To the surprise of no one, the Department of Defense announced this week that it has failed its first-ever comprehensive audit. Rep. Mike Turner (R-OH), the outgoing chair of the House Subcommittee on Tactical Air and Land Forces, said lawmakers knew “the outcome would paint a bleak picture of the financial controls and information systems at the Department of Defense.” But now that the first audit is complete, “we have a clearer picture of the failures at the DoD, we can take action to fix them, hold leadership at DoD accountable,” Turner said.

The audit wasn’t all bad news, though. Five organizations within the Department of Defense earned “unmodified opinions” – accounting-speak for a clean bill of health. Those organizations are: the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers – Civil Works, the Military Retirement Fund, the Defense Health Agency – Contract Resource Management, the Defense Contract Audit Agency and the Defense Finance and Accounting Services – Working Capital Fund, the Pentagon said. Auditors found no evidence of fraud, and all “major military equipment” was accounted for.

On the other hand, the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Special Operations and Transportation commands all failed the audit, with multiple issues that need to be fixed. And information technology security at the Pentagon is a mess, the audit found, with multiple systems in operation that are vulnerable to hacking.

A 236-page financial report released Thursday, which is based on the auditors’ findings, is loaded with interesting facts and figures about the sprawling U.S. Defense Department. A few examples: