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Defense Acquisitions: DOD Needs to Reassess Joint Cruise Missile Costs before Starting New Production Phase

GAO-11-112 Published: Oct 13, 2010. Publicly Released: Oct 13, 2010.
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Highlights

Over the past two and a half decades, the Department of Defense (DOD) has invested heavily to acquire a cruise missile capable of attacking ground targets stealthily, reliably, and affordably. After abandoning an earlier, more expensive missile and a joint service effort, the Air Force began producing the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile (JASSM) in 2001. After that, the program (1) encountered many flight test failures, (2) decided to develop an extended range version, and (3) recognized significant cost growth. The production decision for the JASSM-ER is planned for November 2010. Also, the Secretary of Defense has recently announced a major initiative to restore affordability and productivity in defense spending. This initiative is expected to, among other things, identify savings by conducting needed programs more efficiently. As DOD faces the initial production decision on JASSM-ER, GAO was asked to assess (1) most recent test results, correction of causes of previous flight test failures, and efforts to improve JASSM's reliability; and (2) JASSM cost changes, efforts to control costs, and additional cost risks for the program.

Recommendations

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status
Department of Defense The Secretary of Defense should defer the production decision for JASSM-ER until (1) the program's likely costs and affordability are reassessed to take into account the feasibility and cost of retrofitting JASSM baseline missiles or replacing them, the cost of additional reliability testing against the likely improvement, and the effect of sustained low production rates; and (2) the results of the previous analysis of alternatives are reassessed in light of the likely costs of the JASSM program.
Closed – Not Implemented
In providing comments on this report, the agency partially concurred with our recommendation, but proceeded to their production decision without reassessing costs or their previous analyses of alternatives.

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Topics

Air defense systemsAir Force procurementCost analysisDefense capabilitiesDefense cost controlDefense economic analysisDefense procurementMilitary inventoriesMilitary technologyMissilesOperational testingProcurement planningProgram managementStrategic planningTestingWeaponsWeapons research and developmentWeapons systemsCost estimatesCost growth