US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is expected to unveil sweeping changes to how the Pentagon purchases weapons on Friday, allowing the military to more rapidly acquire technology amid growing global threats.
Hegseth plans to address industry leaders, military commanders, and officials at the National War College, where he will detail the transformation of the Defense Acquisition System in accordance with an executive order signed by President Donald Trump in April, according to a draft memorandum seen by Reuters.
“We need acquisition and industry to be as strong and fast as our war fighters,” Hegseth said. “The Warfighting Acquisition System will dramatically shorten timelines, improve and expand the defense industrial base, boost competition and empower acquisition officials to take risks and make trade-offs.”
The reforms target what Pentagon officials call "unacceptably slow" procurement, which they blame on fragmented accountability and misaligned incentives that have hampered the military's ability to field new technology quickly.
“We’re leaving the old, failed process behind, and will instead embrace a new agile and results-oriented approach that used to take sometimes- when you add it up with requirements- three to eight years, we believe can happen within a year," he said.
“At times we’ve been too damn slow to respond,” Hegseth added. “What we’re doing today marks a new horizon for how we acquire and deliver warfighting capabilities. We’re prioritizing speed, flexibility, competition and calculated risk taking.”
Legacy defense contractors like Lockheed Martin and RTX are expected to attend alongside newer defense entrants like Palantir Technologies, Ursa Major Technologies, maritime drone maker Saronic, and electronic warfare company Epirus.
The restructuring creates Portfolio Acquisition Executives who will have direct authority over major weapons programs to eliminate bureaucracy. The acquisition chain will run directly from program managers to these portfolio executives to military service branch acquisition leaders, with no intermediate approval layers.
Pentagon reforms aim to speed up weapon purchases
The reforms require at least two qualified sources for critical program content through initial production.
This is the latest in a series of reforms. Earlier in the year, the Pentagon changed how it purchased software.
Commercial products will become the default acquisition approach, streamlining the solicitation process, the memo says. The changes also call for time-indexed contract incentives that reward early delivery and penalize delays proportionally.
The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, the Pentagon's chief weapons buyer, will chair monthly Acquisition Acceleration Reviews to track implementation, remove barriers, and monitor defense industrial base competition.
Jerusalem Post Staff contributed to this report