This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-03-238 
entitled 'Military Personnel: Joint Officer Development Has Improved, 
but a Strategic Approach Is Needed' which was released on December 19, 
2002.



This text file was formatted by the U.S. General Accounting Office 

(GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part of a 

longer term project to improve GAO products’ accessibility. Every 

attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of 

the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text 

descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the 

end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided 

but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed 

version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic 

replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail 

your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this 

document to Webmaster@gao.gov.



Report to the Subcommittee on Military Personnel, Committee on Armed 

Services, House of Representatives:



United States General Accounting Office:



GAO:



December 2002:



MILITARY PERSONNEL:



Joint Officer Development Has Improved, but a Strategic Approach Is 

Needed:



GAO-03-238:



GAO Highlights: 



Highlights of GAO-03-238, a report to the Subcommittee on Military 

Personnel, Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives:



December 2002:



MILITARY PERSONNEL:



Joint Officer Development Has Improved, but a Strategic Approach Is 

Needed:



Why GAO Did This Study: 



DOD has increasingly engaged in multiservice and multinational 

operations. Congress enacted the Goldwater-Nichols Department of 

Defense Reorganization Act of 1986, in part, so that DOD’s military 

leaders would be better prepared to plan, support, and conduct joint 

operations. GAO assessed DOD actions to implement provisions in the 

law that address the development of officers in joint matters and 

evaluated impediments affecting DOD’s ability to fully respond to 

the provisions in the act.



What GAO Found: 



DOD has taken positive steps to implement the Goldwater-Nichols Act 

provisions that address the education, assignment, and promotion of 

officers serving in joint positions. However, DOD has relied on waivers 

allowable under the law to comply with the provisions and has 

experienced difficulties implementing some of its programs. Because of 

these difficulties, DOD cannot be assured that it is preparing officers 

in the most effective manner to serve in joint organizations and 

leadership positions.



* Education. DOD has met provisions in the act to develop officers 

through education by establishing a two-phased joint education program, 

but has not determined how many officers should complete both phases. 

In fiscal year 2001, only one-third of the officers serving in joint 

positions had completed both phases of the program.



* Assignment. DOD has increasingly not filled all of its critical joint 

duty positions with joint specialty officers, who are required to have 

both prior education and experience in joint matters. In fiscal year 

2001, DOD did not fill 311, or more than one-third, of its critical 

joint duty positions with joint specialty officers.



* Promotion. DOD has promoted more officers with prior joint experience 

to the general and flag officer pay grades. However, in fiscal year 

2001, DOD still relied on allowable waivers in lieu of joint experience 

to promote one in four officers to these senior levels. Beginning in 

fiscal year 2008, most officers promoted to these senior levels will 

also have to complete DOD’s joint education program or otherwise meet 

the requirements to be a joint specialty officer. Our analysis of 

officers promoted in fiscal year 2001 showed that 58 out of 124 
officers 

promoted to the general and flag level did not meet these requirements. 

DOD has promoted mid-grade officers who serve in joint organizations at 

rates equal to or better than the promotion rates of their peers. 

However, DOD has had difficulty meeting this objective for colonels 

and Navy captains.



DOD’s ability to respond fully to these provisions has been hindered 

by the absence of a strategic plan that (1) establishes clear goals 

for officer development in joint matters and (2) links those goals to 

DOD’s overall mission and goals. DOD has not identified how many joint 

specialty officers it needs and, without this information, cannot 

determine if its joint education programs are properly structured. The 

services vary in the emphasis they place on joint officer development 

and continue to struggle to balance joint requirements against their 

own service needs. DOD has also not fully addressed how it will develop 

reserve officers in joint matters—despite the fact that it is 

increasingly relying on reservists to carry out its mission. Finally, 

DOD has not tracked meaningful data consistently to measure progress 

in meeting the act’s provisions.



What GAO Recommends: 



GAO recommends that the Secretary of Defense direct the Under 

Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to develop a 

strategic plan that links joint officer development to DOD’s overall 

mission and goals. At a minimum, this plan should:



* identify the number of joint specialty officers needed,



* include provisions for the education and assignment of reservists 

who may serve in joint organizations, and, 



* be developed in a manner to provide DOD with more meaningful data 

to track progress made against the plan.



DOD partially concurred with our recommendation because it views 

provisions in the act as impediments that must be removed before 

it can develop an effective strategic plan.



www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-238.



To view the full report, including the scope and methodology, click 

on the link above. For more information, contact Derek B. Stewart 

at (202) 512-5140 or stewartd@gao.gov.



Contents:



Letter:



Results in Brief:



Background:



Positive Actions Taken, but Gaps Remain in Education, Assignments, and 

Promotions:



Lack of a Strategic Approach Is Contributing to DOD’s Difficulties to 

Fully Respond to the Act’s Intent:



Conclusions:



Recommendation for Executive Action:



Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:



Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:



Appendix II: Demographic Data for Joint Positions:



Appendix III: Mid-Level Promotion Statistics:



Appendix IV: Survey Questionnaire and Summary of Responses:



Officers’ Background:



Officers’ Views on Joint Assignments:



Officers’ Views of Phase I of DOD’s Joint Professional Military 

Education Program:



Officers’ Views of Phase II of DOD’s Joint Professional Military 

Education Program:



Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:



Tables:



Table 1: Service Fill Rates and Vacancy Rates at the Joint Forces Staff 

College for Academic Years 1996 through 2001:



Table 2: Placement of Non-Joint Specialty Officers after Graduation 

from Joint Professional Military Education Schools for Fiscal Years 

1996 through 2001:



Table 3: Placement of Joint Specialty Officers after Graduation from 

Joint Professional Military Education Schools for Fiscal Years 1996 

through 2001:



Table 4: Officers Filling Joint Duty Positions in July 2002 Who Are 

Joint Specialty Nominees or Joint Specialty Officers:



Table 5: Joint Positions by Major Command or Activity:



Table 6: Promotion Rates for Mid-Level Officers Assigned to the Joint 

Staff Compared to Officers Assigned to Their Service Headquarters 

during Fiscal Years 1988 through 2001:



Table 7: Promotion Rates for Mid-Level Joint Specialty Officers 

Compared to Promotion Rates of Officers Assigned to Their Service 

Headquarters during Fiscal Years 1988 through 2001:



Table 8: Promotion Rates for Mid-Level Officers Assigned to Other Joint 

Organizations Compared to the Board Average Promotion Rate during 

Fiscal Years 1988 through 2001:



Figures:



Figure 1: Allocation of Joint Positions by Service in Fiscal Year 2001:



Figure 2: Distribution of Vacant and Filled Critical Joint Positions 

during Fiscal Years 1989 through 2001:



Figure 3: Number of Officers Designated Annually as Joint Specialty 

Officers and Total Number of Joint Specialty Officers for Fiscal Years 

1990 through 2001:



Figure 4: Percentage of Officers Promoted to General or Flag Rank with 

Joint Experience between Fiscal Years 1995 and 2001:



Figure 5: Good-of-the-Service Waiver Usage for Fiscal Years 1989 

through 2001:



Figure 6: Distribution of Joint Positions by Pay Grade:



Figure 7: Distribution of Joint Positions by Occupational Categories:



Letter:



December 19, 2002:



The Honorable John McHugh:



Chairman 

The Honorable Vic Snyder

Ranking Minority Member

Subcommittee on Military Personnel

Committee on Armed Services

House of Representatives:



Prior to 1986, the Department of Defense (DOD) primarily operated under 

a culture in which the four military services educated their officers 

in service-specific matters, assigned their most talented officers to 

key service positions, and promoted them to leadership positions within 

their own service. This arrangement served DOD well when military 

operations fell primarily within the capabilities of one of the 

military branches. Given that DOD was increasingly moving toward 

engaging in joint--multiservice and multinational--operations, 

however, Congress recognized that cultural change was needed to move 

DOD away from its service parochialisms toward interservice cooperation 

and coordination. Congress also believed that DOD needed to better 

prepare its military leaders to plan, support, and conduct joint 

operations. It enacted the Goldwater-Nichols Department of Defense 

Reorganization Act of 1986,[Footnote 1] in part, to improve officers’ 

professional development through education in joint matters and 

assignment to joint organizations. The act further requires DOD to 

factor this joint education and experience into its officer promotion 

decisions.



The act has been hailed as landmark legislation, given the significance 

of the cultural change that it was designed to achieve, and DOD has, in 

fact, subsequently issued joint vision statements that anticipate an 

armed force that will be “fully joint: intellectually, operationally, 

organizationally, doctrinally, and technically.”[Footnote 2] During 

the 16 years since the act’s passage, however, DOD has repeatedly 

sought legislative relief from the act’s provisions that address the 

development of officers in joint matters and, although it has complied 

with many of these provisions, it is still experiencing difficulties in 

implementing some of its joint officer development programs and 

policies. Concerns exist in Congress about the extent of DOD’s progress 

in this area and impediments to further change. For this report, we (1) 

assessed DOD’s actions to implement the major provisions of the law in 

terms of the education of officers in joint matters, their assignment 

to joint organizations, and the services’ promotion of officers who are 

serving or who have served in joint positions[Footnote 3] and (2) 

evaluated impediments affecting DOD’s ability to fully respond to the 

act’s intent regarding the development of officers in joint matters. We 

also surveyed and spoke with more than 500 officers serving in joint 

positions on the Joint Staff and in joint organizations located in the 

United States and abroad to obtain their perspectives on joint officer 

development. Appendix I contains a more detailed discussion of our 

scope and methodology.



Results in Brief:



DOD has taken positive steps to implement the major provisions of the 

Goldwater-Nichols Act that address the education and assignment of 

officers in joint matters and the promotion of officers who are serving 

or who have served in joint positions. In certain cases, DOD has met or 

surpassed the act’s objectives. DOD, however, has also relied on 

waivers allowable under the law to comply with some of the provisions 

and has experienced difficulties in implementing some of its programs 

and policies that address joint officer development. Because of these 

difficulties, DOD cannot be assured that it is preparing officers in 

the most effective manner to serve in joint organizations and 

leadership positions. For example,



* DOD has met provisions in the act that require it to develop officers 

in joint matters through education by establishing a two-phased joint 

professional military education program. The act, however, did not 

establish specific numerical requirements and DOD has also not 

determined the number of officers who should complete the joint 

education program. In fiscal year 2001, only one-third of the officers 

who were serving in joint organizations had completed both phases of 

the education.



* DOD has surpassed certain provisions in the act that require it to 

assign officers who meet specified criteria to joint positions. 

However, DOD has also increasingly relied on allowable waivers and has 

not filled all of its critical joint duty positions with officers who 

hold a joint specialty designation. This number reached an all-time 

high in fiscal year 2001 when DOD did not fill 311, or more than one-

third, of its critical joint duty positions with joint specialty 

officers.



* DOD has, in response to the requirements of the act, promoted more 

officers with previous joint experience to the general and flag officer 

pay grades. However, in fiscal year 2001, DOD still relied on allowable 

waivers in lieu of joint experience to promote one in four officers to 

these senior pay grades. Furthermore, DOD has made progress, but it is 

still not fully meeting provisions to promote mid-grade officers 

(majors, lieutenant colonels, and colonels in the Air Force, Army, and 

Marine Corps and lieutenant commanders, commanders, and captains in the 

Navy) who are serving or who have served in joint positions at rates 

not less than the promotion rates of their peers who have not served in 

joint positions. Between fiscal years 1995 and 2001, DOD met more than 

90 percent of its promotion goals for officers who served on the Joint 

Staff, almost 75 percent of its promotion goals for joint specialty 

officers, and just over 70 percent of its promotion goals for all other 

officers who served in joint positions.



A significant impediment affecting DOD’s ability to fully realize the 

cultural change that was envisioned by the act is the fact that DOD has 

not taken a strategic approach to develop officers in joint matters. 

For example, DOD has not identified how many joint specialty officers 

it needs, and the four services have emphasized joint officer 

development to varying degrees. In addition, DOD has not yet, within a 

total force concept, fully addressed how it will provide joint 

development to reserve officers who are serving in joint organizations-

-despite the fact that DOD officials have stated that no significant 

operation can be conducted without reserve involvement. Finally, DOD 

has not been tracking certain data consistently to measure its progress 

in meeting the act’s joint officer development objectives. For example, 

the four services have not kept historical data on the number of joint 

positions that are filled with joint specialty officers and joint 

specialty officer nominees. Without these data, DOD cannot assess the 

degree to which it is properly targeting its joint education programs.



The officers we interviewed in focus group discussions told us that 

they expect, and willingly accept orders, to work in joint assignments 

during their careers. In fact, about 50 percent of the services’ mid-

grade officers have served in at least one joint assignment. In 

addition, more than 75 percent of the officers in our survey who had 

completed the second phase of the joint education program stated that 

the second phase was important from a moderate to a great extent. Those 

officers who did not find the program helpful stated in focus group 

discussions that the program is too long, redundant with the first 

phase of the education program, and of little added value.



This report contains a recommendation that DOD develop a strategic plan 

that will link joint officer development to DOD’s overall mission and 

goals. In commenting on a draft of this report, DOD partially concurred 

with our recommendation because it views provisions in the act as 

impediments that must be removed before it can develop an effective 

strategic plan.



Background:



The intent of the Goldwater-Nichols Reorganization Act of 1986 was, in 

part, to reorganize DOD into a more unified military structure. Within 

that act, Congress included several provisions that specifically 

address the education of officers in joint matters,[Footnote 4] their 

assignment to joint organizations, and the promotion of officers 

serving in joint positions. The act also established a joint specialty 

officer designation for officers who are specifically trained in and 

oriented toward joint matters.[Footnote 5] Although the act contains a 

number of specific requirements, Congress also provided DOD with 

flexibility in meeting the requirements by granting it waiver authority 

when it can demonstrate justification. DOD approves waivers on a case-

specific basis.[Footnote 6] These waivers apply to a number of the 

provisions, including (1) the methods for designating joint specialty 

officers, (2) the posteducation assignments for joint specialty 

officers, (3) the assignment of joint specialty officers to critical 

joint duty positions, and (4) the promotions of officers to the general 

and flag officer pay grades.



Moreover, Congress has issued follow-on reports and made changes to the 

law in subsequent legislation. For example, a congressional panel on 

military education issued a report in April 1989 that contained 

numerous recommendations regarding joint professional military 

education.[Footnote 7] Among other things, this panel recommended that 

the services’ professional military education schools teach both 

service and joint matters and that the student body and faculty at each 

of the service schools include officers from the other services. DOD 

has implemented these recommendations. Most recently, Congress amended 

the law regarding the promotion criteria for officers being considered 

for promotion to the general and flag officer pay grades.[Footnote 8] 

The Goldwater-Nichols Act established a requirement that officers must 

have served in a joint position prior to being selected for these 

promotions. The amendment, contained in the National Defense 

Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002, will require most officers 

being considered for appointment to this grade after September 30, 

2007, to complete the joint education program as well.



DOD uses a number of multiservice and multinational commands and 

organizations to plan and support joint matters. Since passage of the 

Goldwater-Nichols Act, officers serving in these commands and 

organizations have overseen a number of joint and multinational 

military operations that range from humanitarian assistance and 

peacekeeping to major operations such as Operation Desert Storm and 

ongoing operations in Afghanistan. The number of joint positions in 

these organizations has ranged from a low of 8,217 positions in fiscal 

year 1988 to a high of 9,371 positions in fiscal year 1998. Changing 

missions and reorganizations have contributed to this variation. In 

fiscal year 2001, DOD had a total of 9,146 joint positions. Of these 

positions, 3,400 positions were allocated to the Air Force; 3,170 

positions were allocated to the Army; 2,004 positions were allocated to 

the Navy; and 572 positions were allocated to the Marine Corps. Figure 

1 shows that the Air Force had the largest percentage, followed by the 

Army, the Navy, and the Marine Corps.



Figure 1: Allocation of Joint Positions by Service in Fiscal Year 2001:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



Officers in pay grades O-4 (majors in the Air Force, Army, and Marine 

Corps and lieutenant commanders in the Navy) and above can receive 

credit for joint experience when they serve in the Joint Staff, joint 

geographic and functional commands, combined forces commands, and 

defense agencies. In addition, the Secretary of Defense has authority 

to award joint credit to officers for serving in certain joint task 

force headquarters staffs.[Footnote 9] DOD has developed a joint duty 

assignment list that includes all of the active duty positions in pay 

grades O-4 and above in the multiservice organizations that are 

involved in or support the integrated employment of the armed forces. 

DOD’s policy places limits on the number of positions in the defense 

agencies and other jointly staffed activities that can be included on 

the list. The list of joint organizations and demographic descriptions 

of the officers serving in those organizations are provided in appendix 

II.



The Assistant Secretary of Defense for Force Management Policy, under 

the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and 

Readiness, has overall responsibility for the policies and procedures 

governing DOD’s joint officer management program. Among other things, 

the Assistant Secretary is responsible for reviewing joint professional 

military education initiatives, approving the list of joint duty 

assignments, reviewing the promotion and appointment of joint specialty 

officers and other officers who are serving or have served in joint 

duty positions, and acting on requests to waive DOD joint officer 

management requirements. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has 

responsibility, among other things, for implementing DOD’s policies 

governing joint officer management and for making recommendations to 

the Assistant Secretary. The service secretaries are responsible for, 

among other things, supporting DOD policy and for ensuring the 

qualifications of officers assigned to joint duty positions. These 

responsibilities are delineated in DOD’s Joint Officer Management 

Program Directive 1300.19, issued on September 9, 1997.



Positive Actions Taken, but Gaps Remain in Education, Assignments, and 

Promotions:



DOD has taken positive steps to implement the provisions of the 

Goldwater-Nichols Act that address the education of officers in joint 

matters, officers’ assignments to joint organizations, and the 

promotion of officers who are serving or who have served in joint 

positions. [Footnote 10] In certain cases, DOD has met or surpassed the 

act’s objectives. However, DOD has also relied on waivers allowable 

under the law to comply with the provisions. In addition, DOD has 

experienced difficulties in implementing some of its programs and 

policies that address joint officer development. Because of these 

difficulties, DOD cannot be assured that it is preparing officers in 

the most effective manner to serve in joint organizations and 

leadership positions.



Education Program in Joint Matters Developed, but Not Delivered to Most 

Officers:



One of the provisions in the Goldwater-Nichols Act requires DOD to 

develop officers, in part, through education in joint matters.[Footnote 

11] Accordingly, DOD defined joint education requirements in terms of a 

two-phased program in joint matters. It incorporated the first phase of 

the program into the curricula of the services’ intermediate-and 

senior-level professional military education schools.[Footnote 12] DOD 

offers the second phase of the program at the National Defense 

University’s Joint Forces Staff College in Norfolk, Virginia. This 

phase is designed to provide officers with the opportunity to study in 

a truly joint environment and to apply the knowledge they gained during 

the first phase of their joint education. DOD also offers a combined 

program that includes both phases at the National Defense University’s 

National War College and Industrial College of the Armed Forces in 

Washington, D.C. The Secretary of Defense is required to educate 

sufficient numbers of officers so that approximately one-half of the 

joint positions are filled at any time by officers who have either 

successfully completed the joint professional education program or 

received an allowable waiver to complete the education after their 

assignment.[Footnote 13] The act, however, did not identify a specific 

numerical requirement and, similarly, DOD has not established numerical 

goals concerning the number of officers who should complete joint 

professional military education.



In the most effective model, officers would complete the first phase of 

joint education in an in-resident or nonresident program through one of 

the services’ professional military education schools. The in-resident 

programs are a full academic year in length; officers completing the 

curricula in nonresident programs will often do this over several 

years, given that they are completing their education on a part-time 

basis in addition to their normal duties. Upon completion of the first 

phase, officers would attend the second phase of the program at the 

Joint Forces Staff College. The Joint Forces Staff College offers the 

second phase three times during the year and, by law, this phase may 

not be less than 3 months.[Footnote 14] Upon graduation from the second 

phase, officers would be assigned to a joint position.



According to DOD data, only one-third of the officers serving in joint 

positions in fiscal year 2001 had received both phases of the joint 

education program. This is due, in large part, to space and facility 

limitations at the National Defense University schools that provide the 

second phase. Although DOD assigns approximately 3,000 active duty 

officers to joint positions each year, the three schools, collectively, 

have about 1,200 seats available for active duty officers.



Furthermore, the Joint Forces Staff College, from which most officers 

receive the second phase, is currently operating at 83 percent of its 

906-seat capacity. Moreover, the number of unfilled seats at the Joint 

Forces Staff College has risen significantly in recent years, from a 

low of 12 empty seats in fiscal year 1998 to a high of 154 empty seats 

in fiscal year 2001. DOD officials cited pressing needs to assign 

officers to the increasing number of military operations as a major 

reason for these vacancies. A Joint Staff officer responsible for joint 

education expressed concern about the services’ ability to fill seats 

in the future due to the ongoing war on terrorism.



Logistics, timing, and budget issues are also making it difficult for 

officers to attend the second phase of the joint education program. The 

Joint Forces Staff College can only accommodate approximately 300 

students in each 3-month term and does not have the space to receive 

all of the service professional military education school graduates at 

the same time. Given that, officers can report to their joint position 

after completing the first phase and subsequently attend the second 

phase on a temporary duty basis at some point during their assignment. 

However, officers and senior leaders at the sites we visited told us 

that their joint commands cannot afford a 3-month gap in a position due 

to pressing schedules and workload demands. Officers at the U.S. Forces 

in Korea posed a slightly different problem. Given its remote location, 

officers typically serve in Korea for only 1-2 years. That command 

cannot afford to send someone serving in a 1-year billet away for 3 

months. In addition to logistics and timing issues, related budget 

issues exist. When an officer attends the second phase en route to a 

joint command, the officer’s service pays the expenses associated with 

sending the officer to the Joint Forces Staff College. When the officer 

attends the program midtour, the joint organization pays the expenses. 

Officers serving on the Joint Staff told us that a former Chairman of 

the Joint Chiefs of Staff had instituted a policy that the Joint Staff 

would not send officers to the Joint Forces Staff College--or to any 

other training lasting more than 30 days--after they reported to the 

Joint Staff for duty. DOD officials confirmed this and explained that 

the former chairman understood the budget implications and, believing 

in the importance of joint education, instituted his policy with the 

expectation that the services would send their officers to the second 

phase of the education before sending them to their Joint Staff 

assignments. DOD officials acknowledged, however, that unintended 

consequences resulted from this policy. The services still are not 

sending their officers to the second phase before they assign them to 

the Joint Staff.



Officers we interviewed suggested that alternatives should be 

considered for delivering the second phase of DOD’s joint education 

program. For example, some officers believed that the course should be 

shortened while others thought that it should be integrated into the 

first phase of the program that is offered in the services’ 

professional military education schools. However, to shorten the 

principal course of instruction at the Joint Forces Staff College, 

which delivers the second phase, would require a change in the 

law.[Footnote 15]



In addition, considerable variation exists among the services in terms 

of the number of officers each service sends to the Joint Forces Staff 

College. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has directed that 

the seats at the Joint Forces Staff College be allocated among the 

services in accordance with the distribution of service positions on 

the joint duty assignment list. The percentage of seats reserved for 

each service at the school does, in fact, reflect the distribution on 

the list. However, while the Air Force filled almost 98 percent of its 

allocated seats in academic year 2001, the Navy filled only 67 percent 

of its seats. Moreover, vacancy rates for the Army and the Navy have, 

for the most part, increased between academic years 1996 and 2001. 

Table 1 shows seats filled and vacancy rates, by service, at the school 

for academic years 1996 through 2001. Table 1 also shows that the 

allocation of seats has been constant for the last 3 years.



Table 1: Service Fill Rates and Vacancy Rates at the Joint Forces Staff 

College for Academic Years 1996 through 2001:



Army:



Fiscal year: : 1996; Seats 

available: : 289; Seats 

filled: : 282; Difference: : -7; Percent of seats unfilled: : 2.



