By Air Force Tech. Sgt. Jake Richmond
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Nov. 24, 2014 – The Defense Innovation
Initiative will help to develop more innovative leaders and identify new
operational concepts, but sequestration is still “a problem we need to address
as a nation,” Deputy Defense Secretary Bob Work said yesterday.
Work discussed the new initiative on Gannett's
"DefenseNews With Vago Muradian" program.
Echoing Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel’s announcement last
week, Work compared elements of the innovation initiative with the department’s
first two “offset” strategies, which began in the 1970s.
“The United States has never, since the end of World War II,
tried to match our potential adversaries tank for tank, airplane for airplane,
person for person, missile for missile,” Work said. “We have always sought an
offset.”
Sequestration Limits DoD’s Freedom of Action
Generally, that strategy has been based around people,
technology, and then-new operational concepts, Work said.
“Regardless of the budget would be, we would want to do
this,” he added. “But under sequestration, our freedom of action is really
going to be limited.”
The threat of sequestration, with its nearly $1 trillion in
potential spending cuts, was a central topic in Work’s interview with Muradian.
“The president’s been very clear,” Work said. “The national
security of the United States is not well served by sequestration. We just have
to keep pointing out that if you want a budget-driven strategy, go to
sequestration. If you want us to have a strategy that’s good for the nation,
then go more with the president’s budget.”
In the memorandum that established the initiative, Hagel
noted that “downward fiscal pressure will constrain the way we have
traditionally addressed threats.” That pressure will demand a more innovative
and agile defense enterprise, the memo said.
Most Important Aspect is People
Work noted that the initiative has five key aspects, but
emphasized that the initiative isn’t all about technology. “The first and most
important thing is about our people,” he said.
Work discussed the other elements of the departmentwide
effort, including the reinvigoration of wargaming, the creation of a long-range
research and development program and an increased focus on making DoD business
practices more innovative. “If you have more budget top room, you can make more
bets and see which one plays out,” he said. “At sequestration, you just simply
can’t.”
The deputy secretary made it clear that a budget-driven
strategy is not ideal, but he said it’s what will happen if sequestration
continues. Unless Congress acts to change the law, sequestration spending cuts
resume in fiscal year 2015, which begins Oct. 1.
The innovation initiative is timely, despite budget
uncertainty, Work said. He referenced the example of the department’s second
offset strategy, which remained in place through several presidential
administrations and provided an operational advantage for four decades.
“What we can do in the next two years [of this
administration] is kind of set the course,” Work said. “Once you get the
strategy right, they generally go across administrations and over time.”
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