Air Force Senior Airman Madelyn Keech, DOD
As part of the Defense Department's ongoing effort to cut wasteful spending, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth signed a memo directing the termination of more than $580 million in programs, contracts and grants.
The memo, "Continuing Elimination of Wasteful Spending at the Department of Defense," orders an end to various spending identified by the Department of Government Efficiency that doesn't match the priorities of President Donald J. Trump or the Defense Department, Hegseth said during prerecorded remarks.
"In other words, the expenditures aren't a good use of taxpayer dollars; and, ultimately, that's who funds us," Hegseth said.
"We owe taxpayers transparency and making sure we're using the money well," he added.
The top contract being cut is a software development program for the Defense Civilian Human Resources Management System, which was intended to streamline a significant portion of DOD's legacy human resources program.
The program started in 2018 and was supposed to take one year to develop at a cost of $36 million. However, Hegseth said it is now nearly eight years behind schedule and $280 million over budget.
"So, that's 780% over budget; we're not doing that anymore," he added.
The Pentagon is also cutting contracts for external consulting services, including $30 million allotted to one company that purchased several unused licenses, Hegseth said.
In addition to contracts, DOD is also cutting $360 million in grants.
Included are a $6 million grant to decarbonize emissions from Navy ships, a $5.2 million grant to diversify the Navy and a $9 million university grant for developing "equitable AI and machine learning models," Hegseth said.
"I need lethal machine learning models, not equitable machine learning models," he added.
Hegseth said the $580 million of cuts announced in today's memo brings the total money saved to $800 million since his Feb. 20, 2025, announcement on future DOD cuts.
He said that the money saved would ensure warfighters have what they need thanks to the cutting of fraud, waste and abuse.
"The warfighters are working hard, we're working hard with them, we appreciate the work that they're doing, and we have a lot more coming," Hegseth said.
"So, stay tuned … We're going to keep going for you guys," he concluded.
Latest from Defense and Munitions
- Echodyne radars selected by Zone 5 Technologies for counter-drone defense solutions
- Datanomix, Fulcrum modernize manufacturing tech stacks with seamless ERP + production monitoring integration
- Quaker Houghton's new automation technologies to transform fluid management in manufacturing operations
- Hydra MAX sets the standard for next-gen military SATCOM as ALL.SPACE achieves TRL 6
- Integris Composites named armor partner for U.S. Army's XM30 Combat Vehicle
- EROWA's Giant Tooling System
- #55 Lunch + Learn Podcast with KINEXON
- Nikon SLM Solutions, Additive Assurance integrating AMiRIS Inside for enhanced in-process quality assurance