About 5 pm ET every day, the Department of Defense releases its list of contracts awarded during the past 24 hours. A lot of them are for basic necessities: food service concessions, ammunition, fuel, spare parts, trucks. You'll occasionally see a big cyber-security contract. A lot of the juicer secret stuff gets kept a secret. Watchdogs use the releases to tally up the amount of money that major defense contractors get each year, at least from the portion of the Pentagon's budget that is public.
Stipulate: The Department of Defense needs to test and evaluate its programs. However, given the projections of doom and gloom offered by all the service chiefs and commanders everywhere, a contract worth as much as $5 billion over 5 years cannot slip by without some notice. Today, the DoD said it will give the John Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory $2.96 billion dollars for "research, development, engineering and test and evaluation programs throughout the DoD." If the Navy says so, the value of the contract can rise to $4.9 billion.
In return, Hopkins' engineers, who are some of the best anywhere, promise to provide more than 11,000,000 staff hours to various projects. The APL, about as old as the national security state itself, does mostly defense work. Last year, the Ballistic Missile Defense Agency paid it $1 billion to modernize Aegis combat systems. APL engineers are behind many of the MDA's successful missile defense intercepts and designed the backbone for the Pentagon's future internet, the Global Information Grid.
The DoD release stresses that no actual money is being awarded today; the values are simply ceilings for work performed within the scope of the overall project. And as an educational institution, the APL is a non-profit.
Still, the timing is curious, if only because it is coincident with an effort by the Pentagon to be publicly frugal.
Marc Ambinder is TheWeek.com's editor-at-large, and writes The Compass blog. He is the author, with D.B. Grady, of The Command and Deep State: Inside the Government Secrecy Industry. Marc is also a contributing editor for The Atlantic and GQ. Formerly, he served as White House correspondent for National Journal, chief political consultant for CBS News, and politics editor at The Atlantic. Marc is a 2001 graduate of Harvard. He is married to Michael Park, a corporate strategy consultant, and lives in Los Angeles.
- How a Ghost Army of American artists helped defeat Hitler
- 10 things you need to know today: May 24, 2013
- A linguistic dissection of 7 annoying teenage sounds
- Stockholm is burning: Why the Swedish riots bode ill for Europe
- 10 amazing tipping stories
- My husband doesn't want me to get a tattoo. Help!
- WATCH: Jon Stewart and Bill O'Reilly spar over the Obama scandals
- WATCH: Suspect defends brutal beheading of London man in broad daylight
- 32 TV shows to watch in 2013 [Updated]
- Why an I-5 bridge in Washington state collapsed
- WATCH: Suspect defends brutal beheading of London man in broad daylight
- A linguistic dissection of 7 annoying teenage sounds
- How a Ghost Army of American artists helped defeat Hitler
- Stockholm is burning: Why the Swedish riots bode ill for Europe
- The politics behind Kanye West's 'New Slaves'
- London's gruesome attack and the rising threat of lone-wolf terrorism
- What caused Japan's stock market to tumble? 3 theories
- 6 ways credit cards can be good for your finances
- 10 belatedly groundbreaking Vogue covers
- Sadly, you are uglier than you think













