GAO Report on Reorganization of the DoD’s Office of the Director, Operational Test and Evaluation
The GAO found that the DoD's Office of the Director, Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E) underwent a significant reorganization in 2025–2026 that included elimination of senior positions and large civilian workforce reductions.…
Cabrillo Club
Editorial Team · June 30, 2026 · 4 min read

Also in this intelligence package
TL;DR
The GAO found that the DoD (Department of Defense)'s Office of the Director, Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E) underwent a significant reorganization in 2025–2026 that included elimination of senior positions and large civilian workforce reductions. That reorganization has materially reduced DOT&E’s capacity to oversee operational testing across 173 weapon system programs and pushed Action Officers to administer more programs outside their areas of expertise. The GAO warns this increases the risk that weapon systems could be delivered with undocumented operational shortfalls and degrades oversight of both major defense acquisition programs and middle tier acquisition programs. For contractors, the immediate implications are heightened program risk, potential changes or delays to test schedules, and an increased need for defensible test documentation and close engagement with program offices. Expect near-term uncertainty in how operational test requirements are assigned and reviewed; contractors should act now to inventory test deliverables, tighten test evidence, and align capture and proposal efforts to the shifting oversight environment.
Key Points
- What happened: DOT&E was reorganized in 2025–2026 with elimination of senior positions and substantial civilian workforce reductions; GAO found this reduced DOT&E’s operational test oversight capacity for 173 weapon system programs.
- Who is affected: Defense contractors and stakeholders in the listed market segments and NAICS codes in the segmentation (see Who Is Affected), and agencies named in the segmentation (DOD, DOT&E, OSD).
- What the timeline is: Reorganization occurred in 2025–2026.
- What contractors should do NOW: Inventory and harden operational test artifacts and evidence, update program risk registers, initiate targeted capture/proposal actions for affected programs and vehicles, and enable continuous monitoring and automated opportunity rescoring through Cabrillo Club products.
Who Is Affected
The event impacts defense and test-and-evaluation market segments identified in the segmentation provided. Specific named items from the segmentation:
- NAICS codes: 336411, 336412, 336413, 336414, 336415, 336419, 541330, 541380, 541512, 541715, 541990, 334511, 334290, 334220
- Agencies: DOD, DOT&E, OSD
- Contract vehicles: OASIS+, STARS III, ASTRO
- Market segments: Defense; Weapon Systems; Operational Testing; Test and Evaluation; Defense Acquisition; Systems Engineering; Quality Assurance; Aircraft Manufacturing; Missile and Space Vehicle Manufacturing; Military Vehicle Manufacturing; Naval Systems
- Compliance surfaces: CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification); NIST 800-171 (NIST Special Publication 800-171); ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations); DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement) 252.204-7012; FAR (Federal Acquisition Regulation) Part 46
Specific NAICS codes, agencies, and contract vehicles pending source review for any solicitation- or program-specific impacts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Will DOT&E stop conducting operational testing because of this reorganization?
A: The GAO report indicates reduced capacity and redistribution of workloads to Action Officers, not cessation of operational testing. The report highlights increased risk of oversight gaps; specifics about any paused or canceled tests are pending source review.
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Q: How will contractor test schedules and deliverables be affected?
A: The Summary states potential impacts to contractors’ testing requirements and program timelines due to reduced DOT&E oversight and Action Officers covering more programs outside their expertise. Program-level schedule or deliverable changes are pending source review.
Q: Which acquisition categories are most affected?
A: The GAO report explicitly cites impacts to oversight of both major defense acquisition programs and middle tier acquisition programs. Program-specific effects and affected procurements are pending source review.
Definitions
- DOT&E: The DoD Office of the Director, Operational Test and Evaluation responsible for independent operational testing oversight.
- Action Officers: DOT&E personnel assigned to manage and oversee operational test responsibilities for weapon system programs.
- Operational testing: Field and operational-level testing that evaluates system performance against mission requirements and informs fielding decisions.
- Major defense acquisition programs: High-priority DoD acquisition programs subject to formal milestone and test oversight (term used in the Summary).
- Middle tier acquisition programs: Acquisition initiatives executed under middle tier authorities (term used in the Summary).
Intelligence Response
- Cabrillo Signals War Room — Already detected this event and delivered this briefing. Continuous monitoring will track GAO follow-ons, DoD responses, and related policy signals.
- Cabrillo Signals Match Engine — Automatically rescored opportunity pipelines to reflect elevated program risk, shifting probabilities for capture across affected weapon system programs and vehicles.
- Cabrillo Signals Intelligence Hub — Created saved searches for DOT&E- and OSD-related notices and for the contract vehicles listed in segmentation (OASIS+, STARS III, ASTRO); will alert on follow-on solicitations on SAM.gov (System for Award Management) and agency notices.
- Proposal Studio (Proposal OS) and Proposal Studio Workflow Tracker — Use to create/update compliance matrices tied to DFARS/FAR test deliverables, run rapid bid/no-bid decisions, and manage capture through a 9-gate workflow with audit-ready documentation.
Who to notify internal to your organization:
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- BD/Capture Director — to reassess pipeline and reprioritize pursuits.
- Program Managers/Test Leads — to inventory test artifacts and adjust schedules.
- Proposal/Capture Teams — to prepare targeted responses and update compliance matrices.
- Compliance/Security Officer — to validate documentation against the listed compliance surfaces.
- Executive Sponsor — for resourcing and risk acceptance decisions.
First 48-hour response playbook
- Hour 0–4: Run Cabrillo Signals Match Engine to rescore active opportunities; push alerts from Cabrillo Signals War Room to capture and BD leads; create saved searches in Intelligence Hub for DOT&E/OSD and the listed contract vehicles.
- Hour 4–12: Convene capture/program stand-up with PM/Test Lead, BD, and Compliance; start a Proposal Studio compliance matrix for critical programs and map test deliverables against DFARS/FAR Part 46 requirements.
- Hour 12–24: Complete bid/no-bid decisions in Proposal Studio; begin assembling and hardening operational test evidence packages; document risk mitigations in Proposal Studio Workflow Tracker gates.
- Hour 24–48: Finalize prioritized capture tasks, set recurring Intelligence Hub alerts for GAO/DoD follow-ups, and schedule weekly War Room check-ins to track new solicitations and DOT&E guidance.
Stop missing federal opportunities
Signals matches SAM.gov opportunities to your NAICS codes, tracks regulatory changes, and alerts you before competitors.
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Cabrillo Club
Editorial Team
Cabrillo Club is a defense technology company building AI-powered tools for government contractors. Our editorial team combines deep expertise in CMMC compliance, federal acquisition, and secure AI infrastructure to produce actionable guidance for the defense industrial base.