Troop Reform
FRIDAY, MAY 22ND, 2009 AT 10:25 AM
Reform for Our Troops
Posted by Jesse Lee
This
morning the President signed legislation that seems an obvious step,
and yet it is one that has not been taken despite all of the incidents
that have cried out for it: reform of the defense procurement and
contracting system. This accomplishment for American taxpayers ,and
for our military who can now stretch every dollar that much further for
those who serve our country, was made all the more gratifying by the
bipartisan consensus that it finally found.
The President recognized Senator McCain in particular in his remarks:
Last year, the Government
Accountability Office, or the GAO, looked into 95 major defense
projects and found cost overruns that totaled $295 billion. Wasteful
spending comes from exotic requirements, lack of oversight, and
indefensible no-bid contracts that don't make our troops or our country
any safer. To put this in perspective, these cost overruns would have
paid our troops' salaries and provided benefits for their families for
more than a year.
At a time when we're fighting
two wars and facing a serious deficit, this is unexcusable and
unconscionable. As Secretary Gates has said, one dollar of waste in
our defense budget is a dollar we can't spend to support our troops, or
prepare for future threats, or protect the American people. Well, it's
finally time to end this waste and inefficiency.
Already, I've announced reform
that will greatly reduce no-bid defense contracts and save the
government billions of dollars. And Secretary Gates, working with our
military leadership, has also proposed a courageous set of reforms in
our defense budget that will target waste and strengthen our military
for the future. In taking on this enormously difficult task, he's done
a tremendous job, and I want to publicly commend Secretary Gates for
that.
The bill I'm signing today,
known as the Weapons System Acquisition Reforms Act, represents an
important next step in this procurement reform process. It reforms a
system where taxpayers are charged too much for weapons systems that
too often arrive late -- a system that suffers from spending on
unproven technologies, outdated weapons, and a general lack of
oversight.
The purpose of this law will
be to limit cost overruns before they spiral out of control. It will
strengthen oversight and accountability by appointing officials who
will be charged with closely monitoring the weapons systems we're
purchasing to ensure that costs are controlled. If the cost of certain
defense projects continue to grow year after year, those projects will
be closely reviewed, and if they don't provide the value we need, they
will be terminated. This law will also enhance competition and end
conflicts of interest in the weapons acquisitions process so that
American taxpayers and the American military can get the best weapons
at the lowest cost.
And this legislation is long
overdue, and it's been a long time coming. But we're finally signing
it into law because of the dedication and commitment of a few key
members of Congress who've been fighting for years for this reform:
Senators Carl Levin and John McCain; Representatives Ike Skelton, John
McHugh, Rob Andrews, and Mike Conaway. I'm very proud of the
extraordinary work that all these gentlemen have done who are standing
behind me today. Senator McCain couldn't be here today because he's
making sure he has a good seat to watch his son graduate from the Naval
Academy in a few hours, and that's where I'm headed as soon as I catch
my ride over here.
But I will tell you that
defense procurement reform was one of the issues that John McCain and I
discussed in our first meeting after the election. We pledged to work
together to get it done, and today I'm extraordinarily proud to stand
here and sign a bill that passed with unanimous support from both
parties at every step of the way.

(President Barack Obama hands a pen to U.S. Rep. Robert Andrews (D-NJ) as he signs the Weapons Systems
Acquisition Reform Act in the Rose Garden at the White House Friday, May 22, 2009. Standing from left are:
Andrews, Rep. John McHugh (R-NY), Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI), Rep. Ike Skelton (D-MO) and
Rep. Mike Conaway (R-TX). Official White House Photo by Samantha Appleton)


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