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National Treasury Employees Union President Reardon to step down
Following his retirement, the union will pick up with elections for national president and national executive vice president.
Iran hackers hunt nuke workers, US officials
The Associated Press drew on data gathered by the London-based cybersecurity group Certfa to track how in the wake of sanctions on Iran a hacking group often nicknamed Charming Kitten tried to break into the emails of U.S. Treasury officials, as well as atomic scientists, civil society figures and think tank employees.
The services shuffle: Are we done yet?
Have we returned to the days when platform manufacturers were platform manufacturers and services companies were services companies, and everyone stayed in their lane, more or less?
By Jill Aitoro
SAIC subsumes Engility in $2.5B deal
The latest in a series of major defense mergers creates a market giant.
By Amber Corrin
Trump and Kim to hold summit June 12 in Singapore
President Donald Trump will meet with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in Singapore on June 12, Trump announced Thursday, hours after suggesting that the release of three Americans held in the North heralded a potential breakthrough toward denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula.
By Zeke Miller, The Associated Press
Sen. Bernie Sanders takes aim at defense industry excess
Congress’ top populist, Sen. Bernie Sanders, has fired a shot across the bow of defense industry fat cats.
By Joe Gould
Corker: If Pentagon can ‘turn entire countries into craters’ why can't it audit itself?
Sen. Bob Corker on Wednesday asked Defense Department Comptroller David Norquist and Chief Management Officer John Gibson why the Pentagon can “turn entire countries into craters” but has yet to audit itself.
Man pretending to be an Army 3-star used a helicopter to impress a woman, feds say
A man pretending to be a three-star U.S. Army general wanted to impress a woman when he unexpectedly landed in a chartered helicopter at the headquarters of a North Carolina technology company last year, a federal agent testified Monday.
Will Congress cut federal employee benefits to help balance the budget?
Both the president and members of Congress have indicated the desire to cut back on pay, benefits and employee due process.
By Jessie Bur
White House nominates federal CIO
Suzette Kent has been tapped to take over a position that has heavy influence over the government's IT management policy and strategy.
By Jessie Bur
12 ways to defend the nation against cyberattack [Commentary]
Addressing the requirements of the cyber executive order demands serious attention since all aspects of our national interest are now in the cross hairs of criminals and terrorists intent on doing serious damage.
By Tony Hubbard, Geoffrey L. Weber and Jeffrey C. Steinhoff, KPMG