By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Nov. 8, 2017 — Deputy Defense Secretary Pat
Shanahan has only one picture hanging on the wall of his Pentagon office: that
of his father, Mike, a Vietnam veteran who instilled a sense of service in his
son.
Below the picture, hangs his father's Bronze Star Medal from
Vietnam, and his father's badge as chief of police at the University of
Washington.
‘I Grew Up in a Family That Values Service’
"I grew up in a family that values service,"
Shanahan said in his first interview since taking office. "People ask me,
'Why did you take this job?' I think about the people who go to Afghanistan or
wherever they are deployed and how hard that is, and they do it multiple times.
“My Dad was the tough guy,” he continued. “I only saw him
cry once in my life: It was when he had to leave his family to go to Vietnam.
If [today's service members] do that all the time, then how hard is it to come
here and work on what's important here?”
The deputy secretary came to the department from Boeing,
where he worked on commercial aircraft as well as military programs like
missile defense and rotor aircraft. He is an engineer, with a twist.
“People are the answer, not the problem,” he said. “Here,
the talent is incredible.”
At Boeing, the secretary ran a building twice as big as the
Pentagon and with twice as many people. The scale of the Pentagon does not
bother him. “The dynamics, the human nature part is the same,” he said. “The
difference is the consequences. If you get something wrong here, it’s huge. The
operational part is not intimidating, but the consequences are.”
Supporting Service Members
The deputy secretary’s job is to ensure that service men and
women downrange get all the resources they need. Shanahan’s mission is to “make
their lives easier,” he said. “That's my fuel.”
Shanahan said he and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis make a
good team.
"He understands the lethal part and I am the engineer
who can get it," Shanahan said of his work relationship with Mattis.
Coming from the aerospace industry, Shanahan’s biggest
concern has always been safety. “In DoD, that means the safety of our men and
women and country and that supersedes everything,” he said. “But there is also
the solvency side of this.”
Balancing Security, Solvency
Mattis and he are a one-two punch, Shanahan said. Mattis has
the vision, he said, and "I have a lot of experience at being able to
deliver the effects at the right price. A big part of my job is to take the
complexity out of this building and the department so we can do more. I think
of it as how do we reduce the stress and the pressure on our team.”
That's where readiness is so important, he said, which
includes delivering the right kinds of training, the right mix of personnel and
making sure the health care delivers at the right level.
“My job here is to get the resources through the budget
process, avoid being sucked in to reacting so you can spend your time really
working on some of these longer-term issues,” the deputy secretary said.
Planning for the Future
This is difficult for people in the military because most
“grow up doing nothing but operations,” he said. “You have to have this
duality: the trains need to run on time, but you have to lay track for the
future.”
The deputy said he works on two-, five- and 10-year
horizons. “Two years is really the period in which you can have an operational
effect,” Shanahan said. “Five years is where you can start to develop the
capability, and 10 years is how long it takes to really change the culture in
such a way that it will perpetuate.”
Since taking office in July, the deputy secretary said he
has been doing more listening and learning than speaking. Still, he has been
tasked to deliver a strategy driven budget “that allows us to compete and win,”
he said.
The strategy has to have the resources dedicated to it to
enable it to work, Shanahan said. The United States must plan for a military
capable of confronting the threats of the future, he said, and it must fight
today’s battles.
Streamlining Processes
Shanahan said the DoD budget must restore readiness and then
reorganize so things don't take as long. That means, he added, streamlining
processes wherever possible.
The department, he said, has accumulated processes to the
extent that red tape can overwhelm sense. “You have to just cut it like the
Gordian Knot,” Shanahan said.
And, groups working in the Pentagon are making progress on
this, the deputy secretary said. Contrary to popular belief that Congress ties
the hands of the department, many of the changes these groups propose can be
done with a minimum of hassle, he said.
One example involves changes to make acquisition more
effective, Shanahan said. “We haven’t found anything to stop us from being more
efficient today,” he said. “We will run into some, at some point in time, but
there is nothing in the short term preventing us from making significant
changes.”
Developing the strategy and tying the resources tightly to
strategy will be key, he said, and there are technologies that will help.
“We’re not going to buy the future, but with the right technology we will
enable our men and women to compete differently, and that’s where we will get
the edge,” Shanahan said.
Looking Forward
The department is working on these technologies and
processes, the deputy secretary said. “People like to read that the future is
bleak and that really bad things are going to happen to us,” he said. “I would
argue that we have sufficient resources and talent.”
How the resources and talent are marshaled needs to change,
he said.
Shanahan stresses the talent he has found in DoD. The
department has people who understand the different domains and technologies and
how they fit together to produce military capabilities. “Every door I look
behind, I am blown away,” he said.
The military is a team, and service men and women prove that
in the joint forces, Shanahan said. “We are looking to embody that at the
[Office of the Secretary of Defense] and DoD levels,” he said.
Shanahan said Pentagon teams are looking at strategy,
technology, acquisition.
“The one that is fun lately is getting on the Cloud,” he
said.
“When I interviewed with the secretary for the job, I asked
him what his goals were for the department … he talked about lethality, he
talked about the importance of expanding and strengthening our alliances and
partnerships, but he [also] said he wanted organizations outside the government
to benchmark DoD for effectiveness,” the deputy secretary said.
Matching the Speed of Business
Right now, the speed of government lags behind the speed of
business, said Shanahan, noting the Pentagon reform groups that he’s empaneled
want to reverse that.
“With the scale we have and the smart people, I think we can
be faster than business,” he said. “We are spending a lot of time streamlining
and the cloud is an example. When you enable the infrastructure the right way,
you can move at incredible rates of speed. If you ask what’s the most important
attribute, it’s speed.
“We are trying to be as fast and as nimble as the men and
women downrange,” he continued. “We are putting in place the tools needed to
compete and win. Whether it is business or government, speed is the measure of
performance.”
DoD’s impetus has to be the men and women actually doing the
work, Shanahan said.
“My Dad’s picture is a constant reminder to me,” he said.
“We need to have deep appreciation of the missions that they do and the sacrifices
they make.”
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