Fiscal year: : 1997; Seats 

available: : 282; Seats 

filled: : 271; Difference: : -11; Percent of seats unfilled: : 4.



Fiscal year: : 1998; Seats 

available: : 298; Seats 

filled: : 286; Difference: : -12; Percent of seats unfilled: : 4.



Fiscal year: : 1999; Seats 

available: : 297; Seats 

filled: : 253; Difference: : -44; Percent of seats unfilled: : 15.



Fiscal year: : 2000; Seats 

available: : 297; Seats 

filled: : 248; Difference: : -49; Percent of seats unfilled: : 16.



Fiscal year: : 2001; Seats 

available: : 297; Seats 

filled: : 228; Difference: : -69; Percent of seats unfilled: : 23.



Total; Fiscal year: [Empty]; Seats 

available: 1,760; Seats 

filled: 1,568; Difference: -192; Percent of seats unfilled: 11.



Air Force:



Fiscal year: : 1996; Seats 

available: : 321; Seats 

filled: : 321; Difference: : 0; Percent of seats unfilled: : 0.



Fiscal year: : 1997; Seats 

available: : 321; Seats 

filled: : 329; Difference: : +8; Percent of seats unfilled: : 0.



Fiscal year: : 1998; Seats 

available: : 333; Seats 

filled: : 341; Difference: : +8; Percent of seats unfilled: : 0.



Fiscal year: : 1999; Seats 

available: : 336; Seats 

filled: : 348; Difference: : +12; Percent of seats unfilled: : 0.



Fiscal year: : 2000; Seats 

available: : 336; Seats 

filled: : 332; Difference: : -4; Percent of seats unfilled: : 1.



Fiscal year: : 2001; Seats 

available: : 336; Seats 

filled: : 328; Difference: : -8; Percent of seats unfilled: : 2.



Total; Fiscal year: [Empty]; Seats 

available: 1,983; Seats 

filled: 1,999; Difference: +16; Percent of seats unfilled: -1.



Marine Corps:



Fiscal year: : 1996; Seats 

available: : 52; Seats 

filled: : 46; Difference: : -6; Percent of seats unfilled: : 12.



Fiscal year: : 1997; Seats 

available: : 51; Seats 

filled: : 48; Difference: : -3; Percent of seats unfilled: : 6.



Fiscal year: : 1998; Seats 

available: : 51; Seats 

filled: : 48; Difference: : -3; Percent of seats unfilled: : 6.



Fiscal year: : 1999; Seats 

available: : 54; Seats 

filled: : 51; Difference: : -3; Percent of seats unfilled: : 6.



Fiscal year: : 2000; Seats 

available: : 54; Seats 

filled: : 61; Difference: : +7; Percent of seats unfilled: : 0.



Fiscal year: : 2001; Seats 

available: : 54; Seats 

filled: : 49; Difference: : -5; Percent of seats unfilled: : 9.



Total; Fiscal year: [Empty]; Seats 

available: 316; Seats 

filled: 303; Difference: -13; Percent of seats unfilled: 4.



Navy:



Fiscal year: : 1996; Seats 

available: : 217; Seats 

filled: : 213; Difference: : -4; Percent of seats unfilled: : 2.



Fiscal year: : 1997; Seats 

available: : 207; Seats 

filled: : 195; Difference: : -12; Percent of seats unfilled: : 6.



Fiscal year: : 1998; Seats 

available: : 207; Seats 

filled: : 202; Difference: : -5; Percent of seats unfilled: : 2.



Fiscal year: : 1999; Seats 

available: : 219; Seats 

filled: : 168; Difference: : -51; Percent of seats unfilled: : 23.



Fiscal year: : 2000; Seats 

available: : 219; Seats 

filled: : 170; Difference: : -49; Percent of seats unfilled: : 22.



Fiscal year: : 2001; Seats 

available: : 219; Seats 

filled: : 147; Difference: : -72; Percent of seats unfilled: : 33.



Total; Fiscal year: [Empty]; Seats 

available: 1,288; Seats 

filled: 1,095; Difference: -193; Percent of seats unfilled: 15.



Grand total; Fiscal year: [Empty]; Seats 

available: 5,347; Seats 

filled: 4,965; Difference: -382; Percent of seats unfilled: 7.



Source: Joint Forces Staff College.



[End of table]



The officers we spoke with told us that they see the importance of 

completing the first phase of the joint professional military education 

program perhaps because, in most services, there is a clear correlation 

between completion of the first phase and promotion potential. In the 

Army and the Air Force, completion of the first phase has become a 

prerequisite for promotion to lieutenant colonel, if not by directive, 

then at least in practice. In all services, completion of the first 

phase, whether or not it is an absolute requirement, is looked upon 

favorably, at the very least, for promotion purposes.



The officers we surveyed provided mixed responses when we asked them 

about their observations of the second phase of the program at the 

Joint Forces Staff College. Of the 184 officers in our survey who had 

completed the second phase of the program, 11 percent responded that 

attending the second phase was important to a very great extent, 33 

percent responded that attending the second phase was important to a 

great extent, and 33 percent responded that attending the second phase 

was important to a moderate extent. About 24 percent of the officers 

who had completed the second phase responded that attending the second 

phase was important to a little or no extent. In focus group 

discussions, these officers said that the program is too long, 

redundant with the first phase of joint education, and of little added 

value. Some of these officers also said that the second phase of the 

program only had value for officers who were interested in being 

appointed to the general and flag officer grades in their future. 

Officers from all the services and pay grades in our focus groups 

agreed that, if an officer were to attend the second phase at all, an 

officer should attend en route before reporting to a joint position.



Overall, officers at the commands we visited reported that they were 

adequately prepared for their joint position but, often times, cited a 

steep learning curve involved with working in their particular joint 

organization. Officers in over one-half of the focus groups we 

conducted said that they were most prepared for their joint positions 

because (1) they were serving in joint positions that drew upon their 

tactical level primary military occupation skills; (2) their military 

occupation, by nature, was oriented toward joint matters (e.g., 

communications, intelligence, special operations, foreign affairs); 

(3) they had previously served in a joint or staff position; or (4) 

they had attended both phases of the joint education program. Officers 

who responded that they were least prepared said that they were serving 

in joint positions unrelated to their military occupations or that they 

lacked familiarity of joint structures or organization, systems, and 

processes.



General and flag officers with whom we spoke also provided mixed 

responses. While the senior officers talked about the strengths and 

importance of the joint education, some senior officers told us that 

they did not check the records of the officers serving under them to 

see whether the officers had attended the second phase of the joint 

professional military education program and that they did not view this 

lack of education as an issue.



DOD Assigning Officers to Joint Positions but Unable to Fill Critical 

Positions:



The act contains a number of provisions affecting the assignment of 

officers to joint positions. These provisions include (1) the 

percentage of graduates of the National Defense University schools who 

must be assigned to joint duty, (2) the number of joint critical 

positions that must be filled by designated joint specialty officers, 

and (3) the percentage of positions on the joint duty assignment list 

that must be filled by joint specialty officers or joint specialty 

officer nominees.



Assignment of National Defense University Graduates:



The Goldwater-Nichols Act established specific requirements for DOD to 

assign officers who attended a joint professional military education 

school to joint positions after graduation.[Footnote 16] Placement of 

these graduates in joint positions was intended to help DOD realize the 

full benefit of education provided by all three joint colleges. First, 

DOD must send more than 50 percent of the officers who are not joint 

specialists to a joint position upon graduation from a joint 

professional military school.[Footnote 17] Table 2 shows that DOD has 

exceeded this requirement since fiscal year 1996.



Table 2: Placement of Non-Joint Specialty Officers after Graduation 

from Joint Professional Military Education Schools for Fiscal Years 

1996 through 2001:



Fiscal year: 1996; Number of graduates: 1,133; Number of graduates 

placed in joint assignments: 937; Percent of graduates placed in joint 

assignments: 82.



Fiscal year: 1997; Number of graduates: 1,114; Number of graduates 

placed in joint assignments: 938; Percent of graduates placed in joint 

assignments: 84.



Fiscal year: 1998; Number of graduates: 1,134; Number of graduates 

placed in joint assignments: 934; Percent of graduates placed in joint 

assignments: 82.



Fiscal year: 1999; Number of graduates: 1,069; Number of graduates 

placed in joint assignments: 874; Percent of graduates placed in joint 

assignments: 82.



Fiscal year: 2000; Number of graduates: 1,058; Number of graduates 

placed in joint assignments: 896; Percent of graduates placed in joint 

assignments: 85.



Fiscal year: 2001; Number of graduates: 998; Number of graduates placed 

in joint assignments: 857; Percent of graduates placed in joint 

assignments: 86.



Fiscal year: Total; Number of graduates: 6,506; Number of graduates 

placed in joint assignments: 5,436; Percent of graduates placed in 

joint assignments: 84.



Source: The Joint Staff.



[End of table]



Second, DOD must assign all joint specialty officers who graduate from 

joint professional military education schools, including the Industrial 

College of the Armed Forces and the National War College, to joint 

positions upon graduation unless a waiver is granted.[Footnote 18] 

Table 3 shows that 140 joint specialty officers graduated from one of 

these schools in the past 6 years and that DOD did not place 35 

officers, or 25 percent, into joint positions. DOD officials explained 

that the primary reason that these officers were given allowable 

waivers was because they had received orders to command assignments 

within their own service.



Table 3: Placement of Joint Specialty Officers after Graduation from 

Joint Professional Military Education Schools for Fiscal Years 1996 

through 2001:



Fiscal year: 1996; Joint specialty officer graduating: 21; Number 

placed in joint assignments: 16; Number not placed in joint 

assignments: 5; Percent of officers not placed in joint assignments 

after graduating: 24.



Fiscal year: 1997; Joint specialty officer graduating: 22; Number 

placed in joint assignments: 17; Number not placed in joint 

assignments: 5; Percent of officers not placed in joint assignments 

after graduating: 23.



Fiscal year: 1998; Joint specialty officer graduating: 26; Number 

placed in joint assignments: 22; Number not placed in joint 

assignments: 4; Percent of officers not placed in joint assignments 

after graduating: 15.



Fiscal year: 1999; Joint specialty officer graduating: 25; Number 

placed in joint assignments: 11; Number not placed in joint 

assignments: 14; Percent of officers not placed in joint assignments 

after graduating: 56.



Fiscal year: 2000; Joint specialty officer graduating: 22; Number 

placed in joint assignments: 19; Number not placed in joint 

assignments: 3; Percent of officers not placed in joint assignments 

after graduating: 14.



Fiscal year: 2001; Joint specialty officer graduating: 24; Number 

placed in joint assignments: 20; Number not placed in joint 

assignments: 4; Percent of officers not placed in joint assignments 

after graduating: 17.



Fiscal year: Total; Joint specialty officer graduating: 140; Number 

placed in joint assignments: 105; Number not placed in joint 

assignments: 35; Percent of officers not placed in joint assignments 

after graduating: 25.



Source: The Joint Staff.



[End of table]



Assignment to Critical Joint Duty Positions:



The Goldwater-Nichols Act, as amended, further requires DOD to 

designate at least 800 joint positions as critical joint duty 

positions[Footnote 19]--positions where the duties and 

responsibilities are such that it is highly important that officers 

assigned to the positions are particularly trained in, and oriented 

toward, joint matters. DOD has met this requirement and has designated 

808 positions as critical joint duty positions. However, DOD is also 

required to place only joint specialty officers in these positions 

unless the Secretary exercises his waiver authority.[Footnote 20] DOD 

has increasingly used its waiver authority to meet this requirement. 

The percentage of critical joint duty positions that were filled by 

officers other than joint specialty officers has steadily increased 

from 9 percent in fiscal year 1996 to 38 percent in fiscal year 2001. 

In fiscal year 2001, DOD was not able to fill 311 of its critical joint 

duty positions with joint specialty officers. In addition, DOD has left 

other critical joint duty positions vacant. The percentage of unfilled 

critical joint duty positions has steadily increased from 8 percent in 

fiscal year 1989 to 22 percent in fiscal year 2001. Therefore, only 331 

positions, or 41 percent, of the 808 critical joint duty positions were 

filled by joint specialty officers in fiscal year 2001. Figure 2 shows 

the distribution of vacant and filled critical joint duty positions by 

joint specialty officers and non-joint specialty officers during fiscal 

years 1989 through 2001.



