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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony before the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and 
Afghanistan: 

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 9:30 a.m. EDT:
Monday, April 25, 2011: 

Contingency Contracting: 

Observations on Actions Needed to Address Systemic Challenges: 

Statement of Paul L. Francis, Managing Director: 
Acquisition and Sourcing Management: 

GAO-11-580: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-580, a statement before the Commission on Wartime 
Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Department of Defense (DOD) obligated about $367 billion in fiscal 
year 2010 to acquire goods and services to meet its mission and 
support its operations, including those in Iraq and Afghanistan. GAO’s 
work, as well as that of others, has documented shortcomings in DOD’s 
strategic and acquisition planning, contract administration and 
oversight, and acquisition workforce. These are challenges that need 
to be addressed by DOD and by the Department of State and the U.S. 
Agency for International Development (USAID) as they carry out their 
missions in Iraq and Afghanistan and prepare for future contingencies. 
Today’s statement discusses (1) contract management challenges faced 
by DOD, including those that take on heightened significance in a 
contingency environment; (2) actions DOD has taken and those needed to 
address these challenges; and (3) similar challenges State and USAID 
face. The statement is drawn from GAO’s body of work on DOD 
contingency contracting, contract management, and workforce, as well 
as prior reports on State and USAID’s contracting and workforce issues. 

What GAO Found: 

DOD faces a number of longstanding and systemic challenges that hinder 
its ability to achieve more successful acquisition outcomes—obtaining 
the right goods and services, at the right time, at the right cost. 
These challenges include addressing the issues posed by DOD’s reliance 
on contractors, ensuring that DOD personnel use sound contracting 
approaches, and maintaining a workforce with the skills and 
capabilities needed to properly manage acquisitions and oversee 
contractors. The issues encountered with contracting in Iraq and 
Afghanistan are emblematic of these systemic challenges, though their 
significance and impact are heightened in a contingency environment. 
GAO’s concerns regarding DOD contracting predate the operations in 
Iraq and Afghanistan. GAO identified DOD contract management as a high-
risk area in 1992 and raised concerns in 1997 about DOD’s management 
and use of contractors to support deployed forces in Bosnia. In the 
years since then, GAO has continued to identify a need for DOD to 
better manage and oversee its acquisition of services. 

DOD has recognized the need to address the systemic challenges it 
faces, including those related to operational contract support. Over 
the past several years, DOD has announced new policies, guidance, and 
training initiatives, but not all of these actions have been 
implemented and their expected benefits have not yet been fully 
realized. While DOD’s actions are steps in the right direction, DOD 
needs to (1) strategically manage services acquisition, including 
defining desired outcomes; (2) determine the appropriate mix, roles, 
and responsibilities of contractor, federal civilian, and military 
personnel; (3) assess the effectiveness of efforts to address prior 
weaknesses with specific contracting arrangements and incentives; (4) 
ensure that its acquisition workforce is adequately sized, trained, 
and equipped; and (5) fully integrate operational contract support 
throughout the department through education and predeployment 
training. In that regard, in June 2010 GAO called for a cultural 
change in DOD that emphasizes an awareness of operational contract 
support throughout all aspects of the department. In January 2011, the 
Secretary of Defense expressed concerns about DOD’s current level of 
dependency on contractors and directed the department to take a number 
of actions. The Secretary’s recognition and directions are significant 
steps, yet instilling cultural change will require sustained 
commitment and leadership. 

State and USAID face contracting challenges similar to DOD’s, 
particularly with regard to planning for and having insight into the 
roles performed by contractors. In April 2010, GAO reported that State’
s workforce plan did not address the extent to which contractors 
should be used to perform specific functions. Similarly, GAO reported 
that USAID’s workforce plan did not contain analyses covering the agency
’s entire workforce, including contractors. The recently issued 
Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review recognized the need for 
State and USAID to rebalance their workforces and directed the 
agencies to ensure that they have an adequate number of government 
employees to carry out their core missions and to improve contract 
administration and oversight. 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO has made multiple recommendations to the agencies to address 
contracting and workforce challenges. The agencies have generally 
agreed with the recommendations and have efforts under way to 
implement them. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-580] for key 
components. For more information, contact Paul L. Francis at (202) 512-
4841 or francisp@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Chairman Thibault, Chairman Shays, and Commissioners: 

