US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Today at 7:26 AM
Yesterday at 7:17 AM
now I read US Navy Sends Congress $5.3B Wishlist of Planes, Ships and More
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and now Air Force’s $10.7 billion wish list includes more F-35As, KC-46s
source:
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adding
US Army’s FY18 wish list would grow force by 17,000 soldiers
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The U.S. Army’s $12.7 billion wish list for fiscal 2018 asks to grow the total force by another 17,000 troops, would further increase munitions stockpiles, and would further modernize both brigade combat teams and vertical lift capabilities.

The wish list — known formally as an unfunded requirements list — is typically sent to Congress by each of the services to help guide Capitol Hill in considering what additional funding beyond the budget request Congress might provide as lawmakers begin to draft the policy and spending bills.

The Army’s $166 billion budget request for FY18 was released on May 23. It funds a 1,018,000 total force, which maintains the status quo and the end strength mandated in the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act, a better deal than was previously anticipated. The budget request also prioritized munitions stockpiles and modernization for armored brigade combat teams.

The unfunded requirements list in 2018 — obtained by Defense News — shows the Army would want to grow the force beyond the status quo, asking for $3.1 billion to add 10,000 troops for the active force, 4,000 for the Army National Guard and 3,000 for the Army Reserve.

The funding would support the pay, training, sustainment, infrastructure and equipping of the additional soldiers.

It would also provide for three security force assistance brigades; two Short-Range Air Defense, or SHORAD, battalions; two Multiple-Launch Rocket System battalions; cyber operations forces; a multi-domain headquarters; and a division and a corps headquarters.

In its FY18 budget request, the Army announced plans to create two security force assistance brigades “as a tool for combatant commanders to shape their areas of responsibility in ways that deter and prevent conflict and set the theater to enable the United States and its allies and partners to prevail if conflict becomes necessary,” an overview of the budget reads.

The wish list also includes adding a combat service support battalion, a heavy truck company and a maintenance support company.

During a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing last week, Chairman Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., expressed concern over the Army not being able to grow the force larger than what was mandated in 2017. And while the Army was able to fund more modernization efforts in FY18 than it has been able to in the past, McCain said he was also concerned that was enough to strengthen the force.

Speaking generally about the budget during that hearing, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley said it stopped the bleeding, but further and consistent funds would be required to truly heal the force.

While the Army is prioritizing air-and-missile defense, particularly SHORAD, long-range fires, munitions shortfalls and enhancing the lethality of brigade combat teams, the wish list asks for $4.9 billion in additional funds within the service’s top 10 modernization priorities.

The largest amounts would be funneled into modernization accounts that would further enhance mobility, lethality and protection of vertical lift and the brigade combat teams, or BCT. The Army would want an additional $2.5 billion for the BCTs and $1.1 million for vertical lift.

The FY18 budget took another appetite suppressant on aviation modernization, so the wish list attempts to make that up with funds for nine additional AH-64E Apache attack helicopters, three more UH-60 Victor-model Black Hawk utility helicopters as well as three recapitalized versions. The list also includes nine new-build CH-47F Block I Chinook cargo helicopters.

On the ground vehicle side, the Army would recapitalize 33 M2A4 Bradley Fighting Vehicles, 29 more Abrams tanks and 35 Hercules Recovery Vehicles as well as M872 trailers that address “critical mobility shortfalls across the Army,” according to the document.

Other modernization funding would go toward accelerating a replacement of radiation detection capability; developing assured positioning, navigation and timing in a GPS-denied environment; procuring hardware for route-clearance Medium Mine Protected Vehicles; and buying 12 Assault Breacher Vehicles, four Combat Dozer Blades and eight full-width mine plows for the 15th and 16th armored brigade combat teams.

The FY18 budget did shore up some of the munition stockpile shortages concerning the Army, but its wish list asks for $2.3 billion more for missiles, ammunition and funding for the industrial base.

The list asks for 75 more Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) missiles, 147 more Patriot Missile Segment Enhancement missiles, 42 Patriot Enhanced Launcher Electronics Systems and 70 Patriot launcher modification kits.

Funding would also include a 66 percent increase in Guided Multiple-Launch Rocket System production capacity “to meet critical combat requirements and war reserves in Fires, Air and Missile Defense and SHORAD,” the document states.

The list also includes funding for the Cannon-Delivered Area Effects Munitions bridging strategy to possibly replace the Dual-Purpose Improved Conventional Munitions cluster munition. The ban on cluster munitions goes into effect on Jan.1, 2019.

The service also wants to bring production capacity for Excalibur munitions to its maximum rate of 3,000 rounds “in order to keep pace with combat requirements and slow the depletion of war reserves,” the list includes.

To meet urgent operational needs in theater, the list also would procure guided Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System rockets.

The Army also wants $1.8 billion for war-fighter readiness to keep BCT training proficiency aligned with increased operational tempo as well as other training rotations and related sustainment, infrastructure and equipment.