Figure 2: Distribution of Vacant and Filled Critical Joint Positions 

during Fiscal Years 1989 through 2001:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



The services fill these critical joint positions with officers who have 

both the joint specialty designation and the appropriate primary 

military skill, any additional required skills, and pay grade. However, 

when (1) no joint specialty officer with the other requisite skills is 

available for assignment (e.g., pay grade and military occupation) or 

(2) the best-qualified candidate is not a joint specialty officer, a 

waiver must be approved to fill the position with an otherwise 

qualified officer. Service and Joint Staff officials explained that 

DOD’s inability to fill a critical position with a joint specialty 

officer may be due to the fact that the critical joint duty position 

description may not reflect the commander’s needs at the time the 

position is filled. These officials told us that the most frequently 

cited reason for requesting an allowable waiver was because the 

commander believed that the best-qualified officer for the position was 

not a joint specialty officer.



In addition, DOD’s population of joint specialty officers may not be 

sufficient to meet this requirement. By fiscal year 1990, DOD had 

designated just over 12,000 officers, who already had the joint 

education and experience, as joint specialty officers. However, DOD 

experienced a 56 percent decrease in its joint specialty officers 

between fiscal years 1990 and 1997 and has experienced moderate 

decreases in fiscal years 2000 and 2001. Officials on the Joint Staff 

attributed the decreases in the early years to the fact that the 

attrition of officers who received the designation in fiscal year 1990 

has exceeded the number of new designations of joint specialty 

officers. DOD officials also projected that they would need to 

designate approximately 800 new joint specialty officers each year to 

maintain its current population. Since fiscal year 1990, however, DOD 

has only met this projection in 3 of the last 4 fiscal years. Figure 3 

shows the number of new designations of joint specialty officers each 

year and the total number of joint specialty officers for fiscal years 

1990 through 2001.



Figure 3: Number of Officers Designated Annually as Joint Specialty 

Officers and Total Number of Joint Specialty Officers for Fiscal Years 

1990 through 2001:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



Officials told us that DOD has been selective in nominating and 

designating officers for the joint specialty because of the promotion 

objectives specified in the law. Officials noted that as a result, the 

population of joint specialty officers has been small. The act requires 

the services to promote joint specialty officers, as a group, at a rate 

not less than the rate of officers being promoted who are serving on, 

or have served on, the headquarters staff of their service.[Footnote 

21] This higher promotion standard is applied to joint specialty 

officers from the time they receive the joint specialty designation 

until they are considered for or promoted to pay grade O-6. DOD sought 

relief from this provision and, in December 2001, Congress reduced the 

standard for 3 years. During this 3-year period, the services are to 

promote joint specialty officers at a rate not less than the promotion 

rates of all other officers being promoted from the same military 

service, pay grade, and competitive category. Currently, about 2,700 

officers meet the joint specialty officer qualifications but have not 

been designated, and DOD, given this change in the law, is in the 

process of designating these officers. Once they are designated, DOD 

will have a population of about 7,600 joint specialty officers.



Assignment to Joint Duty Assignment List Positions:



The act also requires DOD to fill approximately 50 percent of all of 

the joint positions on the joint duty assignment list either with fully 

qualified joint specialty officers or with officers who have been 

nominated for that designation.[Footnote 22] Although the act does not 

establish specific numerical requirements, it does require that the 

number should be large enough so that approximately one-half of the 

joint positions in pay grades O-4 and above will be filled by officers 

who are joint specialty officers or nominees who meet certain 

requirements. Because the act does not require DOD to report these data 

to Congress and DOD has not maintained historical data on the 

percentage of joint positions filled by either fully qualified joint 

specialty officers or joint specialty officer nominees, we were not 

able to measure progress. Nevertheless, we did ask DOD to provide us 

with data for a point in time. Table 4 shows that more than 70 percent 

of the officers who served in joint positions in July 2002 were joint 

specialty officers or nominees.



Table 4: Officers Filling Joint Duty Positions in July 2002 Who Are 

Joint Specialty Nominees or Joint Specialty Officers:



Service: Army; Number of officers who are joint specialty officer 

nominees: 1,466; Number of officers who are joint specialty officers: 

381; Total number of filled joint positions: 2,493; Percent of joint 

positions filled by joint specialty officers or nominees: 74.



Service: Air Force; Number of officers who are joint specialty officer 

nominees: 1,491; Number of officers who are joint specialty officers: 

314; Total number of filled joint positions: 2,620; Percent of joint 

positions filled by joint specialty officers or nominees: 69.



Service: Marine Corps; Number of officers who are joint specialty 

officer nominees: 318; Number of officers who are joint specialty 

officers: 49; Total number of filled joint positions: 479; Percent of 

joint positions filled by joint specialty officers or nominees: 77.



Service: Navy; Number of officers who are joint specialty officer 

nominees: 1,024; Number of officers who are joint specialty officers: 

196; Total number of filled joint positions: 1,638; Percent of joint 

positions filled by joint specialty officers or nominees: 74.



Service: Total; Number of officers who are joint specialty officer 

nominees: 4,299; Number of officers who are joint specialty officers: 

940; Total number of filled joint positions: 7,230; Percent of joint 

positions filled by joint specialty officers or nominees: 72.



Source: GAO’s analysis of DOD data.



[End of table]



We note, however, that DOD met this requirement by relying heavily on 

joint specialty officer nominees who filled more than 80 percent of the 

positions being filled by joint specialty officers or joint specialty 

officer nominees. This ranged from 79 percent in the Army to 87 percent 

in the Marine Corps. Comparable figures for the Air Force and the Navy 

are 83 percent and 84 percent, respectively.



DOD Promoting Officers with Joint Experience with Mixed Results:



The Goldwater-Nichols Act established promotion requirements and 

objectives for officers being selected for appointment to the general 

or flag officer pay grade and for mid-grade officers who are serving or 

have served in joint positions.



General and Flag Officer Promotions:



The Goldwater-Nichols Act set a requirement that officers must complete 

a full tour of duty in a joint duty assignment, or receive a waiver, 

prior to being selected for appointment to the general or flag officer 

pay grade. The Secretary of Defense may waive the requirement for (1) 

officers when the selection is necessary for the good of the service; 

(2) officers with scientific and technical qualifications for which 

joint requirements do not exist; (3) medical officers, dental officers, 

veterinary officers, medical service officers, nurses, biomedical 

science officers, chaplains, or judge advocates; (4) officers who had 

served at least 180 days in a joint assignment at the time the 

selection board convened and the officer’s total consecutive service in 

joint duty positions within that immediate organization is not less 

than 2 years; and (5) officers who served in a joint assignment prior 

to 1987 that involved significant duration of not less than 12 

months.[Footnote 23]



As of fiscal year 2001, DOD has been promoting more officers who had 

the requisite joint experience to the general and flag officer pay 

grades than it did in fiscal year 1995. In fiscal year 2001, however, 

DOD still relied on allowable waivers in lieu of joint experience to 

promote one in four officers to these senior pay grades. Figure 4 shows 

that the percentage of officers who were selected for promotion to the 

general and flag officer pay grades, and who had previous joint 

experience, rose from 51 percent in fiscal year 1995 to 80 percent in 

fiscal year 1999. Conversely, DOD’s reliance on waivers decreased from 

49 percent in fiscal year 1995 to 

20 percent in fiscal year 1999. Figure 4 also shows, however, that DOD 

experienced slight increases in its use of promotion waivers in fiscal 

years 2000 and 2001.



Figure 4: Percentage of Officers Promoted to General or Flag Rank with 

Joint Experience between Fiscal Years 1995 and 2001:



[See PDF for image]



Note: DOD did not report this information in this format prior to 

fiscal year 1995.



[End of figure]



DOD’s reliance on good-of-the-service waivers,[Footnote 24] in 

particular, to promote officers who had not previously served in joint 

positions is one indicator of how DOD is promoting its senior 

leadership. The service secretaries request use of this waiver 

authority when they believe they have sound justification for promoting 

an officer who (1) has not completed a full tour of duty in a joint 

position and (2) does not qualify for promotion through one of the 

other four specific waivers. We analyzed the extent to which DOD has 

relied on this waiver category to promote its senior officers because 

these waivers apply most directly to the population of general and flag 

officers who are likely to be assigned to senior leadership positions 

in the joint organizations.[Footnote 25] The Secretary of Defense has 

also paid particular attention to this waiver category and, in 2000, 

established a policy that restricts the use of good-of-the-service 

waivers to 10 percent of total promotions to the general and flag 

officer pay grades each year.[Footnote 26]



DOD approved 185 good-of-the-service waivers, representing 11 percent 

of the 1,658 promotions to the general and flag officer pay grades, 

between fiscal years 1989 and 2001. Specifically, DOD approved 10 or 

more good-of-the-service waivers each year between fiscal years 1989 

and 1998 and only 3 to 7 waivers in fiscal years 1999 through 2001. DOD 

relied most heavily on good-of-the-service waivers in fiscal year 1995, 

when it approved 25 waivers, and used them on a decreasing basis 

between fiscal years 1995 and 1999. In fiscal year 1999, DOD approved 

just 3 good-of-the service waivers. In the 2 years since the Secretary 

of Defense issued limitations on the use of these waivers, DOD has used 

them in about 5 percent of its promotions. Figure 5 shows the extent to 

which DOD has used good-of-the-service waivers between fiscal years 

1989 and 2001.



Figure 5: Good-of-the-Service Waiver Usage for Fiscal Years 1989 

through 2001:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



For most appointments to the general and flag level made after 

September 30, 2007, officers will have to meet the requirements 

expected of a joint specialty officer.[Footnote 27] This means that 

most officers, in addition to completing a full tour of duty in a joint 

position, will also have to complete DOD’s joint education program as 

well.[Footnote 28] Our analysis of the 124 officers promoted in fiscal 

year 2001 showed that 58 officers, or 47 percent, had not fulfilled the 

joint specialty officer requirements. These 58 officers included 18 of 

43 officers promoted in the Air Force, 18 of 40 officers promoted in 

the Army, 19 of 33 officers promoted in the Navy, and 3 of the 8 

officers promoted in the Marine Corps.



Mid-grade Officer Promotions:



The Goldwater-Nichols Act also established promotion policy objectives 

for officers serving in pay grades O-4 and above who (1) are serving on 

or have served on the Joint Staff, (2) are designated as joint 

specialty officers, and (3) are serving in or have served in other 

joint positions. DOD has been most successful in achieving its 

promotion objectives for officers assigned to the Joint Staff, but it 

has made less significant progress in achieving the promotion 

objectives for officers in the other two categories.[Footnote 29] 

(Appendix III provides detailed promotion data.):



DOD has been most successful in meeting the promotion objective set for 

officers assigned to the Joint Staff. The act established an 

expectation that officers who are serving or have served on the Joint 

Staff be promoted, as a group, at a rate not less than the rate of 

officers who are serving or have served in their service 

headquarters.[Footnote 30] Between fiscal years 1988 and 1994, DOD met 

its promotion objectives for officers assigned to the Joint Staff in 43 

out of 68 promotion groups, or 63 percent of the time. Between fiscal 

years 1995 and 2001, DOD met this objective in 55 out of 60 promotion 

groups, or 92 percent of the time.



DOD has also made improvements in meeting its promotion objective for 

joint specialty officers. The act established an expectation that joint 

specialty officers, as a group, be promoted at a rate not less than the 

rate of officers who are serving or have served in their service 

headquarters.[Footnote 31] Between fiscal years 1988 and 1994, DOD met 

this promotion objective in 26 of 52 promotion groups, or 50 percent of 

the time. Between fiscal years 1995 and 2001, DOD met the promotion 

objective in 37 out of 50 promotion groups, or 74 percent of the time. 

