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Report to the Subcommittee on Air and Land Forces, Committee on Armed 
Services, House of Representatives: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

March 2010: 

Defense Acquisitions: 

Opportunities Exist to Position Army's Ground Force Modernization 
Efforts for Success: 

GAO-10-406: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-406, a report to the Subcommittee on Air and Land 
Forces, Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Since 2003, the Future Combat System (FCS) program has been the 
centerpiece of the Army’s efforts to transition to a lighter, more 
agile, and more capable combat force. In 2009, however, concerns over 
the program’s performance led to the Secretary of Defense’s decision 
to significantly restructure and ultimately cancel the program. As a 
result, the Army has outlined a new approach to ground force 
modernization. This report (1) outlines the Army’s preliminary post-
FCS plans and (2) identifies the challenges and opportunities the 
Department of Defense (DOD) and the Army must address as they proceed 
with Army ground force modernization efforts. To meet these 
objectives, GAO reviewed key documents, performed analyses, visited 
test facilities where the Army evaluated FCS equipment, and 
interviewed DOD and Army officials. 

What GAO Found: 

With DOD having canceled the FCS acquisition program, the Army has 
moved away from FCS as the centerpiece of ground force modernization. 
Although the Army is still refining its post-FCS plans, it has already 
taken a number of actions to comply with DOD directions and define new 
modernization initiatives. For instance, the Army has terminated FCS 
vehicle development and is preparing for a new ground combat vehicle 
program. Also, Army officials convened a special task force to refine 
future force concepts and formulate an expedited fielding strategy. 
The Army also announced preliminary plans for new acquisition programs. 

With ground force modernization efforts at an early stage, DOD and the 
Army face the challenge of setting the emerging modernization efforts 
on the best possible footing by buying the right capabilities at the 
best value. They have an opportunity to position these efforts for 
success by effectively implementing the enhanced body of acquisition 
legislation and DOD policy reforms as well as lessons learned from the 
FCS program, including lessons that underscore the use of knowledge-
based acquisition and disciplined contracting strategies. Preliminary 
plans suggest that the Army is moving in that direction, including 
expectations to begin future developments with mature technologies and 
utilizing competitive prototyping. However, DOD recently approved, 
with a number of restrictions, low-rate initial production of the 
first increment of FCS spinout equipment, such as new radios and 
sensors, despite having acknowledged that the systems were immature, 
unreliable, and not performing as required. The restrictions include 
required DOD reviews of Army progress toward improving the systems’ 
maturity and reliability. The spin out equipment was being developed 
within the FCS program, and the decision to approve production 
reflects DOD and Army emphasis on providing new capabilities quickly 
to combat units. However, this decision runs the risk of delivering 
unacceptable equipment to the warfighter and trading off acquisition 
principles whose validity has been so recently underscored. 

Detailed plans for most of the Army’s new modernization efforts are 
still being developed and may not be available until at least later in 
fiscal year 2010. That will be a limiting factor as the Congress 
considers the Army’s fiscal year 2011 budget request for these 
modernization efforts. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense instruct the Army to 
correct the identified maturity and reliability issues prior to either 
fielding equipment or approving additional system procurement. GAO 
also recommends that the Secretary direct the Army to submit a 
comprehensive report to the Congress on its modernization investment, 
contracting, and management strategies. DOD concurred with GAO’s 
recommendations. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-406] or key 
components. For more information, contact Michael J. Sullivan at (202) 
512-4841 or sullivanm@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

In Implementing DOD Direction, the Army Is Moving Away from Many of 
Its FCS Approaches: 

Acquisition Direction and FCS Lessons Learned Offer Opportunities to 
Increase the Likelihood of Successful Outcomes: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Comparison of Controls Used in Best Practices Model and DOD 
Policy: 

Table 2: Acquisition Reforms and Their Potential Impact: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: FCS Acquisition Program (2003 versus 2009): 

Figure 2: Increment 1 Systems: 

Abbreviations: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

FCS: Future Combat System: 

GCV: Ground Combat Vehicle: 

LSI: lead systems integrator: 

MRAP: Mine Resistant Ambush Protected: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

March 15, 2010: 

The Honorable Adam Smith: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Roscoe Bartlett: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Air and Land Forces: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
House of Representatives: 

Since 2003, the Future Combat System (FCS) program has been at the 
center of the Army's efforts to modernize by replacing existing combat 
systems with a family of manned and unmanned vehicles and systems 
linked by an advanced information network. However, the Army started 
FCS without determining whether the concept could be successfully 
developed with existing resources. Specifically, the Army had not 
established firm system-level requirements, mature technologies, a 
realistic cost estimate, or an acquisition strategy wherein knowledge 
drives schedule. In our March 2009 report, we concluded that the Army 
would be challenged to demonstrate the knowledge necessary to warrant 
an unqualified commitment to FCS at a congressionally mandated 2009 
milestone review.[Footnote 1],[Footnote 2] 

In April 2009, the Secretary of Defense proposed restructuring the FCS 
program to lower risk and address more near-term needs shortly before 
FCS was to undergo the congressionally mandated review to determine 
its future. The Secretary of Defense's recommendations served as a 
preemptive "no-go" decision for this review, and the FCS acquisition 
program was subsequently canceled in June 2009. As a result, the Army 
has outlined a new approach to modernizing its ground forces. To 
understand the Army's new approach to modernization, you asked us to 
(1) outline the Army's preliminary post-FCS plans and (2) identify the 
challenges and opportunities the Department of Defense (DOD) and the 
Army will need to address as they proceed with ground force 
modernization efforts. 

In conducting our work, we met with Army and DOD officials responsible 
for carrying out the FCS cancellation and formulating new approaches 
for Army modernization. We reviewed the revised overarching Army 
concept document and the preliminary plans for emerging acquisition 
programs and assessed those against the earlier FCS concept. We 
assessed the Army's preliminary modernization plans against lessons 
learned from the FCS program, acquisition best practices, and the 
latest acquisition policy. In addition, we drew from our body of past 
work on weapon system acquisition practices and conducted our own 
analyses of recent policy changes and acquisition reform legislation. 
We conducted this performance audit from March 2009 to March 2010 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. Appendix I 
further discusses our scope and methodology. 

Background: 

Since it started development in 2003, FCS was at the center of the 
Army's efforts to modernize into a lighter, more agile, and more 
capable combat force. The FCS concept involved replacing existing 
combat systems with a family of manned and unmanned vehicles and 
systems linked by an advanced information network. The Army 
anticipated that the FCS systems, along with the soldier and enabling 
complementary systems, would work together in a system of systems 
wherein the whole provided greater capability than the sum of the 
individual parts. The Army expected to develop this equipment in 10 
years, procure it over 13 years, and field it to 15 FCS-unique 
brigades--about one-third of the active force at that time. The Army 
also had planned to spin out selected FCS technologies and systems to 
current Army forces throughout the system development and 
demonstration phase. In 2006, the Army established the Army Evaluation 
Task Force to use, evaluate, and train with these FCS spinout 
capabilities. 

The Army used a management approach for FCS that centered on a lead 
system integrator (LSI) to provide significant management services to 
help the Army define and develop FCS and reach across traditional Army 
mission areas. Army officials have stated that they did not believe 
the Army had the resources or flexibility to use its traditional 
acquisition process to field a program as complex as FCS under the 
aggressive timeline established by the then-Army Chief of Staff. 

As we have reported in the past, the FCS program was immature and 
unable to meet DOD's own standards for technology and design from the 
start (see the list of related GAO products at the end of this 
report). Although adjustments were made, such as adding time and 
reducing requirements, vehicle weights and software code grew, key 
network systems were delayed, and technologies took longer to mature 
than anticipated (see fig. 1). By 2009, after an investment of 6 years 
and an estimated $18 billion, the viability of the FCS concept was 
still unknown. As such, in our 2009 report, we concluded that the 
maturity of the development efforts was insufficient and the program 
could not be developed and produced within existing resources. 

