Dayton Daily News

Top Army appointee wants faster innovation

- By Dan Lamothe The Washington Post

WARREN, MICH. — Army Secretary Mark Esper climbed into the back of an experiment­al Bradley Fighting Vehicle on a recent afternoon, donning a helmet with plans to observe the armored behemoth from the inside. An operator put the 28-ton vehicle in autonomous mode for a demonstrat­ion, but it halted with a lurch. The computer had “dropped” the planned route from its memory.

The visit to the Army’s automotive research center is illustrati­ve of the service’s efforts to modernize after nearly 17 years of war. The Army, after a string of fits and starts and multibilli­on-dollar failures, is pressing to field a variety of replacemen­ts in its aging fleet of combat vehicles. Esper says it is urgent that the Army begin modernizin­g now to outmatch potential adversarie­s such as Russia and China.

“I think that we are at an inflection right now in history,” Esper said in an interview. “I think we have been for the last year or so, and I think it’s a time to come in and make a difference. If I can leave here after three years and have made a difference, I’ll feel good about the experience.”

Esper became President Donald Trump’s top political appointee in the Army after a tumultuous period in which two other nominees changed their minds about taking the job. Vincent Viola, a billionair­e Wall Street trader and owner of the National Hockey League’s Florida Panthers, withdrew in February 2017 after struggling to untangle his financial conflicts of interest. Trump then nominated Tennessee state Sen. Mark E. Green, who stepped aside in May under pressure for past comments about Muslims, transgende­r people and Hispanics.

Trump nominated Esper in July, and the Senate confirmed him in November with an 89-6 vote. Like some of Trump’s other Pentagon nominees, he joined the administra­tion after working in the defense industry, a trend that some government watchdogs consider troubling. For the previous seven years, he was vice president for government relations at Raytheon, acting as a senior lobbyist.

Esper, a native of Uniontown, Pennsylvan­ia, attended the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, New York, graduating in 1986, the same year as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. He embarked on a 25-year military career that included time in the active-duty Army and the Virginia National Guard, and a deployment during the Persian Gulf War.

Outside the military, he has held several other jobs in government, including deputy assistant secretary of defense during the administra­tion of President George W. Bush, national security adviser to then-Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., and a legislativ­e director to then-Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb. He also was chief of staff from 1996 to 1999 at the Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve think tank that has been influentia­l in the Trump administra­tion.

Esper, who is married and has three children in their 20s, has eschewed commentary about polarizing issues while focusing on building up the military. Asked about Trump’s ban on transgende­r people serving in the military, he told reporters that the issue “really hasn’t come up” during his visits with U.S. troops. When it comes to fully integratin­g women in the military, he said that “everybody wants to be treated with a clear set of standards,” a response suggesting that he sees no reason to exclude women.

Taking the Army secretary job was appealing because of the team of leaders the Trump administra­tion has assembled in the Pentagon, beginning with Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, Esper said. As Army secretary, Esper is the senior civilian official in the service, overseeing such matters as weapons acquisitio­n, personnel issues and the approval of awards for valor.

The secretary has been on the road repeatedly since taking office, visiting soldiers from South Korea to Germany. In recent days, he has advocated for a six-point list of modernizat­ion priorities that his service adopted in October before he took office. It includes investing in futuristic long-range ground fires such as hypersonic weapons, new combat vehicles, Army aircraft, communicat­ions equipment that can withstand cyberattac­ks, missile defense and boosting individual soldiers’ combat abilities with better equipment.

Since 1995, the Army has spent more than $32 billion on programs that were canceled early, an embarrassm­ent that has prompted bipartisan concern and promises from senior Army officials to do better. Esper and the Army’s top generals are hanging their hopes for change on a new unit - Army Futures Command - that will be led by a four-star general. It will focus on making sure that the Army is realistic in what it requires from industry, and that military officials and defense contractor­s alike don’t stray too far from initial plans after a contract is signed.

“One of the key challenges the military has faced - and the Army, in particular - is defining our requiremen­ts and keeping them stable,” Esper said. “In the past ... we would take years to develop a set of requiremen­ts, and they would be so grandiose that they would be unachievab­le in the amount of money one would have, and the amount of time one would need.”

The effort began before Esper took office, but he speaks about it often, describing it as a “reasonable bet” to make sure future projects are completed. Futures Command will “clean up lines of accountabi­lity,” he said, with a single 500-person staff overseeing acquisitio­n in a way that did not exist before. That general has been selected, Esper said, but not yet announced.

The Army cut the number of potential homes for the command to 15 in April, and expects to reduce that number to between three and five cities soon, Esper said. The list includes northeaste­rn metropolis­es such as Boston and New York, but also tech-rich cities in the west such as San Francisco and Seattle. Washington, D.C., is not on the list.

“I don’t want to taint the process too much, but there has to be talent,” Esper said of the final location. “It has to be livable. It has to provide a quality of life for your folks, and then we’ll see what else they put on the table. They may offer some things that they may think are attractive to us to bring up.”

In Michigan, Esper rode on futuristic vehicles that could play a role in the Army’s future while visiting the Tank Automotive Research Developmen­t and Engineerin­g Center (TARDEC). The experiment­al Bradley - which Army officials call a Mission Enabling Technologi­es Demonstrat­or - was outfitted with a self-driving option and a remotely operated gun turret. The Army says the upgrades could cut back on the number of soldiers needed in combat in the future.

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 ?? U.S. ARMY ?? Army Secretary Mark Esper, shown touring the Watervliet Arsenal in New York in March, says the Army must begin modernizin­g now to outmatch potential adversarie­s, including Russia and China.
U.S. ARMY Army Secretary Mark Esper, shown touring the Watervliet Arsenal in New York in March, says the Army must begin modernizin­g now to outmatch potential adversarie­s, including Russia and China.

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