Thank you for inviting me here today to discuss improvements needed in 
contracting and planning for the use of contractors in contingency 
environments. The Department of Defense (DOD) obligated about $367 
billion in fiscal year 2010 to acquire goods and services to meet its 
mission and support its operations, including those in Iraq and 
Afghanistan. Our work, as well as that of the inspectors general and 
the commission itself, has documented critical shortcomings in DOD's 
strategic and acquisition planning, contract administration and 
oversight, and acquisition workforce. Addressing these challenges is 
essential if DOD is to meet the warfighters' needs in a timely and 
cost-conscious manner; mitigate the risks of fraud, waste, and abuse; 
and minimize the operational risks associated with contractors not 
only in today's operations but also in future contingencies. These 
challenges not only need to be addressed by DOD but also by the 
Department of State and the U.S. Agency for International Development 
(USAID) as these agencies carry out the U.S. government's diplomatic 
and development efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan. 

My statement today will discuss (1) contract management challenges DOD 
has faced, including those that take on heightened significance in a 
contingency environment; (2) actions DOD has taken and those remaining 
to address these challenges; and (3) similar challenges facing State 
and USAID. This statement is drawn from our broad body of work on DOD 
contingency contracting, contract management, and acquisition 
workforce, including work reflected in our February 2011 high-risk 
update and our June 2010 testimony on operational contract support 
issues.[Footnote 1] Additionally, we relied on our work on State and 
USAID's contracting and workforce efforts relevant to Iraq and 
Afghanistan. Our prior work was prepared in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards. Those standards require that 
we plan and perform the audits to obtain sufficient, appropriate 
evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe that the 
evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our findings and 
conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

DOD Faces Longstanding and Systemic Contract Management Challenges: 

DOD faces a number of longstanding and systemic challenges that have 
hindered its ability to achieve more successful acquisition outcomes-- 
obtaining the right goods and services, at the right time, at the 
right cost. These challenges include addressing the issues posed by 
DOD's reliance on contractors, ensuring that DOD personnel use sound 
contracting approaches, and maintaining a workforce with the skills 
and capabilities needed to properly manage the acquisitions and 
oversee contractors. The issues encountered in Iraq and Afghanistan 
are emblematic of these systemic challenges, though their significance 
and effect are heightened in a contingency environment. 

DOD's Increased Reliance on Contractors Poses Risks: 

Our concerns about DOD's acquisition of services, including the 
department's reliance on contractors and the support they provide to 
deployed forces, predate the operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. We 
identified DOD contract management as a high-risk area in 1992 and 
since then we continued to identify a need for DOD to better manage 
services acquisitions at both the strategic and individual contract 
levels.[Footnote 2] Similarly, in 1997 we raised concerns about DOD's 
management and use of contractors to support deployed forces in 
Bosnia.[Footnote 3] We issued a number of reports on operational 
contract support since that time, and our recent high-risk update 
specifically highlighted the need for increased management attention 
to address operational contract support. 

Contractors can provide many benefits, such as unique skills, 
expertise, and flexibility to meet unforeseen needs, but relying on 
contractors to support core missions can place the government at risk 
of transferring government responsibilities to contractors. In 2008, 
we concluded that the increased reliance on contractors required DOD 
to engage in a fundamental reexamination of when and under what 
circumstances it should use contractors versus civil servants or 
military personnel.[Footnote 4] Earlier this year, we reported that 
the department lacked good information on the roles and functions 
fulfilled by contractors.[Footnote 5] Our work has concluded that 
DOD's reliance on contractors is still not fully guided by either an 
assessment of the risks using contractors may pose or a systematic 
determination of which functions and activities should be contracted 
out and which should be performed by civilian employees or military 
personnel. 

