If You Want To Cut Government Spending, You Can't Ignore the Pentagon
Since Congress began requiring annual audits in 2018, the Department of Defense has never passed.

Since the 1950s, every effort to reduce the size and scope of government has been bulldozed by a political establishment more concerned with furthering its own interests than those of the American people. Between sacred cows and special interest groups, we're always told why nothing can get cut.
With the exception of Social Security, there is no bigger scared cow than the Department of Defense (DOD).
Of course, defense policy is a legitimate function of government—a textbook example of a public good. It's hard, though not impossible, to imagine national security being provided privately. However, it doesn't follow that every dollar spent on defense is effective or even legitimate. It's often the reverse. Sacred-cow status grants relative immunity to the Pentagon's waste and poor strategic spending.
This is why, despite the chaos caused by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and its often questionable approach, I for one welcome the chance to have a national conversation about Pentagon spending.
In a February 22 post on X, DOGE announced that it held a preliminary meeting with the Defense Department and that it looks forward to "working together to safely save taxpayer dollars and eliminate waste, fraud and abuse." Heaven knows the DOD needs such supervision. Since Congress began requiring annual audits in 2018, it has never passed a single full audit.
As of late 2024, it had failed for the seventh year in a row, unable to fully account for an $824 billion annual budget. Pause and think about that: Much of the nation's single largest chunk of discretionary spending can't be completely tracked. Let's hope the DOD is better at protecting us from foreign enemies than tracking its own expenses.
One Pentagon official dryly noted that "things are showing progress, but it's not enough" and a "clean" audit is still years away. Imagine a taxpayer offering this answer to an IRS auditor.
In addition to not knowing where the money is going, a big problem with the department is the defense procurement system. Its issues go beyond simple waste or mismanagement. The system's core challenges stem from its painfully slow acquisition timeline, inefficient cost structures, and barriers to innovation. As a result, when major systems reach deployment, their technologies are often outdated and their costs prohibitive.
Nowhere is the dysfunction more visible than in the development of the F-35 fighter jet program. According to the Government Accountability Office, after nearly 25 years of development and $1.7 trillion in spending—the most expensive defense program ever—only 55 percent of F-35s are mission capable.
The jet's troubled history of cost overruns and unfulfilled promises reflects a broader pattern within the Pentagon: Shouts of "national security!" discourage necessary attention toward wasteful programs and less wasteful alternatives.
The DOD's acquisition timeline represents perhaps the most pressing challenge. Major weapons systems typically take eight to 10 years from concept to delivery. The Navy's Ford-class aircraft carrier program illustrates this perfectly. The lead ship's construction began in 2005, and it was originally scheduled to deploy in 2018. Yet it was deployed for a test in 2022 and finally ready for battle in 2023, with new technologies not yet integrated. The cost, $13.3 billion, was 30 percent higher than the original estimate.
During the extended development period, threats evolve, requirements change, and technology advances, yet the procurement system remains largely locked into initial specifications.
Cost structures create another fundamental problem. The prevalence of "cost-plus" contracts, under which contractors receive guaranteed profits regardless of performance, reduces incentives to do the work efficiently. The Army's Future Combat Systems program operated under such arrangements, with little incentive to control costs or meet schedules. It was canceled in 2009 only after spending $18 billion.
Mix in the many political pressures—such as pushes to include as much technology with each weapon as possible—and the many regulations that frustrate potential innovators who might offer something better or more affordable, and you've got quite a mess.
DOGE may succeed at shrinking the administrative leviathan that has long stifled innovation and burdened taxpayers. The Pentagon's practices demand a parallel reckoning. That can't realistically happen without Congress's help and buy-in from the Pentagon, but DOGE can use its enormous megaphone to jumpstart the conversation.
The road to genuine reform is rarely straightforward. It requires both innovative measures that challenge the status quo and the courage to question even the most deeply entrenched powers. It's time to illuminate the dark corridors of unchecked power at every government agency and department. Investigating the Pentagon is a critical step in this journey.
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It's cronies all the way down.
Well since you're copy/pasting (though why you would crib your article from a patent retard like JD Tuccille, I don't know...), I guess I'll just copy paste the response to it.
Given the enormous role that defense spending plays in the federal budget
Stop. Stop right there. When you say "enormous role," you should point out that it's the third-biggest role. And then, you should also point out that enormous role is actually split into two parts: one that is very very necessary, and the other that is miniscule by comparison. Otherwise you're obfuscating a reality in order to grind an axe.
The second and first biggest "enormous roles" are social security and medicare/medicaid spending. Together, they're TWICE what we spend on the DOD. Furthermore, the DOD spending is split - roughly 3/4 on building, training, maintaining, and improving the military, providing for all its hardware and R&D, and (poorly) caring for veterans; and 1/4 on Overseas Contingency Operations (wars and deployments).
That 3/4 of DOD spending is 100% an absolute proper purpose of government and a legitimate place to spend. That 1/4, YMMV, but is the only part that anyone really complains about.
So, roughly speaking, 40% is the two biggest forms of entitlement spending, 15% is a legitimate spending purpose, and 5% is unpopular wars and campaigns. (The other 40% is roughly half and half - 20% the cost of running every agency in the federal government and every paycheck and amenity of any federal employee; and 20% other forms of entitlement spending, WIC, SNAP (aka food stamps), unemployment, etc.)
That's the federal spending in a rounded-off nutshell.
So when you whine about DOD spending, and you characterize it as an "enormous role" - you are flat out lying. Because the only thing you really get upset about is the mere 5% that is OCOs. As opposed to the 60% of handouts to leeches, and - what DOGE is targeting: the 20% of questionable agency spending.
At the end of the day, you are NOT talking seriously about spending cuts unless you're talking about clamping off the entitlement spigot. We could DOUBLE the DOD budget, and it still wouldn't hold a candle to where the money's really being wasted. And DOGE is attacking far more of waste created by federal agency spending than the entire OCO budget itself.
...
But seriously Ronnie. Keep that metal bucket on your head and keep banging on it with a pipe wrench.
The prevalence of "cost-plus" contracts
SpaceX's founder can lead by example on this front, and shutdown any argument defending the practice.
$200 screwdriver
$600 toilet seat
$2000 coffee maker
And that was in the 1980s
Good luck with that!
Today its $149,000 soap dispensers.
No, today it's $149,000 tampon dispensers. In the wrong bathroom.
"Since Congress began requiring annual audits in 2018, the Department of Defense has never passed."
...and what exactly is Congress going to do to the Pentagon when it doesn't pass an audit?
Nothing?
That's what I thought.
Yes, we should try very hard to eliminate fraud, waste and abuse from ALL necessary and Constitutional federal spending, including the military. That begs the much more important question: what military spending is NECESSARY for the military defense of the nation? I suggest that returning to the original purpose of the national defense - namely, the national DEFENSE - would automatically result in a dramatically reduced defense budget. When someone presents believable calculations of how much extra spending we waste every year on the Global War Against Drugs and Terror and Propping Up Rotten Allies and Dictators Everywhere, then we can figure out how much we can cut the defense budget. In addition, we can start to figure out at that point how much we have to spend to maintain an unbeatable national defense capability and even improve the lot of the permanent career personnel and their families while conducting effective military technology research, development, maintenance and acquisition without blowing it all on "protecting our vital national interests" in god-forsaken deserts and jungles wherever ...