Government Executive
September 8, 2003
GAO says Army's chemical disposal program lacks leadership
By David McGlinchey, Global Security Newswire
The Army’s chemical demilitarization program is in “turmoil” because of poor
leadership and management, government auditors announced in a report released
Friday.
Under its Chemical Weapons Convention obligations, the United States was
supposed to destroy 45 percent of its chemical weapons stockpile by April
2004, but Pentagon officials last week said they would ask officials from
the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons to extend that deadline
to December 2007.
The General Accounting Office blamed chemical disposal delays on “longstanding
leadership, organizational, and strategic planning issues. … The program
lacks stable leadership at the upper management levels.”
The GAO called on the Pentagon to develop a comprehensive strategy to meet
the disposal deadlines.
“Articulate the program’s mission, identify the long-term goals and objectives,
delineate the roles and responsibilities of all DOD and Army offices, and
establish near-term performance measures,” the GAO report (GAO-03-1031) said.
In a written response, the Army agreed with the auditors’ major recommendations.
The report said that a lack of overall strategy had led to widespread failure
across the demilitarization program, including safety concerns, environmental
problems, public anxiety and budget shortfalls. The preliminary estimates
for the total cost of the program have been raised by $1.2 billion, according
to the report.