The absence of systematic assessments of the roles and functions that 
contractors should perform is also evident in contingency 
environments. For example, in June 2010 we reported that DOD had not 
fully planned for the use of contractors in support of operations in 
Iraq and Afghanistan and needed to improve planning for operational 
contract support in future operations.[Footnote 6] In addition, we 
reported that while U.S. Forces-Iraq had taken steps to identify all 
the Army's Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP) contract 
support needed for the drawdown in Iraq, it had not identified the 
other contractor support it may need. We found that the May 2009 
drawdown plan had delegated responsibility for determining contract 
support requirements to contracting agencies rather than to 
operational personnel. However, DOD contracting officials told us that 
they could not determine the levels of contractor services required or 
plan for reductions based on those needs because they lacked 
sufficient, relevant information on requirements for contractor 
services during the drawdown. Similarly for Afghanistan, we found that 
despite the additional contractors that would be needed to support the 
troop increase, U.S. Forces-Afghanistan was engaged in very little 
planning for contractors with the exception of planning for the 
increased use of LOGCAP. 

Further, we have reported on limitations in DOD's ability to track 
contractor personnel deployed with U.S. forces.[Footnote 7] In January 
2007, DOD designated the Synchronized Predeployment and Operational 
Tracker (SPOT) as its primary system for tracking data on contractor 
personnel deployed with U.S. forces. SPOT was designed to account for 
all U.S., local, and third-country national contractor personnel by 
name and to contain a summary of services being provided and 
information on government-provided support. Our reviews of SPOT, 
however, have highlighted shortcomings in the system's implementation 
in Iraq and Afghanistan. For example, we found that varying 
interpretations by DOD officials as to which contractor personnel 
should be entered into the system resulted in SPOT not presenting an 
accurate picture of the total number of contractor personnel in Iraq 
or Afghanistan. In addition, we reported in 2009 that DOD's lack of a 
departmentwide policy for screening local or third-country nationals-- 
who constitute the majority of DOD contractor personnel in Iraq and 
Afghanistan--poses potential security risks.[Footnote 8] We are 
currently assessing DOD's process for vetting firms that are 
supporting U.S. efforts in Afghanistan. 

Regarding planning for the use of contractors in future operations, 
since February 2006 DOD guidance has called for the integration of an 
operational contract support annex--Annex W--into certain combatant 
command operation plans, if applicable to the plan. However, 4 years 
later we reported that of the potential 89 plans that may require an 
Annex W, only 4 operation plans with Annex Ws had been approved by the 
department.[Footnote 9] As a result, DOD risks not fully understanding 
the extent to which it will be relying on contractors to support 
combat operations and being unprepared to provide the necessary 
management and oversight of deployed contractor personnel. Moreover, 
the combatant commanders are missing an opportunity to fully evaluate 
and react to the potential risks of reliance on contractors. 

Weaknesses in Contracting Approaches and Oversight Increase Risk: 

While the strategic level defines the direction and manner in which an 
organization pursues improvements in services acquisition, it is 
through the development, execution, and oversight of individual 
contracts that the strategy is implemented. Keys to doing so are 
having clearly defined and valid requirements, a sound contract, and 
effective contractor management and oversight. In short, DOD, like all 
organizations, needs to assure itself that it is buying the right 
thing in the right way and that doing so results in the desired 
outcome. Our work over the past decade identified weaknesses in each 
of these key areas, whether for services provided in the United States 
or abroad, as illustrated by the following examples: 

* In June 2007, we reported that DOD understated the extent to which 
it used time-and-materials contracts, which can be awarded quickly and 
adjusted when requirements or funding are uncertain.[Footnote 10] We 
found few attempts to convert follow-on work to less risky contract 
types and found wide discrepancies in DOD's oversight. 

* That same month we also reported that DOD personnel failed to 
definitize--or reach final agreement on--contract terms within 
required time frames in 60 percent of the 77 contracts we reviewed. 
[Footnote 11] Until contracts are definitized, DOD bears increased 
risk because contractors have little incentive to control costs. We 
then reported in July 2007 that DOD had not completed negotiations on 
certain task orders in Iraq until more than 6 months after the work 
began and after most of the costs had been incurred, contributing to 
its decision to pay the contractor nearly all of the $221 million 
questioned by auditors.[Footnote 12] We subsequently reported in 2010 
that DOD had taken several actions to enhance departmental insight 
into and oversight of undefinitized contract actions; however, data 
limitations hindered DOD's full understanding of the extent to which 
they are used.[Footnote 13] 

