China Acquiring New Weapons Five Times Faster Than U.S. Warns Top Official

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China

China Acquiring New Weapons Five Times Faster Than U.S. Warns Top Official

“In purchasing power parity, they spend about one dollar to our 20 dollars to get to the same capability.”​

BYTHOMAS NEWDICK
JUL 6, 2022 6:46 PM

The Air Force officer responsible for all aspects of contracting for the service has issued a stark warning about China’s rapid gains in defense acquisition, with the result that its military is now getting its hands on new equipment “five to six times” faster than the United States. This is the latest sobering evidence from a U.S. defense official suggesting that the Pentagon needs to urgently overhaul the way it goes about fielding new weapons, while China increasingly appears to be jockeying for the lead in the development of all kinds of high-end military technologies as part of its broader drive to become a preeminent strategic power.

As Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition, it’s Maj. Gen. Cameron Holt’s job to oversee all aspects of contracting for the service, from buying new weapon systems to logistics and operational support. Holt’s remarks about China’s pace of change were made during the recent Government Contracting Pricing Summit and before he steps down from his current post.

As well as the sheer speed with which Beijing is able to acquire new weapons, Holt contends, the Chinese are also operating far more efficiently. “In purchasing power parity, they spend about one dollar to our 20 dollars to get to the same capability,” he told his audience. “We are going to lose if we can’t figure out how to drop the cost and increase the speed in our defense supply chains,” Holt added.

For Holt, the big issue behind America’s inability to match China in this field is the way it goes about actually buying what its military needs in terms of defense equipment, logistics, and support. While the budgetary framework that actually funds these purchases may be unwieldy (“slow and stodgy” in his words), the greater problem, Holt contends, is the resourcing system.

“If we don’t change our resourcing system, none of the rest of it matters,” Holt said. In fact, the budgeting process could remain the same as it is today, he argued, “If you just change the execution year flexibilities and modernize Congress’s oversight of it to be more patient.”

The current model, however, has delays more or less built into it from the start, with a painfully slow process of getting budgets signed off for each phase of a program, from writing up a formal requirement all the way to sustainment and lifecycle costs. This means that, at any stage in a given program, those that control the budgets can intervene and potentially entirely change its direction — and speed — based on how they think funds should be allocated. So even if a weapons program, for example, makes rapid progress in its early stages, funding decisions further down the line can actually stop it from reaching the troops as quickly as it could.

And even if Congress is happy to allocate a certain amount of funding to a new program, the Pentagon retains the ability to move funds around, possibly hindering the potential of promising new developments in favor of continuing to throw money at legacy programs.

Instead, Holt advocates what he described as the “cash flow” model, which includes provision for some Pentagon movement of funds, but which seeks to ensure Congress retains more oversight over this process and has the option to intervene in a more timely manner.

Ultimately, Holt argues, the U.S. defense acquisition process will continue to fail to move as quickly and responsively as it needs to as long as there is no reform. After all, he contends, the current system dates from the Cold War security environment, and a very different set of threats and challenges.

“We also have gotten a very centrally and micromanaged system of appropriations that have served the Cold War well,” Holt said. “In this environment today, it is absolutely going to kill us. We cannot have a system where the appropriations — where it’s in statute that the name of the program is on that money, and the phase within the program is on the statute, so it’s illegal for a program executive officer inside of execution year to look at that and say — ‘No, there’s a better way to allocate those resources.’”

Ultimately, the current defense acquisition architecture was set up to field technologies and capabilities that are identified four years in advance. That means they are of limited or degraded use in today’s fast-moving world, where new technologies rapidly appear and eclipse older ones. This is a reality that China has been able to embrace, but one that the U.S. system has so far failed to adapt to.

Holt is by no means the first to have looked at the Chinese way of managing the introduction of cutting-edge technologies and drawn an unfavorable comparison with how things are done in the United States (and, it could be argued, in the West more generally).

There is a growing willingness to talk about the particular challenges presented by China’s technological prowess and the lengths its willing to go to harness this to help drive rapid military change.

Back in 2019, the then head of Strategic Command, Gen. John Hyten, used the Air Force Association convention as the opportunity to alert America to the fact its defense-industrial complex had lost the ability to “go fast.” You can read our reporting at the time here, while Hyten’s remarks on the topic begin at 25:48 in the following video:


“We have adversaries now, and we see proof in those adversaries that they’re going faster than we are,” Hyten said. “Slow, expensive, that’s the way it is … I’m criticizing the entire process ... the entire process is broken ... We have to go faster, and we’re not, and it is frustrating the heck out of me. Look at the threat, if we’re not going faster than the threat than it’s wrong."

