Pentagon Shakes Up Leadership While Army Modernizes Electronic Warfare Capabilities
Defense Industry Weekly Roundup
Team, it’s been another eventful week in the DoD, with major leadership changes at the Pentagon, significant modernization efforts in electronic warfare, and some concerning developments in weapons testing oversight. Let’s dive into what’s been happening.
Pentagon Leadership Overhaul Continues
The biggest story this week involves Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s continued restructuring at the Pentagon. Late Friday, we learned that Lt. Gen. Jeffrey Kruse was removed from his position as director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), citing “loss of confidence.”
What makes this particularly interesting is the timing — it comes after a leaked DIA report contradicted the administration’s claims about the effectiveness of June’s strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities. While the White House maintained the strikes “completely obliterated” Iran’s nuclear capabilities, the DIA assessment suggested the damage was far more limited, setting back their program by “maybe a few months, tops.”
Hegseth didn’t stop there. He also dismissed Vice Adm. Nancy Lacore, head of the Navy Reserve, and Rear Adm. Milton Sands, who led Naval Special Warfare Command. The reasons for these dismissals remain unclear, but they’re part of a broader pattern of leadership changes that now includes the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Chief of Naval Operations, and several other senior positions.
Army’s Electronic Warfare Evolution
On the modernization front, the Army is making significant moves in electronic warfare. At TECHNET AUGUSTA 2025, officials unveiled plans for the Modular Mission Payload (MMP) — a new electronic warfare kit designed to be interoperable across virtually any platform in the service.
Col. Scott Shaffer, project manager for EW and cyber within PEO IEW&S, explained that the MMP represents a shift away from dedicated EW vehicles. As one official put it, “We’re past that point of where you’re going to have a dedicated EW vehicle trying to move across a battlefield, antennas looking like a porcupine.”
The Army is prioritizing commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) and government off-the-shelf (GOTS) solutions, with Shaffer noting, “If we’re only hitting 60 percent of the requirements, that’s okay because we’re at least getting something out there and it can be fielded very soon.”
This push comes as the Army establishes 18 new EW companies across its divisions, significantly expanding its electronic warfare capabilities at a time when electromagnetic spectrum dominance is increasingly critical.
Weapons Testing Office Gutted
In a move that’s raising serious concerns among oversight advocates, the Pentagon’s weapons testing office has dramatically reduced its scope. The Director of Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E) cut the number of programs it oversees from 251 to 152, with the workforce slashed from 94 employees to just 46.
Most alarming? The Army’s new XM7 rifle has been removed from oversight — a decision that critics say eerily parallels the M16’s troubled history. Greg Williams from the Project On Government Oversight (the organization tends to be left of center in its editorial) warned that the XM7 “is a perfect example of a weapon system that requires both developmental and operational testing.”
Defense Secretary Hegseth defended the cuts, claiming they’ll save $300 million annually by eliminating “redundant, non-essential, non-statutory functions.” But as Williams pointed out, any short-term savings could be dwarfed by the long-term costs of fielding faulty weapons. The unasked question is, how do we increase the lethality to the warfighter while balancing risk?
Federal Acquisition Reform Accelerates
The FAR overhaul continues at breakneck speed, with significant changes to Parts 8 and 12 that could reshape how the government buys everything from IT services to construction projects.
The biggest game-changer? Contracting officers must now prioritize Best-in-Class (BIC) contracts as their first source of supply. If they want to use anything else, they need written justification approved by senior leadership. This change effectively gives companies on governmentwide acquisition contracts a massive competitive advantage.
Part 12 brings equally significant changes, raising the simplified acquisition threshold for commercial items to $7.5 million — up from the previous $250,000 in practice. The government also eliminated a third of the clauses previously required for commercial contracts, streamlining the process considerably.
AI Tools Get Fast-Track Security Approval
FedRAMP announced it will prioritize AI cloud services for security certification, responding to a request from the Federal CIO Council. The new criteria focus on conversational AI engines for routine federal use, with priority given to tools that:
- Have demand from at least five CFO Act agencies
- Offer enterprise-grade features like single sign-on and role-based access
- Guarantee data separation and protection
- Are available through GSA schedules
- Can meet FedRAMP requirements within two months
Interestingly, none of the current AI offerings — including Google’s Gemini, OpenAI’s ChatGPT, or Anthropic’s Claude — meet all five criteria yet.
Looking Ahead
As we head into September, Congress returns from recess facing a potential government shutdown on September 30th. The spending battle will dominate the agenda, complicated by the Trump administration’s efforts to claw back previously approved funding.
The Army’s new Directorate for Strategy and Transformation, led by Andrew Evans, aims for initial operating capability by mid-October. This reorganization institutionalizes the transformation efforts previously handled by the ISR Task Force, including high-profile programs like Athena-Sensor and HADES.
Meanwhile, federal unions continue fighting the administration’s collective bargaining terminations in court, with NASA, the National Weather Service, and other agencies added to the list of entities where unions are being eliminated for “national security” reasons.
The Bottom Line
This week’s developments highlight the tension between rapid modernization and proper oversight. While the push for commercial solutions and streamlined acquisition makes sense in today’s threat environment, the gutting of weapons testing capabilities raises legitimate concerns about repeating past mistakes.
The electronic warfare modernization efforts show promise, particularly the move away from dedicated platforms toward modular, adaptable systems. But success will depend on execution — and whether the Army can truly deliver plug-and-play capabilities that work across diverse platforms.
As always, I’ll be watching how these changes impact our defense industrial base and, most importantly, our warfighters in the field. The push for efficiency is admirable, but not at the cost of effectiveness or safety.
Stay tuned for next week’s update, where we’ll likely see more on the congressional spending fight and hopefully some clarity on the Pentagon’s broader reorganization plans.
Stay tuned for next week’s update. Until then, keep looking up!
September 4, 2025