Figure 1: FCS Acquisition Program (2003 versus 2009): 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated table] 

Cost estimate (Fiscal year 2009 billions of dollars): 
2003: 
Research and development: $20.9 billion; 
Procurement: $68.2 billion; 
Total: $89.8 billion; 
2009: 
Research and development: $29.0 billion ($8.1 billion increase); 
Procurement: $129.3 billion ($61.1 billion increase); 
Total: $159.3 billion ($69.5 billion increase). 

Schedule (Milestone B to initial operational capability): 
2003: 7 year 6 months; 
2009: 12 years, 3 months (over 4.5 years added). 

Requirements: 
2003: Undefined; 
2009: System-level requirements not matched with emerging designs 
(persistent gaps). 

Software lines of code: 
2003: 34 million; 
2009: 114+ million (tripled in size). 

Projected maturity date of critical technologies[A]: 
2003: 2006; 
2009: 2009 (3 years added). 

Source: DOD (data); GAO (analysis and presentation). 

[A] For FCS, the Army projected maturity based on a Technology 
Readiness Level 6, which is a representative model or prototype that 
has been tested in a relevant environment but requires additional work 
for the appropriate form, fit, and function. Based on our best 
practices work, technologies that have reached Technology Readiness 
Level 7, which is a prototype demonstrated in a realistic environment, 
are mature. 

[End of figure] 

In April 2009, the Secretary of Defense proposed a significant 
restructuring of the FCS program in order to address more near-term 
combat needs and incorporate a role for the Mine Resistant Ambush 
Protected (MRAP) vehicles being used in today's conflicts. The 
Secretary noted significant concerns that the FCS program's vehicle 
designs--where greater information awareness was expected to 
compensate for less armor and result in lower weight and higher fuel 
efficiency--did not adequately reflect the lessons of 
counterinsurgency and close-quarters combat operations in Iraq and 
Afghanistan. As such, the Secretary recommended: 

* accelerating fielding of ready-to-go systems and capabilities to all 
combat brigades; 

* canceling the vehicle component of the FCS program, reevaluating the 
requirements, technology, and approach, and relaunching the Army's 
vehicle modernization program; and: 

* addressing fee structure and other concerns with current FCS 
contracting arrangements. 

Subsequently, in June 2009, DOD issued an acquisition decision 
memorandum that canceled the FCS acquisition program, terminated 
manned ground vehicle development efforts, and laid out plans for 
follow-on Army brigade combat team modernization efforts. DOD directed 
the Army to transition to an Army-wide modernization plan consisting 
of a number of integrated acquisition programs, including one to 
develop ground combat vehicles (GCV). The memorandum also instructed 
the Army to transition away from an LSI management approach. 

In recent months, the Army has been defining its ground force 
modernization efforts per the Secretary's decisions and the June 2009 
acquisition decision memorandum. Although the details are not yet 
complete, the Army took several actions through the end of calendar 
year 2009. It stopped all development work on the FCS manned ground 
vehicles--including the non-line-of-sight cannon--in the summer of 
2009 and recently terminated development of the Class IV unmanned 
aerial vehicle and the countermine and transport variants of the 
Multifunction Utility/Logistics and Equipment unmanned ground vehicle. 
For the time being, the Army is continuing selected development work 
under the existing FCS development contract, primarily residual FCS 
system and network development. In October 2009, the Army negotiated a 
modification to the existing contract that clarified the development 
work needed for the brigade combat team modernization efforts. 

In Implementing DOD Direction, the Army Is Moving Away from Many of 
Its FCS Approaches: 

The Army is implementing DOD direction and redefining its overall 
modernization strategy as a result of the Secretary of Defense's 
decision to significantly restructure the FCS program. It established 
a key task force to refine its future force concepts and modernization 
plans and has moved away from FCS as the centerpiece of ground force 
modernization. Additionally, the Army is transitioning from the FCS 
long-term acquisition orientation to a shorter-term approach that 
biennially develops and fields new increments of capability within 
capability packages. It now has one approved acquisition program that 
will produce and field the initial increment of the FCS spinout 
equipment, as well as preliminary plans for two other acquisition 
programs that will define and develop follow-on increments and develop 
a new GCV. The Army also plans to continue network development for all 
the combat brigades and to develop and field upgrades to other 
existing equipment. 

The Army Has Established a New Operational Concept: 

In response to the Secretary's recommendation to restructure FCS, the 
Army established a Training and Doctrine Command-based task force to 
reexamine current force capability gaps, make resource-informed 
recommendations on how to fill them, and provide elements of planning 
for future force modernization.[Footnote 3] Through that process, the 
task force found that some assumptions were no longer valid, such as 
reliance on networking for survivability, which essentially meant 
trading heavy armor for better information or situational awareness. 
The Army acknowledges that this is not the best trade for the way it 
now has to fight. As a result of the task force's analysis, the Army 
is implementing a new operational concept and brigade combat team 
modernization strategy that will update all Army combat brigades for 
full-spectrum operations. That is a significant contrast to the FCS 
approach that would have created 15 new FCS-unique brigades. 

The task force developed a concept of continual modernization of ready-
to-go capabilities through biennial deliveries of capability packages. 
In addition to select FCS systems, these capability packages could 
also include materiel and nonmateriel items developed outside the FCS 
program. The concept also included plans to reallocate assets, divest 
older technologies, and incrementally modernize the Army's information 
network. The Army expects to field the first capability package in 
fiscal years 2011 through 2012, followed by additional capability 
packages delivered in 2-year increments. The Army plans to align 
capability package fielding with an established equipment reset and 
training process in order to provide these systems to deploying units. 
A network effort, to include more advanced hardware, software, and 
radios, will be included in each capability package. The Army's near- 
term plan is to define, develop, produce, and field capabilities to 
some of the Army's combat brigades, and the long-term plan is to field 
those capabilities to all remaining combat brigades. The Army has 
specified that the new capabilities will be tested and their 
performance validated before they are deployed in the capability 
packages. 

The Army Has Started a Series of Development and Fielding Efforts: 

In recent months, the Army has been defining its ground force 
modernization efforts per the Secretary's decisions and the specifics 
of the June 2009 acquisition decision memorandum. The Army has one 
approved acquisition program as well as preliminary plans for starting 
two other acquisition programs, integrating network capabilities 
across the Army's combat brigade structure, and upgrading and fielding 
existing ground force capabilities. 

* The first program, Increment 1, is a continuation of previous FCS- 
related efforts to spin out emerging capabilities and technologies to 
current forces. Of the Army's post-FCS modernization initiatives, 
Increment 1, which includes such FCS remnants as unmanned air and 
ground systems, unattended ground sensors, the non-line-of-sight 
launch system, and a network integration kit, is the furthest along in 
the acquisition development cycle (see fig. 2). The network 
integration kit includes, among other things, the integrated computer 
system, an initial version of the system-of-systems common operating 
environment, early models of the Joint Tactical Radio System and 
waveforms, and a range extension relay[Footnote 4]. In December 2009, 
the Army requested and DOD approved, with a number of restrictions, 
the low-rate initial production of Increment 1 systems that are 
expected to be fielded in the fiscal year 2011-12 capability package, 
which will be discussed in more detail later in this report. The Army 
will be continuing Increment 1 development over the next 2 years while 
low-rate initial production proceeds. The projected development and 
production cost to equip nine combat brigades with the Increment 1 
network and systems, supported by an independent cost estimate, would 
be about $3.5 billion. 

Figure 2: Increment 1 Systems: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrations of systems with accompanying 
information] 

Small Unmanned Ground Vehicle (SUGV) Block 1: 
Provides enhanced situational awareness and force protection through 
reduced exposure to hazards during soldier-intensive and/or high-risk 
functions. 

Network Integration Kit (NIK): 
Provides enhanced communications and situational awareness through 
radios with multiple software waveforms, connections to unattended 
sensors, and links to existing networking capabilities. 

Urban Unattended Ground Sensor (U-UGS): 
Provides force protection in an urban setting through a leave-behind, 
network-enabled reporting system of movement and/or activity in 
cleared areas. 

Class 1 Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Block 0: 
Provides independent, soldier-level aerial reconnaissance, 
surveillance, and target acquisition capability. 

