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Department of Defense
The Department of Defense is a civilian cabinet organization of the government
of United States. It is the body that controls the working of the country’s
military. DoD has its headquarter at the Pentagon. Headed presently by the
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld its concerns are armed services and military
matters. The secretary or the Head of the Department of Defense
is a member of the President’s Cabinet.
The formation of the Department of Defense was a gradual process. In 1944,
the Congress put forward suggestions to coordinate the activities of the military
services. In a further advancement, the three branches of the military services
suggested special plans in 1945. In accordance with the plan, President Truman
Harry proposed to create a composite Department of National Defense. The idea
of concentration of power in a single department raised certain negative response
yet DoD was eventually accepted.
The Department of Defense combined the Navy
Department, the war Department and the Air Force
Department. The main objective of the DoD was to combat inter-service rivalry
that reduced the military effectiveness during World War II. While it exercises
control over the three major defense systems during crisis it also has control
over the Coast Guard.
The annual budget of DoD is over $375 billion excluding the
sum provided by the Congress annually. Gold-Water Act of 1986 discusses the
command structure of the Department of Defense vividly. At the highest ladder
is the President of the United States, whose order passes through the Secretary
of Defense to the regional commanders. The regional commander commands the troops
and carries out the order dexterously.
Thus, the Department of Defense includes the Army, Navy and
Air Force, along with the Marine Corps, National Security
Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency that form the intricate part
of the country’s protection and Defense.
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