Full title | An act to improve the organization and procedures of the Department of Defense for the acquisition of major weapon systems, and for other purposes. |
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Enacted by the | 111th United States Congress |
Effective | May 22, 2009 |
Citations | |
Public Law | 111-23 |
Stat. | 123 Stat. 1704 |
Codification | |
Act(s) amended | John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 |
Title(s) amended | 5, 10 |
U.S.C. sections created | 10 USC §139c 10 USC §139d 10 USC §2334 10 USC §2433a |
U.S.C. sections substantially amended | 5 USC §5315 10 USC §139a 10 USC §181(b) 10 USC §181(d) 10 USC §2306b(i)(1)(B) 10 USC §2366a 10 USC §2366a(a) 10 USC §2366b 10 USC §2366b(a)(1)(B) 10 USC §2366b(a)(1)(C) 10 USC §2430 10 USC §2433(e) 10 USC §2434(b)(1) 10 USC §2445c(f)(3)(B) 10 USC §2501(a) 10 USC §2505(b) |
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Major amendments | |
Relevant Supreme Court cases | |
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The Weapon Systems Acquisition Reform Act (formally Weapons Acquisition System Reform Through Enhancing Technical Knowledge and Oversight Act of 2009) was an Act of Congress passed in 2009 that was created to reform the way the Pentagon contracts and purchases major weapons systems. The bill was signed into law on May 22 by President Barack Obama.[1]
The Congressional Budget Office predicted that the reforms would cost $55 million and should be in place by the end of 2010. The reforms are expected to save millions, perhaps even billions of dollars during the 2010s.[2] According to the Government Accountability Office, nearly 70% of the Pentagon's 96 biggest weapons programs were over budget in 2008. Another government report detailed $295 billion in waste and cost overruns in defense contracts.[1] The legislation created a Pentagon office, the Office of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation (CAPE), to analyze the cost of new programs. CAPE reports directly to the Secretary of Defense and supersedes the Office of Program Analysis and Evaluation (PA&E). It also puts more emphasis on testing new weapons before they enter production to ensure sufficient development, giving commanders more say in weapons requirements.[1]
Contents |
The Act was introduced February 23, 2009.[3] The bill passed both the House of Representatives and the Senate unanimously, 411-0 and 93-0, respectively.[2] Upon signing the Act, President Obama cited the need to end the "waste and inefficiency" it addressed.
Key provisions in the Weapon Systems Acquisition Reform Act included:[4]