Hyten also pointed to an example of when a U.S. defense procurement program goes right. This was the Cold War-era Minuteman I ICBM program, which not only met or exceeded all its expectations and objectives but did it in just five years at a cost of less than $20 billion in today’s dollars.

And, as a counterpoint, at the time, The War Zone highlighted what things look like when they go very wrong with the example of the KC-46 aerial refueling tanker. Despite nearly three years having passed since that article, the tanker is still struggling and is years away from meeting its promised capability goals — if everything goes right.

Since then, there have been Pentagon initiatives that have aimed to tackle these underlying problems in the acquisition system.

Perhaps the most high-profile example was the raft of cutting-edge programs and disruptive concepts introduced by Dr. William Roper, who served as the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics beginning in 2018. But Roper left that position surprisingly last year, for reasons that are not entirely clear.

However, the man who Roper had employed as the first Air Force Chief Software Officer, Nicolas Chaillan, provided the Financial Times with a very candid interview when he, in turn, departed. Again, Chaillan hit out at the Pentagon’s failure to keep pace with its rival China.

Among the various complaints leveled at the U.S. military’s approach to modernization, Chaillan highlighted what he sees as a lost battle between the United States and China in the field of cyber capabilities, machine learning, and artificial intelligence, or AI.

“We have no competing fighting chance against China in 15 to 20 years,” Chaillan told the FT. “Right now, it’s already a done deal; it is already over in my opinion.” He also called upon the United States to become “smarter, more efficient, and forward-leaning through agility, rapid prototyping and innovation.”

The frustration of these officials is telling. So too is the fact that some of them, at least, seem willing only to talk frankly about Pentagon failings as they prepare to depart their military jobs.
Ultimately, however, they raise the same issues repeatedly. China, right now, has shown itself to be taking a lead in a number of emerging technologies, while the United States has frequently been mired in highly expensive, slow-moving programs like the stealthy F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. At the same time, the United States still has a far bigger defense budget than China, although the latter continues to grow.

All of this becomes more worrisome when seen alongside repeated concerns that the ongoing rivalry between the United States and China could ultimately lead to some kind of military confrontation. Clearly, this reality has been proving highly influential on U.S. military planning and posture. Arguably, however, the issue of potential conflicts between these two powers could ultimately be rendered a sideshow. After all, the speed with which China is able to introduce new military technologies is only likely to increase and points to the growing dominance that Beijing hopes to assert across geopolitics, reflecting ambitions far larger than the military procurement process.

 

xizhimen

Experienced member
Messages
7,391
Reactions
384
Nation of residence
China
Nation of origin
China

Outpacing US At ‘Hypersonic Speed’, China’s Military Acquisition ‘5 Times Faster, 20 Times Cheaper’ – Top Official​


EXPERT REVIEWS

July 7, 2022

At the zenith of geopolitical and military rivalry between the United States (US) and China that has led observers to believe that the two could be involved in an armed confrontation someday, the US official overlooking the military acquisitions has made shocking revelations.

Deputy Assistant Secretary of the US Air Force for Acquisition Major General Cameron Holt recently issued a stern warning in light of China’s tremendous advancements in defense acquisition, which have led to its military receiving new equipment “five to six times” faster than the United States.

The warning from the top defense official is the latest for the US, which has received several assessments from observers, experts, and officials regarding an outdated acquisition and modernization process that has allowed China to leave the largest military behind in the acquisition race.

Major General Holt, speaking at the Government Contracting Pricing Summit, suggested that Pentagon needs to urgently overhaul the way it approaches putting new weapons into use.

At the same time, China seems to be jockeying for the lead in developing advanced military technologies as part of its larger drive to become a dominant strategic power.

Earlier, Mike Griffin, the first Under Secretary for Research and Engineering, revealed a comparison of invention time in 2018 and found that it takes the US sixteen years on average to bring an idea to operational capability, compared to less than seven years for China.

He cited China’s testing of many hypersonic attack vehicles over the past ten years and the high success rate. This grim research suggests that China completes two and a quarter development and fielding cycles for every turn made by the US.

