Sequestration takes effect at midnight on March 1, but no 11th-hour negotiations among congressional leaders to head it off a second time are even scheduled. The Pentagon, facing up to the possibility of no deal, has been hoarding cash since mid-January, repeatedly warning that it can’t absorb the sequestration cuts without profound effects on the military, especially on readiness. Though war-bound units will have priority, the Air Force will have to lay off or furlough tens of thousands of civilians, and some flying units may be idled for months at a time. Returning those people to proficiency will be a long and difficult process, and in the meantime, the Air Force will indeed be hollow. Sequestration is just part of a “perfect storm” of fiscal crises affecting the service, though, as the never-ending budget continuing resolution and debt ceiling battles also take their toll. Click here to continue to On the Brink of Sequestration, our coverage of sequestration’s effects.
President-elect Donald Trump has said he will nominate Pete Hegseth, a Fox News personality, as Secretary of Defense for Trump's second term. The choice rounds out most of the national security selections for the new administration.