Where DOD did not meet its promotion objective was somewhat random and 

we were not able to attribute problem areas to specific pay grades or 

services. As we noted earlier, this standard has been temporarily 

reduced, and, through December 2004, DOD is required to promote joint 

specialty officers, as a group, at a rate not less than the rate for 

other officers in the same service, pay grade, and competitive 

category. We also compared the promotion rates of joint specialty 

officers against this lower standard and found that, with few 

exceptions, DOD would have met this standard between fiscal years 1988 

and 2001.



DOD has made less significant improvement in meeting its promotion 

objective for officers assigned to other joint organizations.[Footnote 

32] The act established an expectation that officers who are serving or 

have served in joint positions be promoted, as a group, at a rate not 

less than the rate for all officers in their service.[Footnote 33] 

Between fiscal years 1988 and 1994, DOD met its promotion objective in 

41 out of 82 promotion groups, or 50 percent of the time. Between 

fiscal years 1995 and 2001, DOD met this objective in 60 out of 84 

promotion groups, or 71 percent of the time. With few exceptions during 

the last 7 years, all services are meeting the promotion objective for 

their officers being promoted to the O-5 pay grade who are assigned to 

the other joint organizations. However, the services have had 

significant difficulty meeting the promotion objectives for their 

officers being promoted to the O-6 pay grade. For example, the Navy has 

failed to meet this objective for its O-6 officers since fiscal year 

1988, and the Army has only met this promotion objective twice--in 

fiscal years 1995 and 2001--since fiscal year 1988. The Air Force has 

generally met this objective for its officers at the O-6 pay grade, but 

it has not met this objective in the past 4 years. Conversely, the 

Marine Corps had difficulty in meeting this promotion objective for its 

officers at the O-6 pay grade between fiscal years 1988 and 1994, but 

it met this objective in every year until fiscal year 2001.



Lack of a Strategic Approach Is Contributing to DOD’s Difficulties to 

Fully Respond to the Act’s Intent:



A significant impediment affecting DOD’s ability to fully realize the 

cultural change that was envisioned by the act is the fact that DOD has 

not taken a strategic approach to develop officers in joint matters. 

For example, DOD has not identified how many joint specialty officers 

it needs, and the four services have emphasized joint officer 

development to varying degrees. In addition, DOD has not yet, within a 

total force concept, fully addressed how it will provide joint 

development to reserve officers who are serving in joint organizations-

-despite the fact that it is increasingly relying on reservists to 

carry out its mission. Moreover, DOD has not been tracking certain data 

in a consistent manner that would help DOD measure its progress in 

following a strategy to meet the act’s overall objectives and its own 

goals as well.



DOD Lacks a Strategic Plan Regarding Joint Officer Development:



DOD has issued a number of publications, directives, and policy papers 

regarding joint officer development. However, it has not developed a 

strategic plan that establishes clear goals for officer development in 

joint matters and links those goals to DOD’s overall mission and goals. 

This lack of an overarching vision or strategy will continue to hamper 

DOD’s ability to make continued progress in this area. A well-developed 

human capital strategy would provide a means for aligning all elements 

of DOD’s human capital management, including joint officer development, 

with its broader organizational objectives. Professional military 

education and joint assignments are tools that an organization can use 

to shape its officer workforce, fill gaps, and meet future 

requirements.



In prior reports and testimony, we identified strategic human capital 

management planning as a governmentwide high-risk area and a key area 

of challenge.[Footnote 34] We stated that agencies, including DOD, need 

to develop integrated human capital strategies that support the 

organizations’ strategic and programmatic goals. In March 2002, we 

issued an exposure draft of our model for strategic human capital 

management to help federal agency leaders effectively lead and manage 

their people.[Footnote 35] We also testified on how strategic human 

capital management can contribute to transforming the cultures of 

federal agencies.[Footnote 36]



Several DOD studies have also identified the need for a more strategic 

approach to human capital planning within DOD. The 8th Quadrennial 

Review of Military Compensation, completed in 1997, strongly advocated 

that DOD adopt a strategic human capital planning approach. The review 

found that DOD lacked an institutionwide process for systematically 

examining human capital needs or translating needs into a coherent 

strategy. Subsequent DOD and service studies, including the Defense 

Science Board Task Force on Human Resources Strategy and the Naval 

Personnel Task Force, endorsed the concept of human capital strategic 

planning.



DOD’s Joint Vision 2020 portrays a future in which the armed forces are 

“fully joint: intellectually, operationally, organizationally, 

doctrinally, and technically.” To exploit emerging technologies and to 

respond to diverse threats and new enemy capabilities requires 

increasingly agile, flexible, and responsive organizations. The vision 

requires the services to reexamine traditional criteria governing span 

of control and organizational layers; to develop organizational 

climates that reward critical thinking, encourage competition of ideas, 

and reduce barriers to innovation; to develop empowered individual 

warfighters; and to generate and reinforce specific behaviors such as 

judgment, creativity, adaptability, initiative, teamwork, commitment, 

and innovative strategic and operational thinking.



The Goldwater-Nichols Act not only defined new duty positions and 

educational requirements but also envisioned a new culture that is 

truly oriented toward joint matters. The key question, today, is how 

does DOD best seize the opportunity and build on current momentum. In 

April 2002, the Office of the Secretary of Defense issued the Military 

Personnel Human Resource Strategic Plan to establish the military 

priorities for the next several years. The new military personnel 

strategy captures the DOD leadership’s guidance regarding aspects of 

managing human capital, but the strategy’s linkage to the overall 

mission and programmatic goals is not stated. DOD’s human capital 

strategy does not address the vision cited in Joint Vision 2020. DOD’s 

human capital approach to joint officer development--if it were linked 

to its overall mission--would emphasize individuals with the knowledge, 

skills, and abilities needed to function in the joint environment.



Number of Joint Specialty Officers Needed Unknown:



DOD has not fully assessed how many joint specialty officers it 

actually needs. As we have previously shown, the number of joint 

specialty officers has decreased by almost 60 percent over the years, 

and DOD has a significant backlog of officers who, although otherwise 

qualified, have not been designated as joint specialty officers. 

Moreover, without knowing how many joint specialty officers it needs, 

DOD’s joint professional military education system may not be 

structured or targeted properly. For example, without first defining 

how many officers should be joint specialty officers--all officers, 

most officers, or only those needed to fill joint positions--DOD has 

not been able to determine the number of joint professional military 

education graduates it needs. Although we have already noted that there 

are many vacant seats at the Joint Forces Staff College, DOD does not 

know if the total number of available seats is sufficient to meet its 

needs or if it will need to explore alternatives for providing joint 

education to greater numbers of officers.



Furthermore, comments from officers we surveyed at various commands 

demonstrate that they place different values on the importance of the 

joint specialty designation. Overall, officers told us that they viewed 

their assignment to a joint position as a positive experience and that 

their services also saw joint assignments as valuable career moves. 

Moreover, 51 percent of the officers surveyed responded that an 

assignment to a joint position is a defined aspect of their career 

path. Responses ranged from 57 percent in the Air Force, to 52 percent 

in the Army, 47 percent in the Navy, and 29 percent in the Marine 

Corps. However, many officers also told us that they were reluctant to 

seek the joint specialty designation. Their concern was that they would 

be flagged as joint specialty officers and, accordingly, be reassigned 

to subsequent tours of duty within joint organizations. They were 

concerned about the need to balance the requirements of already crowded 

service career paths and the expectation to serve in joint 

organizations. Their ultimate concern was that multiple joint 

assignments would take them away from service assignments for too great 

a period and that this time away could adversely affect their career 

progression and promotion potential. The officers responded that the 

joint specialty officer designation was not really important for the 

rank and 

file--but really only important for those who were going to be admirals 

and generals. In other words, these officers believed that the need to 

meet service expectations seemed to override any advantages that the 

joint specialty officer designation might provide. Our survey and more 

detailed responses to that survey are presented in appendix IV.



Service Emphasis on Joint Education and Assignments Varies:



Each of the four services has been assigning officers in pay grades O-

4 through O-6 to joint organizations and, as of fiscal year 2002, about 

50 percent of the services’ mid-level officers had served in at least 

one joint assignment. The percentage of officers who served in a joint 

position ranged from 46 percent in the Navy and the Marine Corps to 52 

percent and 57 percent in the Air Force and the Army, respectively.



Data--including some that we have already presented--however, suggest 

that the four services continue to struggle to balance joint 

requirements against their own service needs and vary in the degree of 

importance that they place on joint education, assignments, and 

promotions. The Air Force, for example, filled 16 more than its 1,983 

allocated seats at the Joint Forces Staff College between fiscal years 

1996 and 2001. During that 6-year period, the Air Force actually 

surpassed its collective allocation by 

1 percent. The Marine Corps left 13 of its 316 allocated seats, or 4 

percent, unfilled during those same fiscal years. Also during that time 

period, the Army left 192 of 1,760 seats, or 11 percent, unfilled and 

the Navy left 193 of 1,288 allocated seats, or 15 percent, unfilled. 

Accordingly, the Air Force has been able to send a higher percentage of 

its officers to a joint position after the officers attend a joint 

professional military education school. In fiscal year 2001, for 

example, 44 percent of Air Force officers serving in joint positions 

had previously attended a joint professional military education school. 

In contrast, 38 percent of Army officers and 33 percent of Navy and 

Marine Corps officers serving in joint positions had attended a joint 

professional military education school prior to their joint 

assignments. This difference can be largely attributed to the fact that 

the Air Force sends a higher percentage of its officers at the O-4 pay 

grade to the Joint Forces Staff College.



Promotion statistics also suggest differences among the services. As we 

noted earlier, the Navy did not meet the pay grade O-6 promotion 

objective for officers serving in joint organizations other than the 

Joint Staff, and who are not joint specialty officers, between fiscal 

years 1988 and 2001. The Army met this objective 2 times, the Marine 

Corps met it 6 times, and the Air Force met it 10 times in the 14-year 

period. Our analysis of general and flag officer promotions showed 

that, between fiscal years 1995 and 2000, the Marine Corps used good-

of-the service waivers to promote 

19 percent of its officers to brigadier general. The Army used this 

waiver authority for 17 percent of its promotions, and the Navy used 

the authority for 13 percent of its promotions. In contrast, the Air 

Force only approved one good-of-the-service waiver during that time 

period.



Development of Reserve Officers in Joint Positions Not Fully Realized:



The Goldwater-Nichols Act states that the Secretary of Defense should 

establish personnel policies for reserve officers that emphasize 

education and experience in joint matters.[Footnote 37] A recent 

congressionally-sponsored study concluded, however, that DOD has not 

yet met this requirement and that DOD’s reserve components lack 

procedures to identify and track positions that will provide reserve 

officers with the knowledge and experience that come from working with 

other services and from joint operations.[Footnote 38] Providing 

education in joint matters to reservists has become increasingly 

important since 1986, given that DOD has increasingly relied on 

reservists in the conduct of its mission. When the act was enacted, 

reservists were viewed primarily as an expansion force that would 

supplement active forces during a major war. Since then the Cold War 

has ended and a shift has occurred in the way DOD uses the reserve 

forces. Today, no significant military operation can be conducted 

without reserve involvement. In addition, the current mobilization for 

the war on terrorism is adding to this increased use and is expected to 

last a long time. A few of the officers who attended our focus groups 

were, in fact, reservists serving on active duty in joint commands. We 

excluded their responses, however, since the educational and experience 

requirements for joint officers do not directly apply to reserve 

officers and, as indicated above, the Secretary of Defense has not as 

yet issued personnel policies emphasizing education and experience in 

joint matters for reserve officers as required by the Goldwater-Nichols 

Act. Nevertheless, many of the active duty officers we spoke with 

raised the issue of providing education to reservists.



We interviewed officers at several joint organizations and found that 

reservists are serving in positions at all levels from the Chief of 

Staff at one command down to the mid-grade officer positions. Moreover, 

DOD has identified 2,904 additional positions that it will fill with 

reservists when it operates under mobilized conditions. All of this 

suggests that reservists can be assigned to joint positions without the 

benefit of joint education.



