Posted on 04/28/2014 1:40:58 PM PDT by PoloSec
Why is the Pentagon to destroy ammunition for our men and women in uniform while the Department of Homeland Security is buying up millions of rounds of ammunition? As we asked last week, why are we decimating our military while many government agencies are arming up?
You really have to wonder why, according to USA Today, The Pentagon plans to destroy more than $1 billion worth of ammunition although some of those bullets and missiles could still be used by troops, according to the Pentagon and congressional sources. Its impossible to know what portion of the arsenal slated for destruction valued at $1.2 billion by the Pentagon remains viable because the Defense Departments inventory systems cant share data effectively, according to a Government Accountability Office report obtained by USA TODAY. The result: potential waste of unknown value.
Everyone complains about fraud, waste and abuse of American taxpayer dollars, and I will admit there is a degree of that in the Department of Defense (DoD), the Pentagon. I firmly supported still do an audit of the DoD when I sat on the House Armed Services Committee. But still, it makes you wonder.
Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., and chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee said, Despite years of effort, the Army, Navy and Air Force still dont have an efficient process for doing something as basic as sharing excess bullets. This Government Accountability Office (GAO) report clearly shows that our militarys antiquated systems lead to millions of dollars in wasteful ammunition purchases. The Army and Pentagon, in a statement, acknowledged the need to automate the process and will make it a priority in future budgets. In all, the Pentagon manages a stockpile of conventional ammunition worth $70 billion.
Now, this last part is quite perplexing to me, having spent 22 years in the US Army as a combat artillery officer and being quite involved in ammunition management as a Brigade/Regimental operations officer, a Battalion Executive officer, and a Battalion Commander. We constantly received spreadsheets that were reconciled monthly for ammunition allocation and use. In the Army we have Division and Corps level Ammunition Officers whose sole mission is ammunition management, which is forecasted out and allocated yearly.
Excess ammunition? We were begging for excess ammunition for training purposes. And I recall on several occasions when I was an Army exchange officer with the II Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Lejeune working out some issues on ammunition transfer and training between XVIIIth Airborne Corps, Ft. Bragg. So what is this baloney?
Folks, this is why we need more men and women serving on Capitol Hill who have served in uniform and can raise the Bovine Excrement flag. It would also behoove these Members of the House and Senate who are on Armed Services committees to have staffers who are veterans and can provide proper insight and perspective.
However, more importantly, we need former servicemen and women in civilian leadership with oversight of the military who understand the tactical level processes and procedures so that at the higher strategic level, this type of foolishness does not occur. Instead, we have political nepotism and cronyism, as too many are positioned due to their campaign contributions or agenda allegiance, not because of their military experience or expertise.
USA Today says the GAO report illustrates the obsolete nature of the Pentagons inventory systems for ammunition. A request for ammunition from the Marine Corps, for example, is e-mailed to the Army. The e-mail is printed out and manually retyped into the Army system because the services cannot share data directly. Not only is this time consuming, but it can introduce errors by an incorrect keystroke, for example.
Waste, buying new ammunition while usable stockpiles exist, can occur because the Army does not report information on all available and usable items, the report states. The annual conference among the services although it saves about $70 million per year, according to the Pentagon is inadequate. The services, in fiscal year 2012, exchanged 44 million items, including 32 million bullets for machine guns and pistols. Specifically, the Armys report does not include information from prior years about usable ammunition that was unclaimed by another service and stored for potential foreign military sales or slated for potential disposal, the report says.
All of which begs the simple question: who is in charge? Who is tracking ammunition production, allocation, usage, and redistribution? This is why a serious audit system is necessary. If a monthly reconciliation is done at the unit/installation level, there should at least be a quarterly reconciliation at higher levels. If that is being done, then we should have fail-safe systems as well as procedures and methods upgraded to ensure effective and efficient management.
This is unacceptable and I bet you could sell the excess usable 9 mm ammunition at a reduced price to civilian outlets and make money for the DoD. But then that would mean youre arming civilians
Today we will send troops to shore up defense of Europe. It will be 150 men. We regret they will not have ammunition.
In case of an emergency, we will send some by ox-cart.
The only time that it make sense to destroy ammunition is when the enemy is about to overrun your position.
Gone are the days when I could go to any gun store and buy Mil-surplus M2 Ball Lake City ammo for my Garand(s).
And they are not selling it because?
Via eco-friendly carbon neutral sailing ships. Give them a few weeks to get there.
Why can’t we just get an ammo dividend?
I thought they were required by law to send it to the CMP. AT least the small arms stuff.
“And they are not selling it because?”
Because one can not have ammunition falling into the hands of American citizens, among whom reside veterans,
law-abiding citizens, Christian males, bible-thumpers,
gun-lovers and all manner of non-scientific American types, especially those in flyover country.
/SARCASM/
IMHO
That’s better... whew!
good one
Bullets can be pulled and reused and brass cases can be inspected and reused 10-20 times. There are millions of civilians that would be happy to purchase the mil surp ammo as reloading stock for a fair price. But that would be providing aid and comfort to the enemy as far as Obama and Co. is concerned so they opt to scrap it.
The OLD army was for use against America’s enemies.
They are blasé and no longer needed.
The NEW army (DHS, IRS, BLM, TSA, etc.)is for use against Americans.
They are cool and will beat down opposition to the New Order.
Any .30 cal, 7.62mm, 9mm, .45 cal, .50BMG ammunition should either be sold as-is unless the powder is reasonably suspect. Ammo in that condition should be pulled and the components sold.
Flat-out destruction is a wasteful, and a gross mishandling of the taxpayers’ money. It should be criminal.
Any .30 cal, 7.62mm, 5.56mm, 9mm, .45 cal, .50BMG ammunition should either be sold as-is unless the powder is reasonably suspect. Ammo in that condition should be pulled and the components sold.
Flat-out destruction is a wasteful, and a gross mishandling of the taxpayers’ money. It should be criminal.
Because people outside the government would then have it.
I didn’t see what type of ammo. I’d love to bid on case lots of 5.56, .45 (if they still buy that), 9mm, or 7.62 NATO. OTOH, if it’s 105mm, well, I do have a policy to procure a firearm for every caliber ammunition I have in the locker...
Don’t panic.
The ammo will be sold to the high bidder with stipulation it be demiled. They will pull the bullets, then reload them and sell them at reduced price. I’ve bought such ammo in the past.
There should be more ammo at a lower price because of this.
Well they bought too much so they have to destroy it.... makes no sense to let our boys get some target practice, DESTROY it...
who the f-ing f is in charge there?????
Ping!
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