GAO Discusses Key DOD Programs; DOD Gets Ready to Report Nunn-McCurdy Breaches to Congress

Friday, 02 April 2010 00:00 administrator
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On March 30, 2010 the Government Accountability Office (GAO) issued its annual “Assessment of Selected Weapon Programs” (GAO-10-388SP).  The report, a 173-page tome, discussed the current status of 70 different major defense programs.  It focused on technological maturity at three different points in the program lifecycle and discussed the current cost, schedule, and technical challenges of each program.

Overall, GAO made the following key points:

Looking at the individual programs, GAO made some interesting observations.  We are (obviously) not going to repeat all of them, but the following comments caught our eyes:

Meanwhile, InsideDefense.com recently reported that the ATIRCM/CMWS program (which is intended to protect Army helicopters against infrared-guided missile threats) has breached its Nunn-McCurdy thresholds.  It did so not because of technology maturity issues, requirements changes, or contractor quality problems.  It did so because last year the program was restructured into three subprograms, one of which experienced cost growth.   (We previously discussed Nunn-McCurdy limits in this article.)  According to InsideDefense.com, “The original ATIRCM objective was 3,400; the decision to slash the buy to just 208 amounted to a 93 percent cut—a change that drove the unit cost into ‘critical’ Nunn-McCurdy breach territory.” 

In addition, that same source reported that a “major satellite program” also breached Nunn-McCurdy thresholds, “forcing the Defense Department to choose between killing the program or certifying to Congress that it must continue.”  The InsideDefense.com article reports that the Wideband Global Satellite (WGS) program “has increased by more than 25 percent over the current baseline, exceeding the Nunn-McCurdy law’s critical unit cost threshold.”  Air Force Secretary Michael Donley reported told Congress in a letter that the breach stemmed from “production breaks [of a two-year duration] and new plans to buy two more satellites.”  Donley also “stresses the first three satellites had ‘an artificially low cost’.” 

According to the article, “an industry source said the contractor, not the government, eats cost increases when they occur” under the program’s fixed-price contract type.  However, we can speculate that it is possible for the contractor to insist on “get-well” funds if the customer wants to purchase new, unplanned, satellites (as is the case here)—in a manner similar to how Boeing insisted on certain terms and conditions related to its Air Force launch contracts.

Finally, InsideDefense.com also reported recent remarks by Dr. Ashton Carter (USD, AT&L) regarding the Pentagon’s troubled programs.  When asked about other DOD programs that warrant similar scrutiny as that applied to the Joint Strike Fighter, the site reported Dr. Carter’s remarks as follows—

I don’t know where to start.  There are so many.  There are too many programs that resemble the Joint Strike Fighter in the sense that they are not performing in the way that they said they were going to and that we expected.  There are lots of reasons for that.  It’s obviously very troubling to me. 

We have posted over and over again on the importance of meeting program expectations in the current budgetary environment.  These various reports indicate that there is still room for improvement.