* As early as 2004, we raised concerns about DOD's ability to 
effectively administer and oversee contracts in Iraq. We noted that 
effective contract administration and oversight remained challenging 
in part because of the continued expansion of reconstruction efforts, 
staffing constraints, and need to operate in an unsecure and 
threatening environment.[Footnote 14] In 2008, we reported that the 
lack of qualified personnel hindered oversight of contracts to 
maintain military equipment in Kuwait and provide linguistic services 
in Iraq and questioned whether DOD could sustain increased oversight 
of its private security contractors.[Footnote 15] During our 2010 
visits with deployed and recently returned units, we found that units 
continue to deploy to Afghanistan without designating contracting 
officer's representatives beforehand and that those representatives 
often lacked the technical knowledge and training needed to 
effectively oversee certain contracts.[Footnote 16] Several units that 
had returned from Afghanistan told us that contracting officer's 
representatives with no engineering background were often asked to 
oversee construction projects and were unable to ensure that the 
buildings and projects they oversaw met the technical specifications 
required in the drawing plans. We are currently assessing the training 
on the use of contract support that is provided to military 
commanders, contracting officer's representatives, and other 
nonacquisition personnel before they deploy. 

Continuing Acquisition Workforce Challenges Hinder DOD's Ability to 
Properly Manage Acquisitions: 

Underlying the ability to properly manage the acquisition of goods and 
services is having a workforce with the right skills and capabilities. 
DOD recognizes that the defense acquisition workforce, which was 
downsized considerably through the 1990s, faces increases in the 
volume and complexity of work because of increases in services 
contracting, ongoing contingency operations, and other critical 
missions. For example, while contract spending dramatically increased 
from fiscal years 2001 through 2008, DOD reported that its acquisition 
workforce decreased by 2.6 percent over the same period. 

In April 2010, DOD issued an acquisition workforce plan that 
identified planned workforce growth, specified recruitment and 
retention goals, and forecasted workforce-wide attrition and 
retirement trends. As part of that plan, DOD announced that it would 
increase the size of two oversight organizations--the Defense Contract 
Audit Agency and the Defense Contract Management Agency--over the next 
several years to help reduce the risk of fraud, waste, and abuse in 
DOD contracts. However, we reported in September 2010 that DOD had not 
completed its assessment of the critical skills and competencies of 
its overall acquisition workforce and that it had not identified the 
funding needed for its initiatives until the conclusion of our 
review.[Footnote 17] The current budget situation raises questions as 
to whether DOD will be able to sustain its projected workforce growth 
and related initiatives. We are currently reviewing the Defense 
Contract Management Agency's capacity for oversight and surveillance 
of contracting activity domestically in light of its role in 
contingency operations. 

DOD's Efforts Have Not Yet Resolved Contract Management Challenges or 
Fully Addressed Its Reliance on Contractors: 

DOD has recognized the need to take action to address the challenges 
it faces regarding contract management and its reliance on 
contractors, including those related to operational contract support. 
Over the past several years, the department has announced new 
policies, guidance and training initiatives, but not all of these 
actions have been implemented and their expected benefits have not yet 
been fully realized. While these actions are steps in the right 
direction, we noted in our February 2011 high-risk update that to 
improve outcomes on the billions of dollars spent annually on goods 
and services, sustained DOD leadership and commitment are needed to 
ensure that policies are consistently put into practice.[Footnote 18] 
Specifically we concluded that DOD needs to: 

* take steps to strategically manage services acquisition, including 
defining and measuring against desired outcomes, and developing the 
data needed to do so; 

* determine the appropriate mix, roles, and responsibilities of 
contractor, federal civilian, and military personnel; 

* assess the effectiveness of efforts to address prior weaknesses with 
specific contracting arrangements and incentives; 

* ensure that its acquisition workforce is adequately sized, trained, 
and equipped to meet the department's needs; and: 

* fully integrate operational contract support throughout the 
department through education and predeployment training. 

