The Army is "embracing" the results of an acquisition reform study that provides a bleak look at how officials buy weapons, with one senior leader pointing to the Ground Combat Vehicle as an example of how the service has begun looking outside Training and Doctrine Command for input on new requirements. "We're going to move out and improve our processes," Lt. Gen. William Phillips, the military deputy to Army acquisition chief Malcolm O'Neill, said Feb. 17 at an industry conference in Washington. "It's the right thing to do because our soldiers demand that from us. It's a holistic look ~ from requirements generation to how we resource and drive affordability inside a program."
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