The Pentagon has appointed a new director of its operational test enterprise and directed a reorganization that would reduce its staff to 30 civilians, 15 military personnel and one senior leader.
In a Tuesday memo, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the move to restructure the Office of the Director of Operational Test and Evaluation, or ODOT&E, supports the Pentagon’s “America First” defense strategy.
“A comprehensive internal review has identified redundant, non-essential, non-statutory functions within ODOT&E that do not support operational agility or resource efficiency, affecting our ability to rapidly and effectively deploy the best systems to the warfighter,” Hegseth said.
Prior to the reorganization order, the office was staffed with 94 personnel — 82 civilians and 12 military members, a defense official told Defense News. The department estimates the changes will save more than $300 million annually.
The Pentagon’s test and evaluation office oversees the process for validating weapons and platforms across the Defense Department. While the military services have their own test teams, the DOD-level office sets policies, provides oversight for major programs and serves as an adviser to the Joint Requirements Oversight Council, among other responsibilities.
One of the office’s more public-facing tasks is publishing an annual testing update on the department’s major weapon systems, including the F-35 fighter jet, the Navy’s Columbia-class submarine and the Army’s Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon. The report also assesses the health of the test and evaluation enterprise, including its equipment, ranges and other testing facilities. The most recent report was released in January.
Raymond O’Toole has served as acting director of the office since January, following two prior tours in the acting role. The memo appoints Carroll Quade, currently the Navy’s deputy for test and evaluation, to perform the duties of ODOT&E director effective immediately.
“Mr. Quade will assume all duties of the Director, overseeing the transition and ensuring ODOT&E’s statutory requirements remain effective and in compliance with statute,” the memo states.
The personnel cuts will come through a “targeted, deliberate and expeditious” civilian reduction in force, according to the memo. RIF notices will be distributed early next week and personnel who are not retained will be placed on administrative leave. All leadership currently classified as senior executive service will also be put on leave.
ODOT&E civilians who are employed by one of the military services will transfer back to those offices.
Beyond the workforce reductions, Hegseth calls for ending all contractor personnel support within seven days of the memo’s release.
“If ODOT&E decides it needs to support contractor personnel after adjusting to its base statutory mission set, ODOT&E may request such contract support with Deputy Secretary of Defense review after an initial 60-day acclimation period,” the document states.