The Department of Defense has dissolved its Office of Net Acquisition – a think tank-like arm of the Pentagon that Republicans have claimed was involved in the Trump-Russia investigation.

Pentagon chief spokesperson Sean Parnell said civilian employees within the office would be ‘reassigned to mission-critical roles’ as the DOD established a plan to rebuild the office ‘in alignment with the Department’s strategic priorities.’ 

The office is meant to provide long-term strategic analysis within DOD, but it has become a target of Republicans who claim it has engaged in ‘projects unrelated to its mission.’

‘Praise the Lord. This wise move saves American taxpayers over 20 million dollars a year,’ Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said in a statement. 

He called the office ‘wasteful and ineffective.’

The office in recent years has been focused on strategizing a potential war with China. It championed a strategy known as ‘AirSea Battle,’ where a blinding campaign against the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) of stealth bombers and submarines would take out China’s long-range surveillance before a naval assault. 

But Grassley has for years scrutinized ONA’s contracting practices. 

ONA has failed to produce classified net assessments for years, with whistleblowing analyst Adam Lovinger once complaining in emails to Director James Baker that the office seemed to attract overpriced academic-style papers instead of classified net assessments. 

‘On the issue of quality, more than once I have heard our contractor studies labeled ‘derivative,’ ’college-level,’ and based heavily on secondary sources,’ Lovinger wrote in a September 2016 email. ‘One of our contractor studies was literally cut and pasted from a World Bank report.’

Lovinger had complained about questionable government contracts awarded to Stefan Halper, an FBI informant who spied on the Trump campaign in 2016.

A DOD inspector general’s report later found that Halper had failed to properly document the research he did as a contractor on four studies valued at $1 million. The four contracts, spanning from 2012 to 2016, were meant to encompass relations between the U.S., Russia, China and India.

The report found that Halper had not provided proof of any meetings he had or locations he had visited as part of his studies. 

‘ONA personnel could not provide us any evidence that Professor Halper visited any of these locations, established an advisory group, or met with any of the specific people listed in the statement of work.’

For a study on what China relations could look like in 2030, Halper had proposed travel to London and Tokyo. 

‘The contract was fixed price based on the acceptance of the deliverables and did not require Professor Halper to submit travel receipts. ONA personnel could not provide documentation that Professor Halper traveled for this contract.’

Contracts show that Halper listed a Russian intelligence official as a consultant for an ONA project, the same intelligence official who was listed as a source in the Trump dossier used to spy on Carter Page. He was in contact with Page and former Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos, ‘raising questions about whether Halper used U.S. taxpayer dollars to seek connections with Trump campaign officials,’ according to Grassley. 

Halper was also a confidential human source for the FBI’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 elections who recorded conversations with officials from the campaign. 

The senator claims that ONA has stonewalled on his inquiries about Halper’s relations to the Trump-Russia probe. 

Senator Jack Reed, D-R.I., top Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, called the office’s closing ‘shortsighted,’ adding that it would ‘undermine our ability to prepare for future conflicts.’ 

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