DOD has generally agreed with the recommendations we have previously 
made and has actions under way to implement them. I would like to 
touch on a few of the actions already taken by DOD. On a broad level, 
for example, improved DOD guidance, DOD's initiation and use of 
independent management reviews for high-dollar services acquisitions, 
and other steps to promote the use of sound business arrangements have 
begun to address several weaknesses, such as the department's 
management and use of time-and-materials contracts and undefinitized 
contract actions. Further, DOD has identified steps to promote more 
effective competition in its acquisitions, such as requiring 
contracting officers to take additional actions when DOD receives only 
one bid in response to a solicitation and revising its training 
curriculum to help program and acquisition personnel develop and 
better articulate the department's requirements. 

Similarly, efforts are under way to reduce the department's reliance 
on contractors. In April 2009, the Secretary of Defense announced his 
intent to reduce the department's reliance on contractors by hiring 
new personnel and by converting, or in-sourcing, functions currently 
performed by contractors to DOD civilian personnel. To help provide 
better insights into, among other things, the number of contractors 
providing services to the department and the functions they perform 
and to help make informed workforce decisions, Congress enacted 
legislation in 2008 requiring DOD to annually compile and review an 
inventory of activities performed pursuant to contracts for 
services.[Footnote 19] In January 2011, we reported that while DOD had 
taken actions to reduce prior inconsistencies resulting from DOD 
components using different approaches to compile the inventory, it 
still faced data and estimating limitations that raised questions 
about the accuracy and usefulness of the data.[Footnote 20] Given this 
early state of implementation, the inventory and associated review 
processes are being used to various degrees by the military 
departments to help inform workforce decisions, with the Army 
generally using the inventories to a greater degree than the other 
military departments. Later this year we will review DOD's strategic 
human capital plans for both its civilian and acquisition workforces, 
the status of efforts to in-source functions previously performed by 
contractor personnel, and DOD's upcoming inventory of services. 

Furthermore, DOD has taken several steps intended to improve planning 
for the use of contractors in contingencies and to improve contract 
administration and oversight. For example, in the area of planning for 
the use of contractors, in October 2008 the department issued Joint 
Publication 4-10, Operational Contract Support, which establishes 
doctrine and provides standardized guidance for and information on 
planning, conducting, and assessing operational contract support 
integration, contractor management functions, and contracting command 
and control organizational options in support of joint operations. DOD 
also provided additional resources for deployed contracting officers 
and their representatives through the issuance of the Joint 
Contingency Contracting Handbook in 2007 and the Deployed Contracting 
Officer's Representative Handbook in 2008. In 2009, the Army issued 
direction to identify the need for contracting officer's 
representatives, their roles and responsibilities, and their training 
when coordinating operational unit replacements. 

Our work found that beyond issuing new policies and procedures, DOD 
needs to fundamentally change the way it approaches operational 
contract support. In June 2010, we called for a cultural change in DOD 
that emphasizes an awareness of operational contract support 
throughout all aspects of the department to help it address the 
challenges it faces in ongoing and future operations.[Footnote 21] 
This view is now apparently shared by the department. In a January 
2011 memorandum, the Secretary of Defense expressed concern about the 
risks introduced by DOD's current level of dependency on contractors, 
future total force mix, and the need to better plan for operational 
contract support in the future. Toward that end, he directed the 
department to undertake a series of actions related to force mix, 
contract support integration, planning, and resourcing. According to 
the Secretary, his intent was twofold: to initiate action now and to 
subsequently codify the memorandum's initiatives in policy and through 
doctrine, organization, training, materiel, leadership, education, 
personnel, and facilities changes and improvements. He concluded that 
the time was at hand, while the lessons learned from recent operations 
were fresh, to institutionalize the changes necessary to influence a 
cultural shift in how DOD views, accounts for, and plans for 
contractors and personnel support in contingency environments. The 
Secretary's recognition and directions are significant steps, yet 
cultural change will require sustained commitment from senior 
leadership for several years to come. 

State and USAID Confront Similar Contracting Challenges: 

While my statement has focused on the challenges confronting DOD, our 
work involving State and USAID has found similar issues, particularly 
related to not planning for and not having insight into the roles 
performed by contractors and workforce challenges. The need for 
visibility into contracts and contractor personnel to inform decisions 
and oversee contractors is critical, regardless of the agency, as each 
relies extensively on contractors to support and carry out its 
missions in Iraq and Afghanistan. 

Our work has identified gaps in USAID and State's workforce planning 
efforts related to the role and extent of reliance on contractors. We 
noted, for example, in our 2004 and 2005 reviews of Afghanistan 
reconstruction efforts that USAID did not incorporate information on 
the contractor resources required to implement the strategy, hindering 
its efforts to make informed resource decisions.[Footnote 22] More 
generally, in June 2010, we reported that USAID's 5-year workforce 
plan for fiscal years 2009 through 2013 had a number of deficiencies, 
such as lacking supporting workforce analyses that covered the 
agency's entire workforce, including contractors, and not containing a 
full assessment of the agency's workforce needs, including identifying 
existing workforce gaps and staffing levels required to meet program 
needs and goals.[Footnote 23] 

Similarly, in April 2010, we noted that State's departmentwide 
workforce plan generally does not address the extent to which 
contractors should be used to perform specific functions, such as 
contract and grant administration.[Footnote 24] As part of State's 
fiscal year 2011 budget process, State asked its bureaus to focus on 
transitioning some activities from contractors to government 
employees. State officials told us, however, that departmentwide 
workforce planning efforts generally have not addressed the extent to 
which the department should use contractors because those decisions 
are left up to individual bureaus. State noted that in response to 
Office of Management and Budget guidance, a pilot study was underway 
regarding the appropriate balance of contractor and government 
positions, to include a determination as to whether or not the 
contracted functions are inherently governmental, closely associated 
to inherently governmental, or mission critical. 

In the absence of strategic planning, we found that it was often 
individual contracting or program offices within State and USAID that 
made case-by-case decisions on the use of contractors to support 
contract or grant administration functions.[Footnote 25] For example, 
USAID relied on a contractor to award and administer grants in Iraq to 
support community-based conflict mitigation and reconciliation 
projects, while State relied on a contractor to identify and report on 
contractor performance problems and assess contractor compliance with 
standard operating procedures for its aviation program in Iraq. State 
and USAID officials generally cited a lack of sufficient number of 
government staff, the lack of in-house expertise, or frequent 
rotations among government personnel as key factors contributing to 
their decisions to use contractors. 

Our work over the past three years to provide visibility into the 
number of contractor personnel and contracts associated with the U.S. 
efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan found that State and USAID continue to 
lack good information on the number of contractor personnel working 
under their contracts.[Footnote 26] State and USAID had agreed to use 
the SPOT database to track statutorily-required information. The 
system still does not reliably track the agencies' information on 
contracts, assistance instruments, and associated personnel in Iraq or 
Afghanistan. As a result, the agencies relied on other data sources, 
which had their own limitations, to respond to our requests for 
information. We plan to report on the agencies' efforts to track and 
use data on contracts, assistance instruments, and associated 
personnel in Iraq or Afghanistan later this year. 

The agencies have generally agreed with the recommendations we have 
made to address these challenges. To their credit, senior agency 
leaders acknowledged that they came to rely on contractors and other 
nongovernmental organizations to carry out significant portions of 
State and USAID's missions. For example, the Quadrennial Diplomacy and 
Development Review (QDDR), released in December 2010, reported that 
much of what used to be the exclusive work of government has been 
turned over to private actors, both for profit and not for profit. As 
responsibilities mounted and staffing levels stagnated, State and 
USAID increasingly came to rely on outsourcing, with contracts and 
grants to private entities often representing the default option to 
meet the agencies' growing needs. Further, the QDDR recognized the 
need for the agencies to rebalance the workforce by determining what 
functions must be conducted by government employees and what functions 
can be carried out by nongovernment entities working on behalf of and 
under the direction of the government. As part of this effort, the 
QDDR called for State and USAID to ensure that work that is critical 
to carrying out their core missions is performed by an adequate number 
of government employees. The review also recommended that for 
contractor-performed functions, the agencies develop well-structured 
contracts with effective contract administration and hold contractors 
accountable for performance and results. Along these lines, the 
Administrator of USAID recently announced a series of actions intended 
to improve the way USAID does business, including revising its 
procurement approach. 

