Overpriced, high-maintenance hardware hurts the Army.

PositionWASHINGTON PULSE: NEWS FROM INSIDE THE BELTWAY

* The Army needs equipment that is "cheaper to buy, cheaper to operate and cheaper to maintain," says Nelson M. Ford, assistant secretary of the Army for financial management. "And that does not mean junk," he told contractors at the Association of the U.S. Army winter symposium. Why can't the Army have squad radios the size, weight and cost of a Bluetooth headset, he asked. Why should the next-generation combat...

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