Acquisition woes revisited.
by Meehan, Scott A.
National Defense • July, 2008 • READERS' FORUM: VIEWS ... COMMENTS ...
SUGGESTIONS
In the April 2008 edition of National Defense, several different
articles--"Impending Collision Between Military Needs and
Resources," "Changes to Military Strategy,"
"Overpriced, High-Maintenance Hardware Hurts the Army,"
"The New Pentagon," "Special Operations Command: It Takes
Too Long to Get Equipment," "Rolling Ahead," and
"Driving Forces," all address a serious, yet common thread
issue. This is stated in the Readers' Forum, "Acquisition
Woes."
The pre-9/11 mindset still prevails in the acquisition world. It is
a multi-facet sequential process involving numerous procedures,
decisions, milestones, evaluations and several meetings, among other
cost producing measures. This antiquated way of doing business is time
consuming at best and extremely costly to the war fighter at its worst.
Current measures exist to maximize the use of laws and regulations to
alleviate this dilemma.
While serving in Iraq in 2003-2004 as a contingency contracting
officer, we did not wait for the one-year to 18-month process when it
came to putting armor on military vehicles. We didn't have that
long when soldiers were being killed in action on a daily basis.
Instead, we identified soldiers' need for protection,
solicited multiple local vendors who operated with metal for sample
plates no thicker than a quarter inch, tested the plates at 20 meters
with 7.62 rounds, selected the first piece that stopped all rounds,
identified the vendor who owned a factory that produced this metal,
signed a contract and had the armor installed onto thousands of humvees
at $600 per vehicle. This covered all four doors, under floor-boards,
and back plates. The whole process from identifying the user need to
full installation took approximately six weeks.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
There is a solution to "Acquisition Woes" if our Defense
Department acquisition mindset is restructured toward a new 21st century
war strategy.
Maj. Scott A. Meehan, Ret.
U.S. Army
COPYRIGHT 2008 National Defense Industrial
Association Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.