The acknowledgment of increased contractor reliance and the intention 
to examine their roles is important, as is developing well-structured 
contracts and effectively administering contracts. Left unaddressed, 
these challenges may pose potentially serious consequences to 
achieving the U.S. government's policy objectives in Iraq and 
Afghanistan. For example, in March 2011, the Secretary of State 
testified that the department is not in an "optimal situation," with 
contractors expected to comprise 84 percent of the U.S. government's 
workforce in Iraq. We recently initiated a review of State's capacity 
to plan for, award, administer, and oversee contracts with performance 
in conflict environments, such as Iraq and Afghanistan. As part of 
this review, we will assess the department's workforce both in terms 
of number of personnel and their expertise to carry out acquisition 
functions, including contractor oversight. We will also assess the 
status of the department's efforts to enhance its workforce to perform 
these functions. 

Concluding Observations: 

The issues I discussed today--contract management, the use of 
contractors in contingency environments, and workforce challenges--are 
not new and will not be resolved overnight, but they need not be 
enduring or intractable elements of the acquisition environment. The 
challenges encountered in Iraq and Afghanistan are the result of 
numerous factors, including poor strategic and acquisition planning, 
inadequate contract administration and oversight, and an insufficient 
number of trained acquisition and contract oversight personnel. These 
challenges manifest in various ways, including higher costs, schedule 
delays, and unmet goals, but they also increase the potential for 
fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement in contingency environments 
such as Iraq and Afghanistan. While our work has provided examples 
that illustrate some effects of such shortcomings, in some cases, 
estimating their financial effect is not feasible or practicable. The 
inability to quantify the financial impact should not, however, 
detract from efforts to achieve greater rigor and accountability in 
the agencies' strategic and acquisition planning, internal controls, 
and oversight efforts. Stewardship over contingency resources should 
not be seen as conflicting with mission execution or the safety and 
security of those so engaged. 

Toward that end, the agencies have recognized that the status quo is 
not acceptable and that proactive, strategic, and deliberate analysis 
and sustained commitment and leadership are needed to produce 
meaningful change and make the risks more manageable. DOD has 
acknowledged the need to institutionalize operational contract support 
and set forth a commitment to encourage cultural change in the 
department. State and USAID must address similar challenges, including 
the use and role of contractors in contingency environments. The 
recent QDDR indicates that the agencies have recognized the need to do 
so. These efforts are all steps in the right direction, but agreeing 
that change is needed at the strategic policy level must be reflected 
in the decisions made by personnel on a day-to-day basis. 

Chairman Thibault, Chairman Shays, this concludes my prepared 
statement. I would be happy to respond to any questions you or the 
other commissioners may have. 

Contacts and Acknowledgments: 

For further information about this statement, please contact me at 
(202) 512-4841 or francisp@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this statement. Individuals who made key contributions to this 
statement include Johana R. Ayers, Vince Balloon, Jessica Bull, Carole 
Coffey, Timothy DiNapoli, Justin Jaynes, Sylvia Schatz, Sally 
Williamson, and Gwyneth Woolwine. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] GAO, High-Risk Series: An Update, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-278] (Washington, D.C.: February 
2011) and Warfighter Support: Cultural Change Needed to Improve How 
DOD Plans for and Manages Operational Contract Support, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-829T] (Washington, D.C.: June 29, 
2010). 

[2] For example, see GAO, Best Practices: Taking a Strategic Approach 
Could Improve DOD's Acquisition of Services, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-230] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 18, 
2002); Defense Acquisitions: Tailored Approach Needed to Improve 
Service Acquisition Outcomes, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-20] (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 9, 
2006); and Defense Acquisitions: Further Actions Needed to Address 
Weaknesses in DOD's Management of Professional and Management Support 
Contracts, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-39] 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 20, 2009). 

[3] GAO, Contingency Operations: Opportunities to Improve the 
Logistics Civil Augmentation Program, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/NSIAD-97-63] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 
11, 1997). 

[4] GAO, Defense Management: DOD Needs to Reexamine Its Extensive 
Reliance on Contractors and Continue to Improve Management and 
Oversight, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-572T] 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 11, 2008). 

[5] GAO, Defense Acquisitions: Further Action Needed to Better 
Implement Requirements for Conducting Inventory of Service Contract 
Activities, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-192 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 14, 2011). 

