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Two veteran intelligence officers with distinct naval and marine backgrounds reflect on how military intelligence operations have evolved from exclusive government programs to information-saturated environments where technology frequently fails to deliver. In this candid conversation on Defense Disrupted, Ed Padinske, Retired Navy Captain, who served as senior intelligence officer for Navy special warfare units, and Ed Sullivan, Retired Marine Colonel, who spent years as an intelligence officer in Iraq and later commanded an intelligence battalion, share battlefield perspectives on system failures.
They explain to Ian how acquisition processes designed in the 1960s remain fundamentally unchanged while fighting modern adversaries, comparing it to racing a 1970 Nova in an F1 competition. Their frontline stories — from Padinske's experience in the White House Situation Room on 9/11 to Sullivan's cultural advisor role in Fallujah — illuminate how personality-driven procurement decisions often sabotage effective solutions, and why pushing capabilities to lower echelons could revolutionize warfare. Both agree that defense innovation requires not just technological advancement but a cultural shift from process compliance to mission outcomes.
Topics Discussed:
By DefenseDisruptedTwo veteran intelligence officers with distinct naval and marine backgrounds reflect on how military intelligence operations have evolved from exclusive government programs to information-saturated environments where technology frequently fails to deliver. In this candid conversation on Defense Disrupted, Ed Padinske, Retired Navy Captain, who served as senior intelligence officer for Navy special warfare units, and Ed Sullivan, Retired Marine Colonel, who spent years as an intelligence officer in Iraq and later commanded an intelligence battalion, share battlefield perspectives on system failures.
They explain to Ian how acquisition processes designed in the 1960s remain fundamentally unchanged while fighting modern adversaries, comparing it to racing a 1970 Nova in an F1 competition. Their frontline stories — from Padinske's experience in the White House Situation Room on 9/11 to Sullivan's cultural advisor role in Fallujah — illuminate how personality-driven procurement decisions often sabotage effective solutions, and why pushing capabilities to lower echelons could revolutionize warfare. Both agree that defense innovation requires not just technological advancement but a cultural shift from process compliance to mission outcomes.
Topics Discussed: