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Esper Has No ‘Hard Timeline’ for Review of $10 Billion JEDI Deal
A member of the U.S. Army Band salutes U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani (standing at top of steps) during an honor cordon ceremony at the Pentagon, March 23, 2015 in Arlington, Virginia. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Esper Has No ‘Hard Timeline’ for Review of $10 Billion JEDI Deal

“I want to make sure I get to the point where I’m comfortable enough to know it,” so “I don’t have any hard timeline in mind,” defense secretary Mark Esper said. He took the job after decisions had been made on terms for the contract and after the field of competitors was narrowed to Amazon and Microsoft Corp.

(Bloomberg) -- Defense Secretary Mark Esper says he has no “hard timeline” to complete his review of the disputed JEDI cloud-computing contract valued at as much as $10 billion.

Esper ordered the review after President Donald Trump endorsed criticism that Amazon.com Inc. was given an unfair advantage for the Pentagon project.

“I’ve gone back, and I do a lot of my own research, reading on the weekends,” Esper told reporters traveling with him to Europe this week. “So it’s kind of ingesting all that,” he said of material that includes questions and objections raised by members of Congress.

“I want to make sure I get to the point where I’m comfortable enough to know it,” so “I don’t have any hard timeline in mind,” he said. Esper took over as defense secretary in July, after decisions had been made on terms for the contract and after the field of competitors was narrowed to Amazon and Microsoft Corp.

Oracle Corp., which was among the bidders eliminated, has led a campaign making its case that the project was tainted by conflicts of interest that led to provisions favoring Amazon.

Read More: Pentagon’s Watchdog Vows to Move Fast in Cloud Contract Probe

“Is JEDI the right strategy?” Esper asked. “Was it handled properly? Is it fair to the taxpayer? All those things. That’s kind of what I’m trying to understand” as well as the impact and timing of an ongoing inspector general’s review, he said. “So in some ways, the timeline isn’t completely mine.”

Esper said a “cloud-based AI capability is important to the warfighter” and “we need to move in that direction and sooner rather than later.”

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