[6] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-829T]. 

[7] GAO, Iraq and Afghanistan: DOD, State, and USAID Face Continued 
Challenges in Tracking Contracts, Assistance Instruments, and 
Associated Personnel, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-1] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 1, 
2010); Contingency Contracting: DOD, State, and USAID Continue to Face 
Challenges in Tracking Contractor Personnel and Contracts in Iraq and 
Afghanistan, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-1] 
(Washington, D.C.: Oct. 1, 2009); and Contingency Contracting: DOD, 
State, and USAID Contracts and Contractor Personnel in Iraq and 
Afghanistan, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-19] 
(Washington, D.C.: Oct. 1, 2008). 

[8] GAO, Contingency Contract Management: DOD Needs to Develop and 
Finalize Background Screening and Other Standards for Private Security 
Contractors, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-351] 
(Washington, D.C.: July 31, 2009). 

[9] GAO, Warfighter Support: DOD Needs to Improve Its Planning for 
Using Contractors to Support Future Military Operations, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-472] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 30, 
2010). 

[10] GAO, Defense Contracting: Improved Insight and Controls Needed 
over DOD's Time-and-Materials Contracts, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-273] (Washington, D.C.: June 29, 
2007). 

[11] GAO, Defense Contracting: Use of Undefinitized Contract Actions 
Understated and Definitization Time Frames Often Not Met, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-559] (Washington, D.C.: June 19, 
2007). 

[12] GAO, Defense Contract Management: DOD's Lack of Adherence to Key 
Contracting Principles on Iraq Oil Contract Put Government Interests 
at Risk, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-839] 
(Washington, D.C.: July 31, 2007). 

[13] GAO, Defense Contracting: DOD Has Enhanced Insight into 
Undefinitized Contract Action Use, but Management at Local Commands 
Needs Improvement, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-299] 
(Washington, D.C.: Jan. 28, 2010). 

[14] GAO, Rebuilding Iraq: Fiscal Year 2003 Contract Award Procedures 
and Management Challenges, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-605] (Washington, D.C.: June 1, 
2004). 

[15] GAO, Military Operations: DOD Needs to Address Contract Oversight 
and Quality Assurance Issues for Contracts Used to Support Contingency 
Operations, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1087] 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 26, 2008). 

[16] While the responsibility for ensuring that a contractor meets the 
requirements as set forth in the contract rests with the contracting 
officer, a contracting officer's representative may be appointed to 
provide day-to-day oversight. Contracting officer's representatives 
are not normally contracting specialists, and often their oversight 
responsibility is an additional duty. Unlike the contracting officer, 
they cannot direct the contractor by making commitments or changes 
that affect price, quality, quantity, delivery, or other terms and 
conditions of the contract; instead, they act as the "eyes and ears" 
of the contracting officer and serve as the liaison between the 
contractor and the contracting officer. 

[17] GAO, Human Capital: Further Actions Needed to Enhance DOD's 
Civilian Strategic Workforce Plan, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-814R] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 27, 
2010). 

[18] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-278]. 

[19] National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008, Pub. L. 
No. 110-181, § 807. 

[20] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-192]. 

[21] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-829T]. 

[22] GAO, Afghanistan Reconstruction: Deteriorating Security and 
Limited Resources Have Impeded Progress; Improvements in U.S. Strategy 
Needed, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-403] 
(Washington, D.C.: June 2, 2004) and Afghanistan Reconstruction: 
Despite Some Progress, Deteriorating Security and Other Obstacles 
Continue to Threaten Achievement of U.S. Goals, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-742] (Washington, D.C.: July 28, 
2005). 

[23] GAO, Foreign Assistance: USAID Needs to Improve Its Strategic 
Planning to Address Current and Future Workforce Needs, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-496] (Washington, D.C.: June 30, 
2010). 

[24] GAO, Contingency Contracting: Improvements Needed in Management 
of Contractors Supporting Contract and Grant Administration in Iraq 
and Afghanistan, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-357] 
(Washington, D.C.: Apr. 12, 2010). 

[25] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-357]. 

[26] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-1], [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-1], and [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-19]. 

[End of section] 

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