Non-Line-of-Sight Launch System (NLOS-LS): 
Provides the ability to precisely attack armored, lightly armored, and 
stationary or moving targets at extended ranges despite 
weather/environmental conditions and/or presence of counter-measures. 

Tactical Unattended Ground Sensor (T-UGS): 
Provides enhanced situational awareness, force protection, and early 
warnings in a tactical setting through cross-cues to sensors and 
weapon systems. 

Source: Army (data and photos); GAO (analysis and presentation). 

[End of figure] 

* For the second acquisition program, Increment 2 of brigade combat 
team modernization, the Army has preliminary plans to mature Increment 
1 capabilities--potentially demonstrating full FCS threshold 
requirements--as well as contribute to further developments of the 
system-of-systems common operating environment and battle command 
software, and demonstrate and field additional capabilities. For 
example, these may include the Armed Robotic Vehicle Assault (Light)-- 
an unmanned ground vehicle configured for security and assault support 
missions--and the Common Controller, which will provide the dismounted 
soldier a handheld device capable of controlling, connecting, and 
providing data transfer from unmanned vehicles and ground sensors. 
According to Army officials, they are currently working to define the 
content, cost, and schedule for Increment 2 and are planning a Defense 
Acquisition Board review in the third quarter of fiscal year 2010 and 
a low-rate initial production decision for fiscal year 2013. 

* The third acquisition program would develop a new GCV. The Army 
reviewed current fighting vehicles across the force structure to 
determine whether to sustain, improve, divest, or pursue new vehicles 
based on operational value, capability shortfalls, and resource 
availability. Per DOD direction, the Army also collaborated with the 
Marine Corps to identify capability gaps related to fighting vehicles. 
For development of a new GCV, the Army's preliminary plans indicate 
the use of an open architecture design to enable incremental 
improvements in modular armor; network architecture; and subcomponent 
size, weight, power, and cooling. Preliminary funding and schedule 
information for the proposed program was recently provided to the 
defense committees by way of the Fiscal Year 2011 President's Budget 
Request. According to a DOD official, in February 2010, DOD made a 
materiel development decision for the Army's proposed GCV effort. 
[Footnote 5] As a result of that decision, DOD authorized the Army's 
release of a request for proposals for GCV technology development. 
Over the next several months, the Army will be conducting an analysis 
of alternatives to assess potential materiel solutions for the GCV. 
The Army expects to follow the analysis with a Milestone A decision 
review on whether to begin technology development in September 
2010.[Footnote 6] After Milestone A, Army officials are proposing the 
use of competitive prototyping with multiple contractors--the number 
of which will depend on available funding--during the technology 
development phase, which will feature the use of mature technologies 
and the fabrication and testing of prototype subsystems. A preliminary 
design review would be used to validate contractor readiness to enter 
detailed design at Milestone B in fiscal year 2013. The Army's 
preliminary plans indicate that the first production vehicles could be 
delivered in late fiscal year 2017, about 7 years from Milestone A. 

* The Army is planning to incrementally develop and field an 
information network to all of its combat brigades in a decentralized 
fashion--that is, not as a separate acquisition program. The Army has 
defined a preliminary network strategy and is in the process of 
defining what the end state of the network will need to be, as well as 
how it may build up that network over an undefined period of time. In 
the near term, the Army is working to establish a common network 
foundation to build on and to define a common network architecture 
based on what is currently available and expected to become available 
in the near future. Current communications, command and control, and 
networking acquisition programs will continue and will be expected to 
build on to the current network foundation and architecture over time. 
Networking capabilities will be expected to meet specific standards 
and interface requirements. According to Army officials, the ongoing 
incremental network and software development activities and 
requirements will be dispersed to these acquisition programs, where 
they will be considered for further development and possible fielding. 
The only original FCS network development activities that the Army 
plans to continue under the FCS development contract are those 
supporting the network integration kit for Increment 1 and whatever 
additional networking capabilities may be needed for Increment 2. DOD 
expects the Army to present network development plans in March 2010. 

* The Army has also outlined plans to upgrade existing ground force 
capabilities and integrate the MRAP vehicle into its forces. The plans 
include upgrades to the Abrams tank fleet, Paladin cannon, and Stryker 
vehicles. They also include a role for MRAP vehicles within the 
brigade combat team structure, in accordance with the Secretary of 
Defense's April 2009 statement that the Army's vehicle program 
developed 9 years ago did not include a role for the $25 billion 
investment in MRAP being used to "good effect" in today's conflicts. 
Using the recommendations from the task force, the Army drafted plans 
to fully integrate MRAP vehicles into 20 combat brigades. 

Acquisition Direction and FCS Lessons Learned Offer Opportunities to 
Increase the Likelihood of Successful Outcomes: 

The challenge facing both DOD and the Army is to set these ground 
force modernization efforts on the best footing possible by buying the 
right capabilities at the best value. In many ways, DOD and the Army 
have set modernization efforts on a positive course by following 
direction from DOD leadership, and they have an opportunity to reduce 
risks by adhering to the body of acquisition legislation and policy 
reforms--which incorporate knowledge-based best practices we 
identified in our previous work--that have been introduced since FCS 
started in 2003. The new legislation and policy reforms emphasize a 
knowledge-based acquisition approach, a cumulative process in which 
certain knowledge is acquired by key decision points before 
proceeding. In essence, knowledge supplants risk over time. 
Additionally, DOD and the Army can further reduce risks by considering 
lessons learned from problems that emerged during the FCS development 
effort. Initial indications are that the Army is moving in that 
direction. These lessons span knowledge-based acquisition practices, 
incremental development, affordability, contract management, and 
oversight. However, in the first major acquisition decision for the 
Army's post-FCS initiatives, DOD and the Army--because they want to 
support the warfighter quickly--are proceeding with low-rate initial 
production of one brigade set of Increment 1 systems despite having 
acknowledged that the systems are immature, are unreliable, and cannot 
perform as required. 

New Acquisition Reforms Point Way to Lower Risk: 

DOD's body of acquisition policy, which includes reforms introduced 
since FCS started development in 2003, incorporates nearly all of the 
knowledge-based practices we identified in our previous work (see 
table 1). For example, it includes controls to ensure that programs 
have demonstrated a certain level of technology maturity, design 
stability, and production maturity before proceeding into the next 
phase of the acquisition process. As such, if the Army proceeds with 
preliminary plans for new acquisition programs, then adherence to the 
acquisition direction in each of its new acquisition efforts provides 
an opportunity to improve the odds for successful outcomes, reduce 
risks for follow-on Army ground force modernization efforts, and 
deliver needed equipment more quickly and at lower costs. Conversely, 
acquisition efforts that proceed with less technology, design, and 
manufacturing knowledge than best practices suggest face a higher risk 
of cost increases and schedule delays. 

Table 1: Comparison of Controls Used in Best Practices Model and DOD 
Policy: 

Knowledge point 1: Occurs as programs begin the engineering and 
manufacturing development phase (Milestone B). Match exists between 
requirements and resources. Technologies needed to meet essential 
product requirements have been demonstrated to work in their intended 
environments and the producer has completed a preliminary design of 
the product. 

Commercial best practices model: Demonstrate high technology readiness 
levels; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Check]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Ensure product requirements are 
informed by the systems engineering process; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Check]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Establish cost and schedule estimates 
for product based on knowledge from preliminary design using systems 
engineering tools; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Conduct decision review for program 
launch; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Check]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Knowledge point 2: Occurs at the critical design review between 
integration and demonstration. Design is stable and has been 
demonstrated through prototype testing. Ninety percent of engineering 
drawings are releasable to manufacturing organizations. 

Commercial best practices model: Complete 90 percent of design 
drawings; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [A]. 

Commercial best practices model: Complete subsystem and system design 
reviews; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Demonstrate with prototype that 
design meets requirements; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Check]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Obtain stakeholder concurrence that 
drawings are complete and producible; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [B]. 

Commercial best practices model: Complete failure modes and effects 
analysis; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Identify key system characteristics; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Identify critical manufacturing 
processes; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Establish reliability targets and 
growth plan based on demonstrated reliability rates of components and 
subsystems; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Conduct design review to enter system 
demonstration; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Check]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Knowledge point 3: Occurs at low-rate initial production commitment. 
Product is ready to be manufactured within cost, schedule, and quality 
targets. All key manufacturing processes are under statistical control 
and product reliability has been demonstrated. 