It is alarming when seen alongside the stakes for the US, especially in the Indo-Pacific region, a theatre of potential future conflict between the two sides. Besides, top Pentagon officials and American commanders in the Indo-Pacific have stated that China could very soon outmatch the US military in the region.

The US Is Still In The Cold War Era

According to Holt, the Chinese are not just acquiring new weaponry at incredible speed, but they are also functioning far more effectively. He informed his audience that, in terms of purchasing power parity, they pay around one dollar to our twenty dollars to get to the same capabilities.

If we can’t figure out how to lower the cost and speed up our defense supply chains, we’re going to lose, said Holt.

He further explained that the main reason America cannot compete with China in this area is its purchase of the defense supplies, logistics, and support that its military requires. The actual problem in the United States lies in resourcing and oversight.

“If we don’t change our resourcing system, none of the rest of it matters,” Holt said. He contends that the current model is based on the one that worked wonders in the Cold War era but is a big fail in the 21st century. He laments the kind of centralized power that controls the entire budgeting to implementation of the program process.

Those in charge of the budgets have the power to intervene at any point in a program and, depending on their opinion of how money should be distributed, completely alter its course. Therefore, even if a weapons program, for instance, advances swiftly in its first stages, financing decisions made later on may prevent it from reaching the troops as quickly as it otherwise might.

Even if Congress agrees to provide a new program with a set amount of funding, the Pentagon still has the power to reallocate funds, thus thwarting the possibility of exciting innovations in favor of keeping financing for legacy projects.

“We also have gotten a very centrally and micromanaged system of appropriations that have served the Cold War well,” Holt said. “In today’s environment, it is absolutely going to kill us.”

Holt instead advocates for the “cash flow” model, which allows for some Pentagon funding movement but aims to give Congress more oversight over the procedure and the ability to step in more quickly. It would ensure a system of more checks and balances and a more decentralized functioning, eliminating micro-management.

In the end, the defense acquisition architecture in place today was designed to field technologies and capabilities known four years in advance. As a result, their utility in the quick-changing world of today, where new technology quickly replaces outdated ones, is limited or diminished. China has accepted this truth, but the American system has so far been unable to do the same.

Acquisition Talk had explained this in a previous analysis by comparing the development models of the F-35 and J-20, the fifth-gen fighter jets of the US and China. The US chose a protracted waterfall development and testing strategy and a model of trying long-term predictive requirements for the F-35, whereas China preferred iterative techniques.

After the J-20’s first flight in 2011, China came up with nine visually significant upgrades within five years. Even as mission systems were being modified by March 2017, the first operational J-20 was deployed to a front-line unit ahead of schedule.

China Could Outmatch The US Military

To make sense of Chinese defense spending since 2000 by service across many areas like personnel, operations, maintenance, and procurement, the US-based Long Term Strategy Group (LTSG) research group undertook a multiyear, open-source project, as previously reported by Politico.

The findings revealed a 20-year annual inflation-adjusted increase of around 10% in Chinese defense spending. At that rate, the PLA’s yearly purchases cash value is expected to surpass that of the US military by 2024. The value of US procurement in 2000 was 6.67 times that of PLA, and by 2019, it was only 1.42 times.

The United States will no longer be able to claim to have the most technologically advanced combat force in the world in total inventory value by roughly 2030 if, as predicted, the PLA’s annual procurement value surpasses that of the US military by 2024.

According to the LTSG assessment, the US has spent far more on operations and maintenance (O&M) than on purchasing new systems in the past two decades. In contrast, the Chinese allocation places procurement up the lead, with O&M and staff combined coming in second.

It becomes alarming when seen against the backdrop of warnings that the US military risks losing its edge to the PLA. Adm. Philip Davidson, former commander of the US Indo-Pacific Command, warned that by 2026, China could overmatch the US military in its capability and widely choose to change the status quo in the region forcibly.

“The pace at which China is moving is stunning,” said Gen. John Hyten, the now-retired No 2-ranking US military officer. He previously commanded US nuclear forces and oversaw Air Force space operations. It is pertinent to mention that besides its nuclear arsenal that’s growing tremendously, China has also left behind the US in the hypersonic race, which has exposed its vulnerabilities.

With time, the military rivalry between the two superpowers will only intensify. It would therefore be in the American interest to heed the warnings of top its top officials.

 

Follow us on social media

Top Bottom