Pentagon official: Defense cuts leave ‘hundreds of thousands of jobs’ at risk
Kendall told senators the Pentagon would have to break
fixed-price contracts on items like the KC-46 aerial tanker and the littoral combat ship, potentially driving costs higher on those programs.
“Across the department there are places where a devastating
impact would occur, and of course that ripples down through all tiers of the
industrial base,” Kendall said. “There would be hundreds of thousands of jobs
impacted by it.”
{mosads}The defense industry and Republicans in Congress have said
sequestration must be averted now because of its impact on industry, as
firms must prepare for the potential of a $50 billion cut to the Pentagon
budget in 2013.
Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.) said that smaller contractors
could go out of business due to cutbacks through sequestration.
“We’re talking about small businesses that, if they are put
out of business by sequestration, then it’s difficult often to bring that
capability back,” Ayotte said while questioning Kendall. “That’s why we’re
concerned about our defense industrial base, and those are real jobs in this
country.”
Kendall said some major firms have approached him about
concerns over providing notice of potential layoffs, a legal requirement,
because of sequestration.
Kendall’s comments echo those from Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, who
has repeatedly called sequestration a “meat-ax approach” and a “gun to the
head” in his congressional testimony.
On weapons contracts, Kendall said sequestration would
require the Pentagon to break a number of contracts and re-negotiate, which
would cause the price to likely increase.
“You’re essentially opening it up and you have to go get
another price,” Kendall said. “Once you don’t have a competitive environment,
it’s much more difficult for us to negotiate a lower price.”
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