In 1995, the Office of the DOD Inspector General recommended that DOD 

develop policy guidance that provides for the necessary training and 

education of reserve component officers assigned to joint 

organizations. The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and 

Readiness concurred with this recommendation. In 1997, we reported that 

DOD officials noted that many details needed to be resolved. For 

example, they said that, since reservists typically perform duties on 

an intermittent or part-time basis, it is difficult for reservists to 

find the time to attend the 3-month second phase of the joint education 

program. Reservists also cannot be readily assigned to locations 

outside of their reserve unit area, thus limiting their availability 

for joint education. Another concern raised by a DOD official was that 

if the education and experience requirements for reservists are too 

stringent, the available pool of reservists who can meet them will be 

limited, thereby denying joint duty assignments to many highly 

qualified personnel. During our review, officials on the Joint Staff 

told us that DOD recently completed a pilot program that considered 

alternatives for providing joint education to reservists. DOD officials 

anticipate that they will be able to deliver joint education to 

reservists through distance-learning beginning in fiscal year 2004.



Difficult to Measure Progress due to Variations in Data Tracking 

Methods:



DOD has a wealth of information to support its implementation of 

provisions in the Goldwater-Nichols Act, and it has been collecting 

data and submitting annual reports to Congress in accordance with the 

act’s reporting requirements. However, in cases where the act does not 

require DOD to report data, DOD has not tracked meaningful information 

that it needs in order to fully assess its progress. For example, DOD 

has not kept historical data on the number of positions in joint 

organizations that are filled with joint specialty officers and joint 

specialty officer nominees. Without trend data, DOD and others cannot 

assess the degree to which DOD is properly targeting its joint 

education program or foresee problematic trends as they arise. Also, 

when we attempted to identify the number of officers who have completed 

both phases of the joint education program, DOD officials told us that 

they did not have fully reliable data because the services do not 

consistently maintain and enter such information into their databases. 

Furthermore, DOD does not track the degree to which reservists are 

filling joint positions. Given that DOD plans to offer joint education 

to reservists and that reservists are serving in joint positions, 

tracking this type of data would help DOD identify reservists who have 

joint education and experience during mobilizations.



Effective organizations link human capital approaches to their overall 

mission and programmatic goals. An organization’s human capital 

approaches should be designed, implemented, and assessed by the 

standard of how well they help an organization pursue its mission and 

achieve desired results or outcomes. High-performing organizations use 

data to determine key performance objectives and goals that enable them 

to evaluate the success of their human capital approaches. Collecting 

and analyzing data are fundamental building blocks for measuring the 

effectiveness of human capital approaches in support of the mission and 

goals of the agency.



Conclusions:



DOD has taken positive steps to implement the major provisions of the 

Goldwater-Nichols Act that address joint officer development. However, 

DOD has not taken a strategic approach toward joint officer development 

and, without a strategic plan that will address the development of the 

total force in joint matters, it is more than likely that DOD will 

continue to experience difficulties in the future in meeting the 

provisions of the Goldwater-Nichols Act. While DOD has made progress in 

implementing provisions of the law, it has not identified how many 

joint specialty officers it needs. Moreover, the fact that the four 

services have emphasized the development of their officers in joint 

matters to varying degrees suggests that DOD has not taken a fully 

unified approach and that service parochialisms still prevail. 

Addressing these points will provide DOD with data it needs to 

determine whether it has the resources or capacity to deliver its two-

phased joint education program to all of the active duty officers who 

need it. Furthermore, although DOD is increasingly relying upon its 

reserve forces, including using reserves in some of its key joint 

positions, it has not fully assessed how it will develop its reserve 

officers in joint matters. Finally, DOD has not been consistent in 

tracking key indicators since enactment of the act in 1986. A strategic 

plan that is designed appropriately will help DOD assess progress made 

toward meeting the act’s specific objectives and overall intent 

regarding joint officer development.



Recommendation for Executive Action:



Because the services lack the guidance they need to undertake a unified 

approach that will address the development of the total force in joint 

matters, we recommend that the Secretary of Defense direct the Under 

Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness to develop a strategic 

plan that links joint officer development to DOD’s overall mission and 

goals. At a minimum, this plan should (1) identify the number of joint 

specialty officers needed, (2) include provisions for the education and 

assignment of reservists who are serving in joint organizations, and 

(3) be developed in a manner to provide DOD with more meaningful data 

to track progress made against the plan.



Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:



We requested written comments from the Department of Defense, but none 

were provided. However, the Office of the Vice Director, Joint Staff, 

did provide us with DOD’s oral comments in which DOD partially 

concurred with our recommendation that it develop a strategic plan that 

links joint officer development to DOD’s overall mission and goals. DOD 

stated that its ability to develop a strategic plan, that would improve 

DOD’s capability to conduct successful joint operations, is limited by 

the current legislation that specifies 1) quotas that artificially 

drive the production of joint specialty officers, 2) requirements that 

limit the availability of the second phase of DOD’s joint education 

program, and 3) post-education requirements that make advance planning 

for joint education difficult. DOD added that it views provisions in 
the 

act as impediments that must be removed before it can develop an 

effective strategic plan. Our report recognizes that DOD is required 

to comply with numerous provisions in the act that address the 
education, 

assignment, and promotion of officers in joint matters. While we 

recognize that DOD must be mindful of these provisions as it attempts 

to develop a strategic plan, we do not believe that the act’s 

provisions prohibit DOD from developing a strategic plan to achieve its 

goals. We believe that DOD will not be able to demonstrate that changes 

to the law are needed unless it first develops a strategic plan that 

identifies the department’s goals and objectives for joint officer 

development and produces empirical data to support needed changes.



In response to our recommendation that DOD develop a strategic plan 

that identifies the number of joint specialty officers needed, DOD 

asserted that numerical quotas prevent it from pursuing a strategic 

approach to joint officer development that is based on true joint 

specialty requirements. Instead, DOD stated that it will produce about 

1,000 joint specialty officers each year in order to satisfy the law. 

However, the statute does, in fact, provide some flexibility and 

permits the Secretary of Defense to determine the number of joint 

specialty officers. The act only requires that approximately one-half 

of the joint positions be filled at any time by officers who have 

either successfully completed the joint education program or received 

an allowable waiver to complete the education after their joint 

assignment. DOD also asserted that officers today are more experienced 

in joint matters and therefore believes that the difference between a 

joint educated officer and a joint specialty officer has diminished. 

During our review, officers who participated in our focus groups told 

us they believe that today’s senior leaders should have joint 

experience and education. We continue to believe that, in the absence 

of a strategic plan that is requirements based, DOD is not in a 

position to determine whether it is producing too many or too few joint 

specialty officers.



In response to our recommendation that a strategic plan should include 

provisions for the education and assignment of reservists who are 

serving in joint organizations, DOD stated that it has recently 

finalized guidance for their development and management and is 

developing a joint education program for reserve officers. However, 

this guidance was not available at the time of our review. The act 

states that the Secretary of Defense should establish personnel 

policies for reserve officers that emphasize education and experience 

in joint matters. Our report acknowledges the steps DOD is taking. 

Given that reservists play an integral role within the total force, we 

view these recent actions that DOD is taking to integrate reserve 

officers in joint matters as positive steps.



In response to our recommendation that a strategic plan should be 

developed in a manner to provide DOD with more meaningful data to track 

progress made against the plan, DOD reported that it is revamping the 

data system it uses to evaluate joint officer management. When 

complete, DOD stated that it will have current and historical data and 

that this information will be used to identify and correct 

inconsistencies. We believe that a strategic plan would help DOD 

identify its goals and track progress made in its joint officer 

program. We view DOD’s effort in this area as a positive step, provided 

that the revamped data system gives DOD the information it needs to 

better manage its joint officer program.



DOD also commented on our findings that address critical joint duty 

positions, joint education, and general and flag officers promotions.



Concerning critical joint duty positions, DOD stated that it is further 

inhibited from achieving its joint vision by a legislative requirement 

to identify 800 critical joint duty positions and fill them with joint 

specialty officers. Moreover, DOD questioned whether there is a valid 

requirement for critical billets within joint organizations. DOD 

believes that the essential factors that should be considered to 

identify those officers who best meet the needs of a joint organization 

are service competencies and expertise in a military occupational 

skill. It stated that joint qualifications should be viewed as one of 

many attributes that can be used. Although we did not validate the 

numerical requirements for critical joint positions, we do discuss 

difficulties DOD has experienced in filling these positions with joint 

specialty officers. In the absence of a strategic plan that is 

requirements based, we continue to believe that DOD is not in a 

position to determine whether it is filling its critical billets 

appropriately.



Regarding joint education, DOD stated that it realizes the value of 

joint education and the importance of acculturating its officers in 

joint matters. However, DOD also stated that it does not have the 

flexibility it needs to educate top quality officers in joint matters. 

DOD viewed the existing requirements that it must follow as inhibitors 

to good personnel management and further stated that these requirements 

cause some officers to miss joint education due to timing limitations. 

DOD believes that, in order to develop an effective strategic plan, it 

needs greater flexibility and that leveraging new educational 

technologies would facilitate its ability to prepare officers for the 

joint environment. Specifically, DOD asserted that, while it has the 

flexibility to offer the first phase of its joint education program in 

both resident and nonresident settings, it can only provide the second 

phase of its joint education program in an in-resident setting, and 

then must assign 50 percent of the graduates to a joint assignment. Our 

report acknowledges the progress DOD has made in providing joint 

education to its officers and the difficulties DOD has experienced in 

providing the second phase of its joint education program. We believe, 

however, that while legislative provisions address the education needed 

to qualify an officer for the joint specialty, DOD is not precluded 

from using new technologies and alternative venues to provide joint 

education. While officers educated under alternative approaches may not 

be awarded the joint specialty officer designation, these officers, 

nonetheless, would be better educated in joint matters and prepared for 

joint positions. We continue to believe that a strategic approach will 

help DOD better identify its joint education needs.



Concerning general and flag officer promotions to pay grade O-7, DOD 

acknowledged that our findings regarding waiver usage are correct. 

However, DOD believed that without further analysis, our finding that 

DOD still relies heavily on allowable waivers to promote one in four 

officers to this level without joint experience is misleading. DOD 

pointed out that a closer examination of the types of waivers used 

might be a better indicator of how well it is doing. In our report, we 

identify the five categories of allowable waivers. We discuss the 

progress DOD has made in promoting officers with joint experience as 

well as its progress in limiting its use of good-of-the-service waivers 

in particular. During our review, we attempted to obtain data on the 

other categories of waivers. However, DOD does not capture and report 

waiver usage by the various categories in its annual reports and DOD 

was not able to provide it to us at the time of our review.



We are sending copies of this report to appropriate congressional 

committees. We are also sending copies of this report to the Secretary 

of Defense; the Secretaries of the Air Force, Army, and Navy; the 

Commandant of the Marine Corps; and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of 

Staff. We will also make copies available to others upon request. In 

addition, this report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web 

site at http://www.gao.gov.



If you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, please 

call me at (202) 512-5140. Major contributors to this report are listed 

in appendix V.



Derek B. Stewart

Director

Defense Capabilities and Management:



Signed by Derek B. Stewart:



[End of section]



Appendix I: Scope and Methodology:



To examine the steps the Department of Defense (DOD) has taken to 

address the education and assignment of officers in joint matters, we 

initially conducted a legislative history of the act, reviewed joint 

directives and publications, and analyzed data contained in the 

Goldwater-Nichols Act Implementation Reports that are presented as an 

appendix to DOD’s Annual Reports to the Congress for fiscal years 1988 

through 2001. We also analyzed data contained in DOD’s joint duty 

assignment list database and interviewed and gathered data from 

officials serving in the Manpower and Personnel Directorate within the 

Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and the 

four military services headquarters. In certain cases, we analyzed data 

dating back to fiscal year 1989. In other cases, we could only analyze 

data going back to fiscal year 1996 due to changes in DOD’s reporting 

methods that made comparisons difficult. We used fiscal year 2001 as 

our end point because that year represents the last year for which 

complete annual data were available.



To assess the services’ compliance with provisions that pertain to the 

promotion of officers to the flag and general officer pay grades, we 

measured the extent to which the services promoted officers with the 

requisite joint experience or used allowable waivers. In addition, we 

obtained and analyzed individual biographies and service histories for 

each officer promoted to these senior pay grades in fiscal year 2001. 

