Military

McCain to Carter: No more last-minute personnel moves

President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Pentagon won’t take over for several more months, but one prominent Senate Republican is telling current Defense Secretary Ash Carter that his work leading the military is all but finished.

On Monday, Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., wrote to Carter asking him to “suspend all efforts on the development and implementation of rules and regulations at the Department of Defense that would change long-standing policy, including with regard to military personnel ratings, standards, uniforms, job titles, and related issues.”

The move is both a plea by the Senate’s top defense lawmaker for calm before the military leadership transition and a jab at Carter’s recent policy moves. He and McCain have sparred in recent months over Carter’s planned “Force of the Future” initiatives, designed to modernize military workforce rules to help with recruiting and retention.

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President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Pentagon won’t take over for several more months, but one prominent Senate Republican is telling current Defense Secretary Ash Carter that his work leading the military is all but finished.

On Monday, Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., wrote to Carter asking him to “suspend all efforts on the development and implementation of rules and regulations at the Department of Defense that would change long-standing policy, including with regard to military personnel ratings, standards, uniforms, job titles, and related issues.”

The move is both a plea by the Senate’s top defense lawmaker for calm before the military leadership transition and a jab at Carter’s recent policy moves. He and McCain have sparred in recent months over Carter’s planned “Force of the Future” initiatives, designed to modernize military workforce rules to help with recruiting and retention.

“Many of the Department’s recent actions in this regard have been questionable and misguided,” McCain wrote. “Any effort to continue in that direction during a presidential transition and lame-duck session of Congress would be inappropriate.”

In particular, Republicans on the Senate committee have criticized proposed and implemented changes to military promotion schedules, mid-career sabbaticals and family leave policies as potentially costly and misguided.
In addition, defense officials infuriated many in the naval community in September when they announced plans to drop all Navy enlisted ratings titles, to both promote more cross-training among sailors and get around problems with gender-specific job descriptions.

Read the whole story from Military Times.

Featured image courtesy of Getty Images.

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