Pentagon reportedly looking to cut civilian workforce by at least 50,000
The Pentagon is reported to be hoping to reduce its civilian workforce by about 50,000 to 60,000 people, chiefly through voluntary means, it has been reported.
ABC News quotes one senior defense official saying: “The number sounds high, but I would focus on the percentage, a 5% to 8% reduction is not a drastic one. [It] can be done without negatively impacting readiness, in order to make sure that our resources are allocated in the right direction.”
The cuts are expected to come from freezing hiring, dismissing probationary workers with less than one or two years service, and by people taking up an offer to resign on full pay until the end of September.
Key events
Associated Press reports that one program shuttered by the Trump administration cutting off funding to USAid is in Vietnam, where clean-up efforts have been halted.
At a former American airbase in southern Vietnam the removal of toxic soil contaminated with the US army’s Agent Orange defoliant has been abruptly stopped, and work to clear unexploded American munitions and landmines has also been ended.
It quotes an American Vietnam War veteran who has dedicated his time to humanitarian programs in the country for the last three decades, Chuck Searcy, saying “It doesn’t help at all. It is just another example of what a lot of critics want to remind us of: You can’t depend on the Americans. It is not a good message.”
About 2,200 files consisting of over 63,000 pages concerning the assassination of president John F Kennedy have been posted on the website of the US National Archives and Records administration. The Trump administration claims they were previously classified.
Associated Press reports that the National Archives say the vast majority of its collection of over six million pages of records, photographs, motion pictures, sound recordings and artifacts related to the assassination have already been released.
No major revelations appear to be contained in the documents so far, with the New York Times reporting on the release with the headline “Here’s what to know. (Oswald still did it.)”
Adam Nagourney wrote for the paper that “Trump, in teasing the release on Monday, said there would be no redactions – but an early review found that some information appeared to have been blocked out.”
The paper quoted historian David J Garrow saying “This dump is profoundly more impenetrable than all the previous more annotated ones”. Many of the documents released appeared to be hard to read.
Pentagon reportedly looking to cut civilian workforce by at least 50,000
The Pentagon is reported to be hoping to reduce its civilian workforce by about 50,000 to 60,000 people, chiefly through voluntary means, it has been reported.
ABC News quotes one senior defense official saying: “The number sounds high, but I would focus on the percentage, a 5% to 8% reduction is not a drastic one. [It] can be done without negatively impacting readiness, in order to make sure that our resources are allocated in the right direction.”
The cuts are expected to come from freezing hiring, dismissing probationary workers with less than one or two years service, and by people taking up an offer to resign on full pay until the end of September.
Welcome and opening summary …
Hello, and welcome to the Guardian’s rolling coverage of US politics and the second Donald Trump administration. Here are the headlines …
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Donald Trump on Tuesday signed an executive order seeking to shift responsibility for disaster preparations from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) to state and local governments
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Trump also fired the two Democratic commissioners on the US Federal Trade Commission on Tuesday, further blurring the lines of bipartisanship at regulatory agencies]
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A federal judge has granted an injunction that temporarily blocks the US military from enforcing the administration’s executive order barring transgender people from military service
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The Trump administration has released thousands of records related to the assassination of president John F Kennedy that it claimed had previously been classified
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The White House has fuelled speculation it has plans to eliminate two large national monuments in California established by former president Joe Biden and turn them over to potential economic development
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A blaze at a Tesla showroom is being investigated as potential terrorism
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Palestinian activist and recent Columbia graduate, Mahmoud Khalil, has said he is being targeted by the Trump administration for his political beliefs