Congress thinks there are too many generals and flag officers holding positions in the Defense Department.
It’s something the 2017 defense authorization act directly addressed by telling DoD to reduce the number of general and flag officer billets by 110 by 2022.
Now, a new RAND study commissioned by the Pentagon finds there are just about that many general and flag officers that are unneeded.
The study revealed that after looking at the requirements for general and flag officer positions, about 132 of the 615 positions didn’t meet the need for such a high ranking official.
“We tried to look and see to make sure each of the positions that were on the books were adequately justified,” Lisa Harrington, associate director of the Forces and Resources Policy Center at the RAND Corporation told Federal News Network. “Our method tries to look at these positions from a different perspective, either organizationally, the characteristics of the individual position, what opportunities are there for reductions and then what are inconsistencies across the services?”
RAND concluded that about 10 percent of those positions can be downgraded to leadership below a flag officer or be eliminated altogether.
Congress and other critics of flag officer inflation feel the issue has gotten out of hand.
Gee, you think?
It’s not just general officers. The ratio of officers to men in the military has been 10:1 for hundreds of years, since before the founding of the Republic, and these days, its 5:1.
Bloated administration seems to be a good first step to determine where we should cut the military.