To analyze the extent to which DOD has complied with provisions that 

address the promotions of mid-grade officers who are serving or have 

served in joint positions, we obtained and analyzed data from the 

Manpower and Personnel Directorate within the Joint Staff for fiscal 

years 1988 through 2001.



To evaluate impediments affecting DOD’s ability to fully respond to the 

act’s intent, we reviewed previously issued Department of Defense 

vision statements and human resource strategic plans. We also analyzed 

existing data to measure trends over time and identify the key reasons 

why DOD is having difficulty in responding to the act.



We interviewed agency officials and obtained data at the following 

locations:



* Manpower and Personnel Directorate, Joint Chiefs of Staff, 

Washington, D.C.;



* Operational Plans and Interoperability Directorate, Joint Chiefs of 

Staff, Washington, D.C.;



* Office of the Secretary of Defense, Force Management and Policy, 

Washington, D.C.;



* Air Force Education Branch, Headquarters, U.S. Air Force, Washington, 

D.C.;



* Joint Officer Management Branch, Air Force Personnel Center, Randolph 

Air Force Base, Texas;



* Joint Management Branch, Army Personnel Command, Alexandria, 

Virginia;



* Office of Joint Officer Management Policy Office, Naval Bureau of 

Personnel, Arlington, Virginia;



* Marine Corps Training and Education Command, Quantico, Virginia;



* Personnel Management Division, Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps, 

Quantico, Virginia;



* National Defense University, Washington, D.C.; and:



* Joint Forces Staff College, Norfolk, Virginia.



To obtain the perspectives of officers serving in joint positions on 

joint officer development, we surveyed 557 officers and conducted focus 

group discussions with 513 officers serving in 11 different locations. 

We did not conduct a random sample due to the dispersion of officers 

serving in joint positions, and, therefore, cannot project from the 

information the officers provided us. However, we did attempt to 

include the different types of organizations in which officers serve in 

joint positions by selecting the Joint Staff, three geographic 

commands, two functional commands, three combined forces commands, and 

two defense agencies. While the results cannot be projected, the 

population of officers surveyed reflects the overall composition of the 

joint duty assignment list. At each location, we administered a survey 

(shown in appendix IV) and conducted focus group interviews with active 

duty officers in pay grades O-4, O-5, and O-6. To gain firsthand 

information from officers serving in joint duty positions, we asked 

them about their joint education and assignments. We also asked them 

about the value they place on (1) serving in a joint position and 

(2) attaining the joint specialty officer designation. In addition, we 

conducted individual interviews with senior officers and personnel 

officers at the commands we visited.



We surveyed officers and conducted focus group discussions at the 

following offices, commands, and agencies:



Joint Chiefs of Staff, Washington, D.C.



Combined Commands

Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, Mons, Belgium

Allied Forces South, Naples, Italy

U.S. Forces Korea, Seoul, Korea:



Functional Commands

Special Operations Command, Tampa, Florida

Strategic Command, Omaha, Nebraska:



Geographic Commands

Joint Forces Command, Norfolk, Virginia

European Command, Stuttgart, Germany

Pacific Command, Honolulu, Hawaii:



Defense Agencies

Defense Information Systems Agency, Arlington, Virginia

Defense Intelligence Agency, Arlington, Virginia:



We administered surveys, but did not conduct site visits, to officers 

serving in joint positions at the following locations within the U.S. 

Central Command’s area of responsibility:



* Joint Task Force--Southwest Asia,



* Office of Military Cooperation--Egypt, and:



* U.S. Military Training--Saudi Arabia:



We conducted our review from January 2002 through October 2002 in 

accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.



[End of section]



Appendix II: Demographic Data for Joint Positions:



This appendix presents information about the distribution of joint 

positions in DOD’s joint duty assignment list by organization, pay 

grade, and occupational category.



Table 5 identifies the major commands and activities where joint 

positions are located and the number of joint positions that were in 

each command or activity in fiscal year 2001.



Table 5: Joint Positions by Major Command or Activity:



Organizations/Activities: U.S. Pacific Command; Number of positions: 

923.



Organizations/Activities: U.S. European Command; Number of positions: 

602.



Organizations/Activities: U.S. Central Command; Number of positions: 

575.



Organizations/Activities: U.S. Joint Forces Command; Number of 

positions: 564.



Organizations/Activities: U.S. Strategic Command; Number of positions: 

539.



Organizations/Activities: U.S. Special Operations Command; Number of 

positions: 438.



Organizations/Activities: U.S. Space Command; Number of positions: 356.



Organizations/Activities: U.S. Southern Command; Number of positions: 

344.



Organizations/Activities: U.S. Transportation Command; Number of 

positions: 242.



Organizations/Activities: North American Aerospace Defense Command; 

Number of positions: 112.



Organizations/Activities: Allied and North Atlantic Treaty 

Organization activities; Number of positions: 884.



Organizations/Activities: Defense Agencies; Number of positions: 

1,669.



Organizations/Activities: Office of the Secretary of Defense; Number of 

positions: 365.



Organizations/Activities: Miscellaneous DOD and other activities; 

Number of positions: 267.



Organizations/Activities: Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff; Number of 

positions: 158.



Organizations/Activities: Joint Staff and miscellaneous joint 

activities; Number of positions: 877.



Organizations/Activities: General and flag officer joint positions; 

Number of positions: 231.



Organizations/Activities: Total; Number of positions: 9,146.



Source: GAO’s analysis of DOD data.



[End of table]



In fiscal year 2001, DOD’s joint duty assignment list contained 9,146 

joint positions for active duty officers in pay grades O-4 and above. 

Figure 6 shows that 80 percent of the positions were equally divided 

between the O-4 and O-5 pay grades.



Figure 6: Distribution of Joint Positions by Pay Grade:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



Joint positions include a wide range of occupational categories. Figure 

7 shows that, in fiscal year 2001, the single largest percentage of 

joint positions fell within the category of tactics and operations. 

Officers with military occupation skills such as aviation and 

navigation, armor and infantry, and surface and submarine warfare serve 

in this category of positions. The second largest percentage of joint 

positions fell within the intelligence category. This category includes 

strategic intelligence, politico-military affairs, and information 

operations.



Figure 7: Distribution of Joint Positions by Occupational Categories:



[See PDF for image]



[End of figure]



[End of section]



Appendix III: Mid-Level Promotion Statistics:



The Goldwater-Nichols Act established promotion policy objectives for 

three categories of mid-level officers who are serving in or have 

served in joint positions. The act set expectations that these officers 

be promoted at a rate not less than the promotion rate of their peers. 

The services are expected to:



* promote officers who are in or have been assigned to the Joint Staff, 

as a group, at a rate equal to or better than the promotion rate of 

officers who are or have been assigned to their service headquarters;



* promote joint specialty officers, as a group, at a rate equal to or 

better than the promotion rate of officers who are or have been 

assigned to their service headquarters; and:



* promote officers who are serving in or have served in other joint 

assignments, as a group, that are not included in the previous two 

categories, at a rate equal to or better than their service average 

promotion rates.



For our analysis, we compared progress DOD made between fiscal years 

1988 and 1994 with progress DOD made between fiscal years 1995 and 

2001. For each of the three promotion categories (Joint Staff, joint 

specialty officers, and officers serving in other joint positions), we 

multiplied the three pay grades by the four services by the 7 years and 

identified 84 potential promotion groups. We then eliminated those 

groups in which no promotions occurred to identify the actual promotion 

groups. We then counted the number of groups in which DOD met or 

exceeded the applicable standard.



Table 6 shows that DOD met its promotion objectives for mid-level 

officers assigned to the Joint Staff in 43 out of 68 promotion groups 

between fiscal years 1988 and 1994, or 63 percent of the time. Between 

fiscal years 1995 and 2001, DOD met this objective in 55 out of 60 

promotion groups, or 92 percent of the time.



Table 6: Promotion Rates for Mid-Level Officers Assigned to the Joint 

Staff Compared to Officers Assigned to Their Service Headquarters 

during Fiscal Years 1988 through 2001:



[See PDF for image]



Source: GAO’s analysis of DOD data.



[End of table]



Table 7 shows that DOD met its promotion objectives for mid-level joint 

specialty officers in 26 out of 52 promotion groups between fiscal 

years 1988 and 1994, or 50 percent of the time. Between fiscal years 

1995 and 2001, DOD met this objective in 37 out of 50 promotion groups, 

or 

74 percent of the time.



Table 7: Promotion Rates for Mid-Level Joint Specialty Officers 

Compared to Promotion Rates of Officers Assigned to Their Service 

Headquarters during Fiscal Years 1988 through 2001:



[See PDF for image]



Source: GAO’s analysis of DOD data.



[End of table]



Table 8 shows that DOD met its promotion objectives for mid-level 

officers assigned to joint organizations other than the Joint Staff in 

41 out of 82 promotion groups between fiscal years 1988 and 1994, or 50 

percent of the time. Between fiscal years 1995 and 2001, DOD met this 

objective in 60 out of 84 promotion groups, or 71 percent of the time.



Table 8: Promotion Rates for Mid-Level Officers Assigned to Other Joint 

Organizations Compared to the Board Average Promotion Rate during 

Fiscal Years 1988 through 2001:



[See PDF for image]



Note: Asterisks (*) indicate that the other joint officer promotion 

rate was not equal to or greater than the service board average 

promotion rate.



[End of table]



Source: GAO’s analysis of DOD data.



[End of section]



Appendix IV: Survey Questionnaire and Summary of Responses:



We administered a survey to 557 officers serving in joint positions 

regarding their current joint duty assignment, their thoughts and 

opinions on joint duty assignments in general, joint professional 

military education, and other opinions regarding joint officer 

management. A copy of the survey appears at the end of this summary.



Officers’ Background:



Although the survey findings cannot be generalized to all officers 

serving in joint positions, the composition of the officers in our 

survey generally reflected the service and pay grade distribution in 

DOD’s joint duty assignment list. Thirty-seven percent of the officers 

were in the Air Force, 33 percent were in the Army, 24 percent were in 

the Navy, and about 6 percent were in the Marine Corps. Forty-seven 

percent of the officers were in pay grade O-4, 35 percent were in pay 

grade O-5, and 18 percent were in pay grade O-6. On average, the 

officers we surveyed had 16 years of commissioned service.



We asked the officers in our survey to identify their current joint 

duty position in the context of broad functional areas and types of 

duties performed.



* Twenty-seven percent of the officers responded that their joint 

positions fell within the functional area of strategic, tactical, or 

contingency operations. Their duties involved command and control of 

combat operations or combat support forces; military operations; or the 

planning, development, staffing, assessment, or implementation of plans 

or requirements for forces and materiel.



* Twenty-eight percent of the officers surveyed responded that their 

joint positions fell within the functional area of direct or general 

support or the development, staffing, or assessment of military 

doctrine or policy.



* Forty-five percent of the officers responded that they were engaged 

in the functional areas of education and training or administration. 

They performed duties that included (1) directing, commanding, and 

controlling noncombat units, organizations, or activities or:



* (2) providing general, administrative, or technical support services 

to military operations.



Seventy-one percent of the officers we surveyed were serving in their 

first joint duty position in the joint duty assignment list. Twenty-one 

percent of the officers were in their second joint duty position, and 

the remaining 8 percent were serving in their third joint duty 

position.



Officers’ Views on Joint Assignments:



Most officers (85 percent) responded that their service had clearly 

defined the career path for their military occupation. On the other 

hand, just over half (51percent) of the officers responded that a joint 

assignment was a clearly defined component of their career path and 

about 35 percent of the officers responded that a joint duty assignment 

was not a well-defined aspect of their career path. (Fourteen percent 

of the officers responded that they were unsure.):



Most officers (70 percent) responded that a joint duty assignment was 

beneficial to their career to a moderate or very great extent, while 

about 19 percent responded that a joint duty assignment was beneficial 

only to a little extent. The remaining 7 percent of the officers 

responded that a joint duty assignment was not beneficial to their 

careers. We asked the officers to identify the greatest incentive for 

serving in a joint position. The most common response offered by Army, 

Air Force, and Marine Corps officers was that joint duty assignments 

broadened their experience, perspective, and knowledge of the 

multiservice and multinational environment. The most common response 

offered by officers in the Navy was that joint duty assignments 

enhanced their promotion potential and professional development. 

