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285 points ridruejo | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.238s | source
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thatguymike ◴[] No.45888230[source]
Based on this article alone, I can believe this is a good thing. The US military suffers incredibly from its monopsony position and without a doubt will get a heavy wakeup call (read: dead young people) next time it has to fight a real war. In addition the army should be the most accountable and results oriented branch of government, since it’s the only one that’s actively oppositional. If we can’t fix procurement there then what hope do we have for the rest of government?
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bonsai_spool ◴[] No.45892758[source]
> In addition the army should be the most accountable and results oriented branch of government

The army isn't a branch of government - and if you then wish for Defense to be accountable, there's the question of how to allocate money for secret things.

I don't know how other countries do this and if there are better ways to structure this.

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themafia ◴[] No.45893861[source]
> there's the question of how to allocate money for secret things.

In the history of war I find very few examples where an obscure secret technology was the key to military victory.

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nradov ◴[] No.45894094[source]
Cryptography, radar, proximity fuses, and nuclear bombs are all examples of obscure secret technologies that were keys to military victory in WWII.
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1. aDyslecticCrow ◴[] No.45901304[source]
Fourier transfer.