Wednesday, March 26, 2025

WHITE GUYS

U.S. Senate Confirms Navy Secretary John Phelan

Pentagon
File image courtesy DOD

Published Mar 25, 2025 9:23 PM by The Maritime Executive

 

 

The U.S. Senate has confirmed the appointment of President Donald Trump's nominee for the next Secretary of the Navy, the financier, political donor and art collector John Phelan. He was confirmed by a vote of 62-30, securing more than a dozen votes from senators in the political opposition. 

Phelan has no prior professional connections with the armed forces, but in confirmation hearings, the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee appeared satisfied with his command of the policy issues facing the Navy - and his willingness to tap the subject matter expertise of his subordinates. He emphasized his skills as a manager and organizational leader, acknowledged that he was not a naval expert, and pledged to make the service more efficient and effective as an enterprise. 

"The Navy and the Marine Corps already possess extraordinary operational expertise within their ranks," he told the committee last month. "My role is to utilize that expertise and strengthen it, step outside the status quo and take decisive action with a results-oriented approach."

Phelan pledged to delve into the Navy's intractable problems with shipbuilding, rein in costs and get hulls delivered on time. "I would push for a more agile, accountable and flexible shipbuilding strategy by streamlining procurement, enhancing budget flexibility, strengthening partnerships with the defense industrial base, and holding con


White House Nominates Navy Submariner to Run Maritime Administration

DOT
File image courtesy DOT

Published Mar 25, 2025 7:13 PM by The Maritime Executive

 

Former submarine officer Capt. Brent Sadler (USN) has been nominated to run the U.S. Maritime Administration, the unit of the Department of Transportation responsible for the Ready Reserve, the Maritime Security Program, the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy and several other maritime-related programs. MARAD has been without a nominated leader since former administrator Adm. Ann Phillips' resignation in mid-January.  

Capt. Sadler is a Navy veteran with 26 years of experience, and currently works as a researcher with the conservative Heritage Foundation. He is an engineer by training and a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, with multiple Indo-Pacific submarine tours on his resume. As a policy leader at Indo-Pacific Command, he helped pass a program for maritime security training for Southeast Asian partners in FY2016, and helped direct $12 billion in defense funding to the Asia-Pacific under the "rebalance" initiative in 2013-15. 

When confirmed, he will help lead the drafting of new legislation to create a "strategic commercial fleet" focused on ensuring "adequate cubed footage," according to a White House draft executive order obtained by USNI. This unit of measurement applies to ro/ro capacity, the most frequently-discussed element of the U.S. strategic sealift fleet. 

When confirmed, Sadler will have wide latitude to remake MARAD or reduce its size, an administration priority across government. High staff turnover and high retirement eligibility have left MARAD with more than 100 vacant positions (as of last September). In the fall, the agency had openings for 12 percent of all authorized positions, according to GAO - long before the White House's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) offered all federal employees a voluntary buyout. MARAD officials told GAO last year that the staff shortages made it hard to accomplish missions, and that the problem was worsening. 

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