Commercial best practices model: Demonstrate manufacturing processes; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Build production-representatives 
prototypes; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Test production-representative 
prototypes to achieve reliability goal; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [C]. 

Commercial best practices model: Test production-representative 
prototypes to demonstrate the product in a realistic environment; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Collect statistical process control 
data; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Demonstrate that critical processes 
are capable and under statistical control; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Empty]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Commercial best practices model: Conduct decision review to begin 
production; 
May 2003 DOD policy: [Check]; 
December 2008 DOD policy: [Check]. 

Sources: DOD (data); GAO (analysis and presentation). 

[A] DOD criteria do not specify the percentage of drawings to be 
completed at the critical design review. 

[B] DOD's revised policy includes the post-critical design review 
assessment, which is the Milestone Decision Authority's assessment of 
the program manager's critical design review. However, we could not 
determine whether stakeholder concurrence was necessary to proceed. 

[C] DOD criteria establish reliability goals, but do not specify 
testing on production-representative prototypes. 

[End of table] 

As shown above, the cumulative building of knowledge consists of 
information that should be gathered at three critical points over the 
course of a program: 

Knowledge point 1 (at the program launch or Milestone B decision): 
Establishing a business case that balances requirements with 
resources. At this point, a match must be made between the customer's 
needs and the developer's available resources--technology, 
engineering, knowledge, time, and funding. A high level of technology 
maturity, demonstrated via a prototype in its intended environment, 
indicates whether resources and requirements match. Also, the 
developer completes a preliminary design of the product that shows 
that the design is feasible and that requirements are predictable and 
doable. FCS did not satisfy this criterion when it began in 2003, and 
by 2009, 6 years into development, the Army still had not satisfied 
this criterion as emerging designs did not meet requirements, critical 
technologies were immature, and cost estimates were not realistic. 

Knowledge point 2 (at the critical design review between design 
integration and demonstration): Gaining design knowledge and reducing 
integration risk. At this point, the product design is stable because 
it has been demonstrated to meet the customer's requirements as well 
as cost, schedule, and reliability targets. The best practice is to 
achieve design stability at the system-level critical design review, 
usually held midway through system development. Completion of at least 
90 percent of engineering drawings at this point provides tangible 
evidence that the product's design is stable, and a prototype 
demonstration shows that the design is capable of meeting performance 
requirements. 

Knowledge point 3 (at production commitment or the Milestone C 
decision): Achieving predictable production. This point is achieved 
when it has been demonstrated that the developer can manufacture the 
product within cost, schedule, and quality targets. The best practice 
is to ensure that all critical manufacturing processes are in 
statistical control--that is, they are repeatable, sustainable, and 
capable of consistently producing parts within the product's quality 
tolerances and standards--at the start of production. 

In recent years, a number of specific changes have been made to DOD 
acquisition policies. Further policy changes should be incorporated as 
a result of the Weapon System Acquisition Reform Act of 2009. These 
changes, if implemented properly, allow programs to achieve knowledge 
at the right times by ensuring that any critical technologies to be 
included in the weapon system are mature and ready for integration. 
The changes provide support to program managers to keep requirements 
reasonable and to keep changes at a minimum. The prototyping 
provisions included in these changes call for developmental prototypes 
beginning very early in the program. With FCS, the Army did not follow 
knowledge-based acquisition practices, but reforms introduced since 
FCS's start in 2003 incorporate nearly all of the knowledge-based 
practices we identified in our previous work. For example, the reforms 
include controls to ensure that programs have demonstrated a certain 
level of technology maturity, design stability, and production 
maturity before they proceed to the next phase of the acquisition 
process. If the Army adheres to these acquisition practices, it has an 
opportunity to increase the likelihood of successful outcomes for 
follow-on Army ground force modernization efforts. Conversely, 
acquisition efforts that deviate from knowledge-based practices face a 
higher risk of cost increases and schedule delays. Table 2 lists some 
of those acquisition reforms and their potential impact. 

Table 2: Acquisition Reforms and Their Potential Impact: 

Acquisition reform: Configuration steering boards; 
Description: New annual or event-driven program reviews of all 
requirements and significant technical configuration changes with the 
potential to affect cost and schedule; 
Potential impact: Moderating requirements, proposing options, or both 
to reduce costs improves affordability and executability by ensuring 
that requirements do not exceed resources, speeds up delivery of the 
capability, and prevents reductions in purchased quantities. 

Acquisition reform: Cost estimation; 
Description: Added requirement for independent cost estimates 
simultaneous with DOD component estimates at Milestone A, Milestone B, 
full-rate production, and other points dictated by statute. Review and 
concurrence of estimates, estimate choice, and confidence level 
required by the Director of Cost Analysis and Program Evaluation. A 
report on DOD's progress in improving estimate accuracy and compliance 
with policies is due annually; 
Potential impact: A reliable cost estimate helps ensure that the 
program's projected funding needs are adequate to execute the program. 
We have found independent estimates to be more reliable than DOD 
component estimates. 

Acquisition reform: Decision points and assessments; 
Description: Decision points throughout the acquisition cycle; 
Materiel development decision; Preliminary design review--required 
before Milestone B; Post-preliminary design review assessment; 
Critical design review; Post-critical design review assessment; 
Potential impact: Decision points to assess progress and determine 
whether to continue, change direction, or terminate efforts based on 
risks, affordability, program trade-offs, acquisition strategy 
updates, and the development of exit criteria for the next phase or 
effort. 

Acquisition reform: Competitive prototyping; 
Description: New requirement for competing prototypes prior to, or 
through, Milestone B and related provisions in the technology 
development and acquisition strategies; 
Potential impact: Technology demonstrated via prototypes provides a 
stronger basis for analyzing and refining requirements, ensuring more 
knowledgeable initial cost estimates, and making an appropriate match 
between requirements and available resources could improve the 
accuracy and predictability of cost and schedule estimates at program 
initiation. 

Acquisition reform: Statutory certifications; 
Description: New statutory certifications at Milestone A and B that 
necessitate development of critical knowledge (cost and schedule 
estimates, funding availability, justification of duplicated 
capabilities, and demonstration of technology) to proceed to the next 
iteration in the acquisition cycle; 
Potential impact: Requiring these demonstrations of knowledge could 
increase program stability and predictability and reduce acquisition 
cycle time. Further, eliminating programs with inadequate technology 
and questionable affordability, funding, viability, and sustainability 
early in the acquisition cycle could prevent DOD from unnecessarily 
expending valuable resources. 

Acquisition reform: Systems engineering; 
Description: More robust technical approach to developing and 
maintaining a capability, including key technical risks, processes, 
resources, metrics, and applicable performance incentives; 
Potential impact: Improved systems engineering can help ensure that a 
product's requirements are achievable and designable, given available 
resources, by defining and balancing system performance, cost, 
schedule, and risk. 

Sources: DOD Acquisition Policy and 2009 Weapon Systems Acquisition 
Reform Act (data); GAO (analysis and presentation). 

[End of table] 

There are initial indications that DOD and the Army are moving forward 
to implement the acquisition policy reforms as they proceed with 
ground force modernization, including the Secretary of Defense's 
statement about the ground vehicle modernization program--to "get the 
acquisition right, even at the cost of delay." In addition, DOD 
anticipates that the GCV program will comply with DOD acquisition 
policy in terms of utilizing competitive system or subsystem 
prototypes. According to a DOD official, DOD made a materiel 
development decision for the GCV in February 2010, and the Army is 
proposing to conduct a preliminary design review on GCV before 
Milestone B. Additionally, a configuration steering board is planned 
in 2010 to address reliability and military utility of infantry 
brigade systems. 

Lessons Learned from FCS Can Foster a Smoother Acquisition Strategy 
Moving Forward: 

The Army has the opportunity to reduce risks by incorporating lessons 
learned from the FCS development effort. These key lessons span 
several areas: knowledge-based acquisition principles, incremental 
development, affordability, contract management, oversight, and 
incentive fee structure. Considering these lessons give the Army an 
opportunity to reduce risks by utilizing the things that worked well 
on the FCS program, while avoiding the acquisition pitfalls that 
plagued the program. 