Conversely, when we asked officers to provide their opinion regarding 

the greatest disincentive to serving in a joint duty position, officers 

in all of the services cited the time they spent in a joint position 

that took them away from their service.



Officers’ Views of Phase I of DOD’s Joint Professional Military 

Education Program:



Seventy-seven percent of the officers we surveyed had attended the 

first phase of DOD’s joint professional military education program. 

Among those who had attended the first phase, 56 percent completed it 

at one of the professional military education schools and 44 percent 

completed Phase I through a nonresident program.



Most officers (59 percent) responded that the first phase of the joint 

education program was beneficial to their careers to a great or 

moderate extent. Sixty-three percent of the officers responded that it 

was important to a great or moderate extent to complete the first phase 

of the joint education prior to serving in a joint position. Sixty-six 

percent of the officers believed that the first phase of the joint 

education increased their effectiveness in their joint position. 

Officers in all services responded that the first phase of the joint 

education provided a foundation of joint knowledge--a first exposure to 

joint doctrine, other service’s methods, and the operational and 

strategic levels of war-fighting.



Officers’ Views of Phase II of DOD’s Joint Professional Military 

Education Program:



Thirty-six percent of the officers we surveyed said that they had 

attended the second phase of DOD’s joint professional military 

education program. The majority of these officers had attended the 

Joint Forces Staff College in Norfolk, Virginia (92 percent), while 

significantly smaller percentages had attended the Industrial College 

of the Armed Forces (5 percent) and the National War College (3 

percent).



Sixty-four percent of the officers had not completed the second phase 

of the joint professional military education program and the 

overwhelming majority (86 percent) of these officers reported that they 

would not likely attend the second phase before the end of their 

current joint duty assignment. Officers in all services cited timing, 

budget, and logistics issues as reasons for not attending the second 

phase after reporting to a joint assignment. They added their views 

that neither the losing nor gaining command wanted to be responsible 

for funding the education.



About 60 percent of the officers responded that it was important to 

complete the second phase of the joint professional military education 

program prior to serving in a joint assignment and that this education 

would increase an officer’s effectiveness in a joint position. Slightly 

fewer officers (56 percent) responded that the second phase of the 

joint education program was beneficial to their careers.



[End of section]



Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:



GAO Contact:



Brenda S. Farrell (202) 512-3604:



Acknowledgments:



In addition, Ann M. Asleson, James R. Bancroft, Larry J. Bridges, 

Jocelyn O. Cortese, Herbert I. Dunn, Jack E. Edwards, Alicia E. 

Johnson, David E. Moser, Krislin M. Nalwalk, Madelon B. Savaides, and 

Susan K. Woodward contributed to this report.



FOOTNOTES



[1] Pub. L. 99-433, Oct. 1, 1986.



[2] Department of Defense, Joint Vision 2010 and Joint Vision 2020, 

Washington, D.C. 



[3] The Goldwater-Nichols Act uses the term joint duty assignment. For 

the purposes of this report, we use the term joint positions.



[4] Congress defined joint matters as those matters relating to the 

integrated employment of land, sea, and air forces, including matters 

relating to national military strategy, strategic planning and 

contingency planning, and command and control of combat operations 

under unified command. 10 U.S.C. sec. 668.



[5] There are four methods for an officer to be selected for the joint 

specialty: (1) An officer completes joint professional military 

education and subsequently serves in a joint position; (2) An officer 

who has a military occupational specialty that is a critical 

occupational specialty involving combat operations, serves in a joint 

position, and then completes the joint professional military education 

program; (3) An officer serves in a joint position and then completes 

the joint professional military education, provided the Secretary of 

Defense determines a waiver is in the interest of sound personnel 

management; and (4) An officer completes two joint assignments and the 

Secretary of Defense waives the joint education requirement. A 

numerical limitation on the last two waivers is specified in the law. 

10 U.S.C. sec. 661.



[6] 10 U.S.C. secs. 619a (b), 661 (c)(3) (and) (d)(2)(C), 663 (d). 



[7] Report of the Panel on Military Education of the 100th Congress, 

Committee on Armed Services, House of Representatives, April 21, 1989.



[8] Pub. L. 107-107, Div. A, Title V, sec. 525 (a), (b), Dec. 28, 2001.



[9] 10 U.S.C. sec. 664 (i).



[10] Pub. L. 99-433, Oct. 1, 1986; 10 U.S.C. secs. 661 (c), 662 (a), 

and 663 (d).



[11] 10 U.S.C. sec. 661 (c).



[12] These schools include the Air Command and Staff College and the 

Air War College in Montgomery, Alabama; the Army Command and General 

Staff College in Leavenworth, Kansas; the Army War College in Carlisle, 

Pennsylvania; the Marine Corps Command and Staff College and the Marine 

Corps War College in Quantico, Virginia; and the College of Naval 

Command and Staff and the College of Naval Warfare in Newport, Rhode 

Island.



[13] 10 U.S.C. sec. 661 (b) and (d).



[14] 10 U.S.C. sec. 663 (e).



[15] 10 U.S.C. sec. 663 (e).



[16] 10 U.S.C. sec. 663 (d).



[17] The Goldwater-Nichols Act was amended in 1993 to allow DOD the 

flexibility to send these officers to a joint position as their first 

or second assignment after graduation. 10 U.S.C. sec. 663 (d)(2)(A).



[18] 10 U.S.C. 663 (d)(1).



[19] The act originally required the Secretary to designate no fewer 

than 1,000 critical joint duty positions, but the act was amended in 

1996 by Public Law 104-106 section 501(a) to reduce the number to 800. 

10 U.S.C. sec. 661 (d)(2)(A).



[20] 10 U.S.C. sec. 661 (d)(2)(B) and (C). 



[21] 10 U.S.C. sec. 662 (a)(2).



[22] In order for those nominated for the joint specialty to count 

toward the approximate 50 percent requirement, the officers must have 

completed joint professional military education prior to their joint 

assignment or have a military occupational specialty that is designated 

as a critical occupational specialty involving combat operations. 

Officers with critical occupational specialties involving combat, 

therefore, can be nominated to be joint specialty officers without 

having completed joint professional military education prior to their 

joint assignment. 10 U.S.C. sec. 661 (d)(1).



[23] 10 U.S.C. sec. 619a (b).



[24] 10 U.S.C. sec. 619a (b)(1).



[25] We did not analyze the four other waiver categories because they 

apply to officers for whom joint requirements generally do not exist, 

officers who already had joint experience that predated the 

implementation of the Goldwater-Nichols Act, and officers who were 

already serving in joint positions when they were selected for 

promotion.



[26] Secretary of Defense memorandum dated July 6, 2000.



[27] 10 U.S.C. sec. 619a (a)(2).



[28] The existing waiver authority remains unchanged by the amendments 

made to 10 U.S.C. sec. 619a (a) by the National Defense Authorization 

Act for Fiscal Year 2002. Pub. L. 107-107, Div. A, Title V, sec. 525, 

Dec. 28, 2001.



[29] For our analysis, we compared progress DOD made between fiscal 

years 1988 and 1994 with progress DOD made between fiscal years 1995 

and 2001. For each of the three promotion categories (Joint Staff, 

joint specialty officers, and other officers serving in joint 

positions), we multiplied the three pay grades by the four services by 

the 7 years and identified 84 potential promotion groups. We then 

eliminated those groups in which no promotions occurred to identify the 

actual promotion groups. We then counted the number of groups in which 

DOD met or exceeded the applicable standard. DOD is required to report, 

on an annual basis, the extent to which it met the promotion objectives 

in a given year. However, DOD is not required to report this type of 

trend analysis over time. 10 U.S.C. sec. 662 (b).



[30] The Goldwater-Nichols Act states that “officers who are serving 

on, or have served on, the Joint Staff are expected, as a group, to be 

promoted to the next higher grade at a rate not less than the rate for 

officers of the same armed force in the same grade and competitive 

category who are who are serving on, or have served on, the 

headquarters staff of their armed force.” 10 U.S.C. sec. 662 (a)(1).



[31] The Goldwater-Nichols Act states that “officers who have the joint 

specialty are expected, as a group, to be promoted at a rate not less 

than the rate for officers of the same armed force in the same grade 

and competitive category who are serving on, or have served on, the 

headquarters staff of their armed force.” 10 U.S.C. sec. 662 (a)(2).



[32] This category excludes officers who have served on the Joint Staff 

and joint specialty officers.



[33] The Goldwater-Nichols Act states that “officers who are serving 

in, or have served in, joint duty assignments (other than officers 

covered in paragraphs (1) and (2)) are expected, as a group, to be 

promoted to the next higher grade at a rate not less than the rate for 

all officers of the same armed force in the same grade and competitive 

category.” 10 U.S.C. sec. 662 (a)(3).



[34] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Human Capital: A Self-

Assessment Checklist for Agency Leaders, GAO/OGC-00-14G (Washington, 

D.C.: Sept. 2000); Human Capital: Major Human Capital Challenges at the 

Departments of Defense and State, GAO-01- 565T (Washington, D.C.: Mar 

29, 2001); and Major Management Challenges and Program Risks: 

Department of Defense, GAO-01-244 (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 2001).



[35] See U.S. General Accounting Office, A Model of Strategic Human 

Capital Management, Exposure Draft, GAO-02-373SP (Washington, D.C.: 

Mar. 2002).



[36] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Managing for Results: Building 

on the Momentum for Strategic Human Capital Reform, GAO-02-528T 

(Washington, D.C.: Mar.18, 2002).



[37] 10 U.S.C. sec. 666.



[38] See Congressional Research Service, Department of Defense 

Reorganization Act of 1986: Proposals for Reforming the Joint Officer 

Personnel Management Program (Washington, D.C.: July 18, 2000).



GAO’s Mission:



The General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, 

exists to support Congress in meeting its constitutional 

responsibilities and to help improve the performance and accountability 

of the federal government for the American people. GAO examines the use 

of public funds; evaluates federal programs and policies; and provides 

analyses, recommendations, and other assistance to help Congress make 

informed oversight, policy, and funding decisions. GAO’s commitment to 

good government is reflected in its core values of accountability, 

integrity, and reliability.



Obtaining Copies of GAO Reports and Testimony:



The fastest and easiest way to obtain copies of GAO documents at no 

cost is through the Internet. GAO’s Web site ( www.gao.gov ) contains 

abstracts and full-text files of current reports and testimony and an 

expanding archive of older products. The Web site features a search 

engine to help you locate documents using key words and phrases. You 

can print these documents in their entirety, including charts and other 

graphics.



Each day, GAO issues a list of newly released reports, testimony, and 

correspondence. GAO posts this list, known as “Today’s Reports,” on its 

Web site daily. The list contains links to the full-text document 

files. To have GAO e-mail this list to you every afternoon, go to 

www.gao.gov and select “Subscribe to daily E-mail alert for newly 

released products” under the GAO Reports heading.



Order by Mail or Phone:



The first copy of each printed report is free. Additional copies are $2 

each. A check or money order should be made out to the Superintendent 

of Documents. GAO also accepts VISA and Mastercard. Orders for 100 or 

more copies mailed to a single address are discounted 25 percent. 

Orders should be sent to:



U.S. General Accounting Office



441 G Street NW,



Room LM Washington,



D.C. 20548:



To order by Phone: 	



	Voice: (202) 512-6000:



	TDD: (202) 512-2537:



	Fax: (202) 512-6061:



To Report Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in Federal Programs:



Contact:



Web site: www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm E-mail: fraudnet@gao.gov



Automated answering system: (800) 424-5454 or (202) 512-7470:



Public Affairs:



Jeff Nelligan, managing director, NelliganJ@gao.gov (202) 512-4800 U.S.



General Accounting Office, 441 G Street NW, Room 7149 Washington, D.C.



20548: