2026 National Defense Strategy Rather than protect and advance Americans’ interests, they opened our borders, forgot the wisdom of the Monroe Doctrine, ceded influence in our hemisphere, and outsourced America’s industry, including the defense industrial base (DIB) upon which our forces rely They sent America’s brave sons and daughters to fight war after rudderless war to topple regimes and nation-build halfway
FACT SHEET: Homeland Defense Policy Guidance (HDPG) The 2022 National Defense Strategy (NDS) states that the top priority of the Department of Defense (DoD) is to defend the homeland, paced to the growing multi-domain threat posed by the People's Republic of China (PRC) The 2023 Homeland Defense Policy Guidance (HDPG) aims to drive action across DoD to deter threats of aggression or strategic attack on the homeland across multiple domains and
Establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness (USD(P R)), in conjunction with the Director, CAPE and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS), will utilize the FY27 Program Budget Review (PBR) to resource and align the Joint C-sUAS University under the JIA TF 401 Director
Historical Office gt; DOD DOW History gt; Secretaries of Defense The Historical Office of the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) dates to 1949 It is one of the longest serving continuously operating offices in the Office of the Secretary of Defense and has been recognized for the excellence of its publications and programs for over a half century The mission of the historical office is to collect, preserve, and present the history of the Office of
Memo Accelerating Secure Software - dodcio. defense. gov Department of Defense (DoD) Cybersecurity and Supply Chain Risk Management (SCRM) practices within the Department must adapt and keep pace with software development and the increasing complexity and evolution of supply chain risk Lengthy, outdated cybersecurity authorization processes frustrate agile, continuous delivery
Artificial Intelligence Strategy for the Department of War Executing a set of "Pace-Setting Projects" (PSPs) that will demonstrate the accelerated pace of execution, focus, and ethos we need to stay ahead The PSPs will also serve as tangible, outcome-oriented vehicles for rapidly completing our buildout of the foundational AI enablers (infrastructure, data, models, policies, and talent) needed to accelerate AI integration across the entire Department
2025 Annual Report to Congress: Military and Security Developments . . . China’s record of canceling defense and military engagements in response to perceived offenses or heightened tensions suggests that China views defense and military engagements as a tool to punish or reward the United States for its perceived behavior, instead of these engagements being inherently valuable to maintaining peace and stability
Intelligence Oversight Directorate - U. S. Department of Defense The duties and obligations placed on DoW intelligence organizations to protect the rights of individuals arise from the U S Constitution and Executive Order 12333 as implemented by DoD Manual 5240 01 DoD Directive 5148 13 outlines the DoW Intelligence Oversight program and serves as the basis for the DoW regulations and instructions that implement Intelligence Oversight (IO) within the
The United States and the Republic of the Philippines Bilateral Defense . . . The Bilateral Defense Guidelines are not intended to create rights or obligations under international or domestic law and are meant to serve as a living document that the United States and the Philippines can modify as deemed necessary and upon mutual written decision of both countries