysis on how many aircraft they would need for the Armed Overwatch program they “relied on unproven assumptions” that don’t justify the number of 75 aircraft that they have requested.
In its assessment titled Special Operations Forces: DOD Should Slow Acquisition of Armed Overwatch Aircraft Until It Conducts Needed Analysis, GAO found that SOCOM and AFSOC could do with a much smaller fleet, though the report didn’t specify exactly how many aircraft would suffice.
The first excerpt pertains to the USMC trying to figure out what they need, what it sufficient, what works in different theatres, what they can get ahold of.
The second excerpt pertains to the SOCOM and AFSOC being told by GAO that they need to precisely define what they are going to use, where, when, why and how and how often otherwise they don't get the money.
Therein lies the gap between Ukraine and the DOD, the MOD and DND/PWGSC/TB.
In a world of 70% solutions the accountants want 100% certainty.
I have no problem accounting for every penny spent after the fact. I have great difficulty in predicting the future with accuracy. There is a need for a 30% contingency fund and firing people who misuse it.