Always Follow Principles of Knowledge-Based Acquisition: 

Lesson: The Army did not position the FCS program for success because 
it did not establish a knowledge-based acquisition approach--a 
strategy consistent with DOD policy and best acquisition practices--to 
develop FCS. The Army started the FCS program in 2003 before defining 
what the systems were going to be required to do and how they were 
going to interact. It moved ahead without determining whether the FCS 
concept could be developed in accordance with a sound business case. 
Specifically, at the FCS program's start, the Army had not established 
firm system-level requirements, mature technologies, a realistic cost 
estimate, or an acquisition strategy wherein knowledge drives 
schedule. By 2009, the Army still had not shown that emerging FCS 
system designs could meet requirements, that critical technologies 
were at minimally acceptable maturity levels, and that the acquisition 
strategy was executable within estimated resources. 

Actions being taken: In the first major acquisition decision for the 
Army's post-FCS initiatives, DOD and the Army--because they want to 
support the warfighter quickly--are proceeding with low-rate initial 
production of Increment 1 systems despite having acknowledged that 
systems are immature, are unreliable, and cannot perform as required. 
In December 2009, the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
Technology and Logistics approved low-rate initial production of 
Increment 1 equipment for one infantry brigade but noted that there is 
an aggressive risk reduction plan to grow and demonstrate the network 
maturity and reliability to support continued Increment 1 production 
and fielding. In the associated acquisition decision memorandum, the 
Under Secretary acknowledged the risks of pursuing Increment 1 
production, including early network immaturity; lack of a clear 
operational perspective of the early network's value; and large 
reliability shortfalls of the network, systems, and sensors. The Under 
Secretary also said that he was aware of the importance of fielding 
systems to the current warfighter and that the flexibility to deploy 
components as available would allow DOD to "best support" the 
Secretary of Defense's direction to "win the wars we are in." Because 
of that, the Under Secretary specified that a number of actions be 
taken over the next year or more and directed the Army to work toward 
having all components for the program fielded as soon as possible and 
to deploy components of the program as they are ready. However, the 
Under Secretary did not specify the necessary improvements that the 
Army needed to make or that those improvements are a prerequisite for 
approving additional production lots of Increment 1. 

The approval for low-rate initial production is at variance with DOD 
policy and Army expectations. DOD's current acquisition policy 
requires that systems be demonstrated in their intended environments 
using the selected production-representative articles before the 
production decision occurs. However, the testing that formed the basis 
for the Increment 1 production decision included surrogates and non-
production-representative systems, including the communications 
radios. As we have previously noted, testing with surrogates and non-
production-representative systems is problematic because it does not 
conclusively show how well the systems can address current force 
capability gaps.[Footnote 7] Furthermore, Increment 1 systems--which 
are slated for a fiscal year 2011-12 fielding--do not yet meet the 
Army's expectations that new capabilities would be tested and their 
performance validated before they are deployed in a capability 
package. As noted in 2009 test results, system performance and 
reliability during testing was marginal at best. For example, the 
demonstrated reliability of the Class I unmanned aerial vehicle was 
about 5 hours between failure, compared to a requirement for 23 hours 
between failure. The Army asserts that Increment 1 systems' maturity 
will improve rapidly but admits that it will be a "steep climb" and 
not a low-risk effort. 

While the Under Secretary took current warfighter needs into account 
in his decision to approve Increment 1 low-rate initial production, it 
is questionable whether the equipment can meet one of the main 
principles underpinning knowledge-based acquisition--whether the 
warfighter needs can best be met with the chosen concept. Test reports 
from late 2009 showed conclusively that the systems had limited 
performance, and that this reduced the test unit's ability to assess 
and refine tactics, techniques, and procedures associated with 
employment of the equipment. The Director, Operational Test and 
Evaluation, recently reported that none of the Increment 1 systems 
have demonstrated an adequate level of performance to be fielded to 
units and employed in combat. Specifically, the report noted that 
reliability is poor and falls short of the level expected of an 
acquisition system at this stage of development. Shortfalls in meeting 
reliability requirements may adversely affect Increment 1's overall 
operational effectiveness and suitability and may increase life cycle 
costs. In addition, in its 2009 assessment of the increment's limited 
user test--the last test before the production decision was made--the 
Army's Test and Evaluation Command indicated that the Increment 1 
systems would be challenged to meet warfighter needs. The Evaluation 
Command concluded that, with the exception of the non-line-of-sight 
launch system, which had not yet undergone flight testing, all the 
systems were considered operationally effective and survivable, but 
with limitations, because they were immature and had entered the test 
as pre-production representative systems, pre-engineering design 
models, or both. Additionally, the command noted that these same 
systems were not operationally suitable because they did not meet 
required reliability expectations. 

Develop the Advanced Information Network Incrementally as Technology 
Becomes Available: 

Lesson: The FCS concept depended heavily on the network to link 
people, platforms, weapons, and sensors together within the 15 FCS 
brigades and to help eliminate the "fog of war."[Footnote 8] There 
were significant risks associated with network development, including 
those related to performance and scalability, architecture, and tests 
of network performance being performed only after designs for vehicles 
carrying the network equipment already were set. The network never 
matured to show that it could deliver expected performance and 
reliability. Six years into network development efforts, it was still 
not clear whether the network could be developed, built, and 
demonstrated as planned. 

Actions being taken: Under the Army's revised concept, rather than 
build a new network all at once and field it only to the unique FCS 
brigades, the Army's intent is to develop and field an information 
network across the Army, building on current communications networks. 
Full details of the Army's network strategy are still being developed, 
including the desired end state, incremental steps to that end state, 
and its costs. However, the Army anticipates that the new network will 
be bounded by available funding as well as technology readiness. It 
also expects, as with capability packages, to field network capability 
sets on a biennial basis. Network capability sets feature multiple 
pieces of the network that have been integrated and demonstrated. Near-
term goals for the network include starting to connect the individual 
soldiers, expanding situational awareness to the company level, and 
expanding interoperability. As the Army envisions the network 
strategy, it will leverage network investments in systems already 
procured for ongoing wars, build upon a core set of network-related 
foundation products, and develop network packages that can be 
customized in support of current and future force platforms. These 
packages will include software, computers, and radios. 

Ensure Affordability with More Knowledge and Realism Up Front: 

Lesson: The affordability of FCS was always in doubt and, in the end, 
was a contributing factor to the decision to cancel the program. 
Ultimately, FCS affordability depended on two factors: the actual cost 
of the program and the availability of funds. The Army could not 
provide confident cost estimates for the actual costs of FCS because 
of the low levels of knowledge within the program. Instead, it 
indicated a willingness to accept the program's high risks and make 
trade-offs in requirements for FCS and other programs to accommodate 
FCS's growing costs. When the Army's predicted costs for FCS rose from 
$92 billion in 2003 to $159 billion by 2009, the Army indicated that 
it would defer upgrades to current force systems, such as the Abrams 
Tank and Bradley Fighting Vehicle, to free up funds for FCS. In the 
end, the competition for funds--within the Army, among Army programs 
and other DOD programs, and among DOD programs and other federal 
government needs--was a factor in the decision to end the FCS program. 
According to a September 2009 letter from the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics, the FCS acquisition 
could not be developed and produced within existing resources. 
Additionally, the Under Secretary noted that based on an evaluation of 
the overall priorities for Army modernization, developing and 
procuring FCS brigades was not fiscally viable given DOD priorities. 

Action being taken: The Army has not yet fully defined major 
predictors--content, pace, and costs--for long-term affordability of 
ground force modernization efforts. It has indicated that work is 
ongoing to develop priorities and resource plans for fiscal years 2011 
through 2015, including fielding capability packages, incrementally 
improving the network, and establishing a new GCV program. The Army 
has also indicated that funding will drive capability trades. For 
example, the content and quantity of capability packages could be 
decreased or increased depending on available funding. Additionally, 
the Director of Cost Analysis and Program Evaluation prepared an 
independent cost assessment for Increment 1. This independent estimate 
was very close to the Army's cost position for Increment 1 development 
and production. 

In its fiscal year 2011 budget request, the Army asked the Congress to 
approve funding for further Increment 1 development and production, 
Increment 2 development, GCV development, and some network 
development. As we have noted, at this time, detailed plans for these 
efforts are still being developed and may not be available until at 
least later in fiscal year 2010 as those plans are solidified and 
approved. 

Transition Away from Industry-Led Integration: 

Lesson: In 2003, the Army contracted with an LSI for FCS because of 
the program's ambitious goals and the Army's belief that it did not 
have the capacity to manage the program. The Army did not have the 
expertise to develop the FCS information network or enough people to 
support the program had it been organized into separate program 
offices. Through its relationship with the LSI, the Army believed that 
it found a partner that could help to define and develop FCS and reach 
across the Army's organizations. In our 2007 report, we pointed out 
that the close partnerlike relationship between the Army and the LSI 
posed risks to the Army's effective management and oversight of the 
FCS program.[Footnote 9] As a result, the June 2009 acquisition 
decision memorandum that outlined plans to cancel the FCS program also 
articulated a desire to move away from industry-led integration 
activities. 

Action being taken: While Army officials have acknowledged the Under 
Secretary's direction to transition away from reliance on the LSI and 
affirmed their desire to comply with that direction, the transition 
will not happen right away. The Army is beginning a deliberate process 
to transition system engineering and integration activities from the 
LSI to the government. For example, Army officials stated that the 
Army will be contracting with the LSI for the procurement of the first 
three brigade sets of Increment 1 equipment.[Footnote 10] When these 
systems move into full-rate production, the Army may be in a better 
position to contract directly with the original equipment 
manufacturers and without the assistance of an LSI. According to the 
Army, the development of Increment 2 may be jointly managed by the LSI 
and the original equipment manufacturers. Likewise, the first lot of 
Increment 2 production may be jointly managed by the LSI and the 
original equipment manufacturers; the other production lots may be 
managed directly by the original equipment manufacturers. 

In September 2009, the Army established the Program Executive Office 
for Integration to oversee coordination of the three separate but 
integrated programs and the network development. Roles and 
responsibilities have not yet been fully defined. According to Army 
officials, the office will be modeling the various brigade 
architectures and infrastructures to better understand how they 
currently function and to facilitate adding capabilities to the 
brigades. They also expect the office to work with the individual 
acquisition programs to ensure that the programs are properly 
integrated with other elements of each capability package and 
equipment already fielded in the various brigades. As the integration 
issues are addressed, the individual acquisition programs will be 
responsible for execution. Additionally, the office will perform 
system engineering and integration via in-house capabilities and 
supplemented by federally funded research and development centers or 
contractors for the capability packages. The Army is also establishing 
an organization above the program executive office level to integrate 
ongoing network acquisition efforts to better capture new network 
technologies, expand technologies in the field so that they work 
better together, and provide better networking capability to more 
units. One way that the Army will be doing this is through 
establishing network standards and interface requirements. 

Improve Oversight: 

Lesson: DOD largely accepted the FCS program and its changes as 
defined by the Army, even though it varied widely with the best 
practices embodied in DOD's own acquisition policies. Until late in 
the FCS program, DOD passed on opportunities to hold the FCS program 
accountable to more knowledge-based acquisition principles. Despite 
the fact that the program did not meet the requisite criteria for 
starting an acquisition program, DOD approved the program's entrance 
into system development and demonstration in 2003. DOD later 
reevaluated the decision and decided to hold a follow-on review with a 
list of action items the program had to complete in order to continue. 
However, this review never occurred, and the FCS program continued as 
originally planned. In addition, DOD allowed the Army to use its own 
cost estimates rather than independent--and often higher--cost 
estimates when submitting annual budget requests. 

Action being taken: DOD appears to be more resolute in some of its 
oversight responsibilities for the emerging post-FCS efforts. For 
instance, at an October 2009 DOD review, the Army offered preliminary 
plans for post-FCS efforts. While DOD agreed to schedule an Increment 
1 production decision and a GCV materiel development decision, DOD 
also noted that additional clarity was needed for development and 
procurement of follow-on items beyond Increment 1, as well as for 
transition of the integration activities from the current FCS 
contractors to the Army. DOD noted in its decision memorandum that it 
requires these plans before it will approve any acquisition strategy 
for modernization activities other than Increment 1 and GCV 
development. Additionally, while DOD did not hold the Army accountable 
to knowledge-based principles when it approved Increment 1 for low-
rate production, DOD did limit low-rate initial procurement quantities 
to one brigade's worth of equipment. DOD also required the Army to 
prepare for two additional reviews in 2010--one review to provide a 
status report on non-line-of-sight launch system testing and a report 
detailing the network maturity plan for Increment 1, and another 
review for examining the results of additional testing performed on 
Increment 1 systems. Additionally, DOD required the Army to fund 
Increment 1 acquisition efforts to the cost estimate prepared by the 
Director, Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation. 

Create a Better Incentive and Award Fee Contract Structure: 

Lesson: In the near future, the Army will likely be awarding 
development contracts for the emerging post-FCS programs. As we noted 
in 2005, DOD award fees do not always link to acquisition outcomes. 
[Footnote 11] Additionally, prior defense acquisition contracts, 
including the FCS contract, have not complied with preferred DOD 
guidance for structuring incentive and award fees. In 2007, we 
reported that the Army's contract with the FCS LSI contained fee 
provisions that did not tie fees to demonstrated performance, and it 
rewarded the LSI too early in the development process.[Footnote 12] 
Specifically, we reported that the Army would be paying 80 percent of 
the total incentive fee before the LSI conducted the critical design 
review. We viewed this arrangement as risky because most of a 
program's cost growth occurs after the critical design review. 

Action being taken: In April 2009, when the Secretary of Defense 
announced his plans to significantly change the FCS program, he noted 
that he was troubled by the terms of the contract, particularly in its 
very unattractive fee structure that gives the government little 
leverage to promote cost efficiency. Previously, in an April 2008 
memorandum, DOD stated that a more typical fee arrangement would be 
significantly less than what the Army featured in the FCS contract, 
and that fees should be based on demonstrated performance to the 
government. In September 2009, DOD issued another memorandum to the 
military services, instructing the acquisition officials to (1) be 
more consistent in applying the department's guidance, (2) be more 
judicious in their reviews of fees to ensure that they are tied to 
demonstrated performance, and (3) collect additional fee data. These 
two memorandums indicate that the department appears focused on 
achieving more disciplined award and incentive fee practices. In 
addition, DOD officials have recently stated that they expect future 
Army contracts for ground force modernization to incorporate a fee 
structure with a "more classic and reasonable" form, in accordance 
with the Secretary's direction and the September 2009 memorandum. 

In October 2009, the Army negotiated a contract modification for 
additional development of Increment 1 systems. The Army will soon be 
contracting for the procurement of those systems. Later, the Army will 
be awarding contracts for GCV development. At this point, it is 
unclear how and to what extent the Army will be applying the new fee 
guidance. 

Conclusions: 

Army and DOD officials made a very difficult decision when they 
canceled what was the centerpiece of Army modernization--the FCS 
program. As they transition away from the FCS concept, both the Army 
and DOD have an opportunity to improve the likely outcomes for the 
Army's ground force modernization initiatives by adhering closely to 
recently enacted acquisition reforms and by seeking to avoid the 
numerous acquisition pitfalls that plagued FCS. As DOD and the Army 
proceed, they should keep in mind the Secretary of Defense's 
admonition about the new ground vehicle modernization program: "get 
the acquisition right, even at the cost of delay." Based on the 
preliminary plans, we see a number of good features. For example, we 
applaud the Army's decision to pursue an incremental acquisition 
approach for its post-FCS efforts. However, it is vitally important 
that each of those incremental efforts adheres to knowledge-based 
acquisition principles and strikes a balance between what is needed, 
how fast it can be fielded, and how much it will cost. Moreover, the 
acquisition community needs to be held accountable for expected 
results, and DOD and the Army must not be willing to accept whatever 
results are delivered regardless of military utility. 

We are concerned that in their desire for speedy delivery of emerging 
equipment to our warfighters in the field, DOD and the Army did not 
strike the right balance in prematurely approving low-rate initial 
production of Increment 1 of brigade combat team modernization. 
Although the Army will argue that it needs to field these capabilities 
as soon as possible, none of these systems has been designated as 
urgent and it is not helpful to provide early capabilities to the 
warfighter if those capabilities are not technically mature and 
reliable. If the Army moves forward too fast with immature Increment 1 
designs, this could cause additional delays as the Army and its 
contractors concurrently address technology, design, and production 
issues. Production and fielding is not the appropriate phase of 
acquisition to be working on such basic design issues. 

While the Army has not yet finalized its plans for its post-FCS 
initiatives, one thing is certain--these programs are likely to 
require significant financial investments. In its fiscal year 2011 
budget request, the Army has asked the Congress to approve funding for 
Increment 1 development and production, Increment 2 development, GCV 
development, and some network development. At this time, detailed 
plans for these efforts are still being developed and were not yet 
available as of early January 2010. This means that the Congress will 
have limited information on which to base its funding decisions. The 
Army's fiscal year 2011 budget request does not provide sufficient 
details to allay all concerns. DOD and the Army need to clearly define 
and communicate plans in order to ensure broad agreement among all 
stakeholders, including the Congress. It appears that the Army's plans 
may not be solidified until well beyond the point when the 
congressional defense committees will have marked up the fiscal 2011 
defense authorization bill. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

In order to ensure that only technically mature and reliable 
capabilities are fielded to the warfighters, we recommend that the 
Secretary of Defense mandate that the Army correct the identified 
maturity and reliability issues with the Increment 1 network and 
systems prior to approving any additional lots of the Increment 1 
network and systems for production. Specifically, the Army should 
ensure that the network and the individual systems have been 
independently assessed as fully mature, meet reliability goals, and 
have been demonstrated to perform as expected using production- 
representative prototypes. We also recommend that the Secretary of the 
Army not field the Increment 1 network or any of the Increment 1 
systems until the identified maturity and reliability issues have been 
corrected. 

In order to enhance congressional visibility into the Army's plans in 
this area, we also recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the 
Army to submit a comprehensive report to the Congress before the end 
of fiscal year 2010 on its ground force modernization investment, 
contracting, and management strategies. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

DOD concurred with, and provided comments to, all our recommendations. 
Regarding our recommendation to correct Increment 1 maturity and 
reliability issues prior to approving additional production, DOD 
stated that the need to correct those issues has been communicated to 
the Army. DOD also asserts that all Increment 1 systems will be tested 
in their production configuration, and performance will be 
independently assessed against capability requirements prior to 
approving production of any additional lots of Increment 1 systems. 
DOD's comments concisely summarize the instructions that the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics 
included in his December 2009 acquisition decision memorandum that 
approved low-rate initial production for the first brigade's worth of 
infantry brigade combat team systems. The memorandum includes a number 
of sensible provisions, such as (1) an aggressive risk reduction plan 
to grow and demonstrate network maturity and reliability, (2) monthly 
reporting requirements for network and system reliability 
improvements, (3) a comprehensive precision mix analysis to 
demonstrate the cost-effectiveness of the non-line-of-sight launch 
system, (4) the use of a configuration steering board to examine 
reliability and military utility, and (5) a plan to compare the 
effectiveness of operational units with and without the Increment 1 
systems and network. However, neither the memorandum nor DOD's 
comments to this report indicated the minimally acceptable standards 
that must be met in order to proceed with additional procurement lots 
of the Increment 1 systems and network. The Army has many Increment 1 
development and testing activities planned for the coming months and 
we intend to monitor their progress closely. 

Regarding our recommendation that the Army not field the Increment 1 
systems and network until maturity and reliability issues had been 
corrected, DOD stated that Increment 1 systems would not be fielded 
until performance is sufficient to satisfy the warfighter's capability 
requirements. We believe it will be vitally important that (1) 
Increment 1 systems and network clearly demonstrate their ability to 
fully satisfy the needs of the warfighter and (2) DOD and the Army not 
be willing to accept whatever acquisition results are delivered 
regardless of their military utility. Again, we intend to follow the 
Army and DOD's activities and actions in the coming months. 

Regarding our recommendation to submit a comprehensive report to the 
Congress on Army ground force modernization investment, contracting, 
and management strategies, DOD stated that the Army will provide its 
annual Army Modernization Strategy no later than the third quarter of 
fiscal year 2010. According to DOD, this strategy document, in 
conjunction with the 2010 Army Weapons Systems Handbook and the 2011 
budget request material, provides the Army's investment, contracting, 
and management strategies for ground force modernization. In making 
this recommendation, we felt that the Army had made significant 
changes in its investment, contracting, and management strategies as 
it moved away from the FCS program. We felt that a comprehensive 
report on its new strategies for ground force modernization would be 
enlightening to the Congress. In the coming months, we will review the 
materials promised by the Army to determine if they provide adequate 
knowledge to the Congress. 

DOD's comments are reprinted in appendix II. 

We received other technical comments from DOD, which have been 
addressed in the report. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretary of Defense; the 
Secretary of the Army; and the Director, Office of Management and 
Budget. This report also is available at no charge on the GAO Web site 
at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

Please contact me on (202) 512-4841 or sullivanm@gao.gov if you or 
your staff have any questions concerning this report. Contact points 
for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be 
found on the last page of this report. The major contributors are 
listed in appendix III. 

Signed by: 

Michael J. Sullivan: 
Director: 
Acquisition and Sourcing Management: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To outline the Army's preliminary post-Future Combat System (FCS) 
plans, we obtained and reviewed proposed plans for the Army's new 
modernization approach. We compared those plans against the FCS 
operational concept and acquisition approach. We interviewed officials 
responsible for carrying out the FCS cancellation, including officials 
from the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
Technology and Logistics and the Program Executive Office for 
Integration (formerly the FCS Program Office). We also met with 
officials responsible for reexamining current-force capability gaps 
and formulating the new operational concept, including officials from 
the Army's Training and Doctrine Command, the Future Force Integration 
Directorate, and the Army Evaluation Task Force. 

To identify the challenges and opportunities the Department of Defense 
(DOD) and the Army will need to address as they proceed with Army 
ground force modernization efforts, we reviewed relevant Army and DOD 
documents, including the Secretary of Defense's April 6, 2009, 
announcement on restructuring FCS and the June 23, 2009, acquisition 
decision memorandum that implemented the Secretary's proposed 
restructure; the Army Capstone Concept; the Director, Operational Test 
and Evaluation's Fiscal Year 2009 Annual Report; the Comprehensive 
Lessons Learned White Paper; and the Army Modernization White Paper. 
Additionally, we reviewed recent acquisition reforms, including DOD 
Instruction 5000.02, Operation of the Defense Acquisition System; the 
Weapon Systems Acquisition Reform Act of 2009 (Public Law No. 111-23); 
and other legislative initiatives. In developing lessons learned from 
the FCS program, we reviewed current Army ground force modernization 
plans and assessed them against FCS approaches and outcomes, best 
practices, and the latest acquisition policies and reforms. In our 
assessment of the Army's modernization approach, we used the knowledge-
based acquisition practices drawn from our body of past work as well 
as DOD's acquisition policy and the experiences of other programs. We 
interviewed officials responsible for providing independent 
assessments of technologies, testing, networking, and systems 
engineering. This included officials from the Office of the Secretary 
of Defense's Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation Office; Office of 
the Director, Defense Research and Engineering; Office of the 
Assistant Secretary of Defense (Networks and Information Integration); 
and Office of the Director, Operational Test and Evaluation. 

We discussed the issues presented in this report with officials from 
the Army and the Secretary of Defense and made changes as appropriate. 
We conducted this performance audit from March 2009 to March 2010 in 
accordance with generally accepted auditing standards. Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain sufficient, 
appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings 
and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the 
evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Defense: 

Office Of The Under Secretary Of Defense: 
Acquisition, Technology	And Logistics: 
3000 Defense Pentagon: 
Washington, DC 20301-3000: 

March 11, 2010: 

Mr. Michael J. Sullivan: 
Director, Acquisition and Sourcing Management: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Sullivan: 

This is the Department of Defense response to the GAO draft report, 
GAO-10-406, "Defense Acquisitions: Opportunities Exist to Position 
Army's Post-FCS Modernization Efforts for Success," dated February 8, 
2010 (GAO Code 120824). 

The report recommends that: (1) the Secretary of Defense instruct the 
Army to correct the identified maturity and reliability issues with 
the Increment 1 network and systems prior to approving additional 
system procurement; (2) the Secretary of the Army not field the 
Increment 1 network or systems until the identified maturity and 
reliability issues have been corrected; and (3) the Secretary of 
Defense direct the Army to submit a comprehensive report to Congress 
on its ground force modernization investment, contracting, and 
management strategies. 

The Department concurs with the GAO recommendations and our comments 
are enclosed. Detailed technical comments were provided separately. 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to comment on the draft 
report. For further questions concerning this report, please contact 
Ms. Anne Swanek, Anne.Swanek@osd.mil, 703-693-9879. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 
David G. Ahern: 
Director: 
Portfolio Systems Acquisition: 

Enclosure: As stated: 

[End of letter] 

GAO Draft Report Dated February 8, 2010: 
GAO Code 120824/GAO-10-406: 

"Defense Acquisitions: Opportunities Exist To Position Army's Post-FCS 
Modernization Efforts For Success" 

Department Of Defense Comments To The GAO Recommendations: 

Recommendation 1: The GAO recommended that the Secretary of Defense 
mandate that the Army correct the identified maturity and reliability 
issues with the Increment 1 network and systems prior to approving any 
additional lots of the Increment 1 network and systems for production. 
Specifically, the Army should ensure that the network and individual 
systems have been independently assessed as fully mature, meet 
reliability goals, and have been demonstrated to perform as expected 
using production-representative prototypes. 

DOD Response: Concur. The need to correct identified maturity and 
reliability issues with the Increment 1 network and systems has been 
communicated to the Army. Prior to approving any additional lots of 
Increment 1 network and systems for production they will be tested in 
their intended production configuration and performance of all systems 
will be independently assessed relative to capability requirements. 

Recommendation 2: The GAO recommended that the Secretary of the Army 
not field the Increment 1 network or any of the Increment 1 systems 
until the identified maturity and reliability issues have been 
corrected. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Army will not field the Increment 1 systems 
until system performance is sufficient to satisfy the capability 
requirements of the Warfighter. 

Recommendation 3: The GAO recommended that the Secretary of Defense
direct the Army to submit a comprehensive report to the Congress 
before the end of fiscal year 2010 on its ground force modernization 
investment, contracting, and management strategies. 

DOD Response: Concur. The Army will provide their annual Army 
Modernization Strategy no later than 3rd quarter fiscal year 2010 that 
will support the 2011 President's budget. This strategy, in 
conjunction with the 2010 Army Weapons Systems Handbook and the 2011 
budget materials related to ground force acquisitions, provides the 
Army's investment, contracting, and management strategies for ground 
force modernization. The investment, contracting and management 
strategies for the acquisitions which will provide for ground force 
modernization are established per acquisition law and policy for the
individual programs. Additionally, the Army Acquisition Executive has 
recently established a Program Executive Officer for Integration with 
responsibility for coordinating acquisitions to support the Army's 
capability package fielding. The plans for contracting and management 
strategies to support this integration effort are still maturing and 
will be aligned with acquisition plans to support the Department's 
fiscal year 2012 budget. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Michael J. Sullivan, (202) 512-4841 or sullivanm@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, the following staff members 
made key contributions to the report: William R. Graveline, Assistant 
Director; William C. Allbritton; Noah B. Bleicher; Helena Brink; Tana 
M. Davis; Marcus C. Ferguson; and Robert S. Swierczek. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Defense Acquisitions: Issues to be Considered for Army's Modernization 
of Combat Systems. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-793T]. Washington, D.C.: June 16, 
2009. 

Defense Acquisitions: Assessments of Selected Weapon Programs. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-326SP]. Washington, 
D.C.: March 30, 2009. 

Defense Acquisitions: Key Considerations for Planning Future Army 
Combat Systems. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-410T]. 
Washington, D.C.: March 26, 2009. 

Defense Acquisitions: Decisions Needed to Shape Army's Combat Systems 
for the Future. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-288]. 
Washington, D.C.: March 12, 2009. 

Defense Acquisitions: 2009 Review of Future Combat System Is Critical 
to Program's Direction. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-638T]. Washington, D.C.: April 10, 
2008. 

Defense Acquisitions: 2009 Is a Critical Juncture for the Army's 
Future Combat System. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-408]. Washington, D.C.: March 7, 
2008. 

Defense Acquisitions: Future Combat System Risks Underscore the 
Importance of Oversight. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-672T]. Washington, D.C.: March 27, 
2007. 

Defense Acquisitions: Key Decisions to Be Made on Future Combat 
System. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-376]. 
Washington, D.C.: March 15, 2007. 

Defense Acquisitions: Improved Business Case Key for Future Combat 
System's Success. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-564T]. Washington, D.C.: April 4, 
2006. 

Defense Acquisitions: Improved Business Case Is Needed for Future 
Combat System's Successful Outcome. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-367]. Washington, D.C.: March 14, 
2006. 

Defense Acquisitions: Future Combat Systems Challenges and Prospects 
for Success. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-428T]. 
Washington, D.C.: March 16, 2005. 

Defense Acquisitions: The Army's Future Combat Systems' Features, 
Risks, and Alternatives. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-635T]. Washington, D.C.: April 1, 
2004. 

Issues Facing the Army's Future Combat Systems Program. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-1010R]. Washington, D.C.: August 
13, 2003. 

Best Practices: Better Matching of Needs and Resources Will Lead to 
Better Weapon System Outcomes. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-288]. Washington, D.C.: March 8, 
2001. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, Defense Acquisitions: Decisions Needed to Shape Army's Combat 
Systems for the Future, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-288] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 12, 
2009). 

[2] The John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2007, Pub. L. No. 109-364, § 214 (2006), required the Secretary of 
Defense to perform a milestone (go/no-go) review of the FCS 
acquisition program no later than 120 days after the preliminary 
design review to determine whether (1) the warfighter's needs are 
valid and can best be met with the concept of the program; (2) the 
concept of the program can be developed and produced within existing 
resources; and (3) the program should continue as currently 
structured, continue in restructured form, or be terminated. 

[3] The Training and Doctrine Command is the Army organization that 
designs, develops, and integrates capabilities, concepts, and doctrine. 

[4] The system-of-systems common operating environment is the 
operating environment that serves as middleware between operating 
systems and software applications. 

[5] A materiel development decision is a review that is the formal 
entry point into the acquisition process and is mandatory for all 
programs. A successful materiel development decision may approve entry 
into the acquisition management system at any point consistent with 
phase-specific entrance criteria and statutory requirements. 

[6] Milestone A is the point at which a program enters the technology 
development phase, Milestone B is entry into the engineering and 
manufacturing development phase, and Milestone C is entry into the 
production and deployment phase. 

[7] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-288]. 

[8] "Fog of war" is the uncertainty and confusion before, during, and 
after conflict caused by incomplete, inconsistent, late, too much, or 
too little information. 

[9] GAO, Defense Acquisitions: Role of Lead Systems Integrator on 
Future Combat Systems Program Poses Oversight Challenges, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-380] (Washington, D.C.: June 6, 
2007). 

[10] The Boeing Company served as the LSI on the FCS contract. 
According to Army officials, Boeing's role on ground force 
modernization efforts will be more akin to that of a prime contractor. 
Consequently, the Army no longer refers to Boeing as an LSI. 

[10] GAO, Defense Acquisitions: DOD Has Paid Billions in Award and 
Incentive Fees Regardless of Outcome, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-66] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 19, 
2005). 

[12] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-380]. 

[End of section] 

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