Lastly, the service is asking for an additional $579.1 million for infrastructure projects it couldn’t include in the FY18 request. The list asks to fund construction of six readiness centers for the reserve components, other maintenance facilities and barracks among other construction projects.
12.7+10.7+5.3=28.7

28.7 is about four and a half percent of 639.1 EDIT comes from
DoD Releases Fiscal Year 2018 Budget Proposal
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Last edited:

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Welcome back to the 1960's
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Desired Attributes of Interim Combat Service Rifle:


• The rifle must be a Commercial Off The Shelf (COTS) system readily available for purchase today. Modified or customized systems are not being considered.
• Caliber: 7.62x51mm
• Available barrel lengths, to include 16 and 20 inch barrels, without muzzle device attached.
• Muzzle device capable of or adaptable to auxiliary devices for:
-- Compensation of muzzle climb
-- Flash suppression
-- Sound Suppression
• Fire Control: Safe, Semi-automatic, and fully automatic capable.
• All controls (e.g. selector, charging handle) are ambidextrous and operable by left and right handed users
• Capable of mounting a 1.25 inch wide military sling
• Capable of accepting or mounting the following accessories.
-- Forward grip/bi-pod for the weapon
-- variable power optic
• Detachable magazine with a minimum capacity of 20 rounds
• Folding or collapsing buttstock adjustable to change the overall length of the weapon
• Foldable backup iron sights calibrated/adjustable to a maximum of 600 meters range
• Weight less than 12lb unloaded and without optic
• Extended Forward Rail
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Note I added Emphasis to caliber, This Is a request for 7.62x51mm Battle rifles. This is a request for information not a procurement program yet. The US is taking it seriously however as there are concerns about the ability to penetrate Commercial, Russian and Chinese made Body armor with the 5.56x45mm round ( mostly in Congress). Longer term projects are underway to look at intermediate calibers in the 6mm range. Like the 6.5mm Caseless carbine developed by Textron for the Cased Telescoped Small Arms Systems.6.5_CS_Carbine_2.JPG
but these are still years away from actual production,
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for the Next generation Squad Automatic Rifle which would likely be an outgrowth of the Cased Telescoped Small Arms Systems program for the replacement of the M249 in about 2025 where this all fits can be seen below. Next gen squad weapons.jpg
This Said having a 7.62x51mm Battle rifle to fall back does make some sense in some Area's of operation. The Germans have also looked at this. The Turks never really adopted the Assault rifle (5.56mm) beyond there SF troops and Issue 7.62mm Battle Rifles like the MPT76 as there main issue. If this Does go to a procurement. The Likely winner would be an AR based rifle.
 
Yesterday at 8:12 AM
now I read
Here's What the Navy Wants to Do With 4K More Sailors
source:
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and I also read
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make up half the Navy’s $5.3 billion unfunded requirements list of items that didn’t fit in the 2018 budget request. But while the wishlist includes several upgrades to existing vessels, as well as new landing craft and barges, it doesn’t ask for
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.

Instead of ships, the unfunded requirements list prioritizes aircraft: $739 million for 10
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fighters takes first place, followed by $1 billion for six
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reconnaissance planes and $540 million for four
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. The fourth and fifth items are for upgrades to the Navy’s long-neglected infrastructure of shore facilities, reflecting
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‘s desire to
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. Overall:

  • about $3.4 billion of the request, or 63 percent, goes for weapons procurements. (The way the items are listed means this sum includes a small amount of R&D funding as well). Of that, the lion’s share, $2.7 million, goes to buy new aircraft: the F-18s, P-8As, and F-35Cs, plus four
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    .
  • $1.3 billion, 24 percent, goes for facilities, counting both readiness funding (from the Operations & Maintenance account) and Military Construction (MILCON).
  • $480 million, 9 percent, goes for other readiness needs, $330 million of it for aviation: logistics, spare parts, and general support.
  • $101 million, 2 percent, goes to research, development, testing, & evaluation (RDT&E). (That’s not including small RDT&E sums wrapped up in weapons upgrades we counted as procurement).
  • Just $90 million, 2 percent, goes to military personnel, filling holes in short-handed units rather than growing the force.
If you break the list up by priority ranking, you see some striking patterns. Almost all the procurement requests, $3.1 billion, are in the top 12 items, with the best odds of passing. What little R&D money there is almost all comes in the top half of the list (items #1-24). Personnel requests, however, are clustered in the middle, with middling odds of being funded. Facilities is split: 53 percent of the request are in the top 12, 38 percent in the bottom 12, very little in the middle. Non-facilities readiness requests are almost entirely in the bottom half.

Specifically, when you discount lower-priority requests, procurement’s share jumps even higher, to 75 percent; facilities drops to 18 percent; other readiness to four percent; R&D stays at 2 percent; and personnel falls to one percent of the request.

Yet despite all that emphasis on procurement, there are still no new ships.
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will want to change that.
source:
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nicky

Junior Member
seawolf12.1496570261.jpg


seawolf1.1496570297.jpg
 
Yesterday at 7:14 AM
dtulsa told me in Facebook but for him it's difficult to post links (cellphone, right?) so here's USNI News
White House Announces Richard V. Spencer as Nominee for SECNAV
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and here's NavyTimes:
Trump to nominate Marine veteran Richard Spencer for Navy secretary
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President Trump says he's found a new candidate for the civilian post of Navy secretary.

His name is Richard Spencer, and he's a former financial industry executive. Spencer is also a former Marine Corps captain.

The White House says Spencer most recently was managing partner of Fall Creek Management, a privately held management consulting company in Wyoming. Spencer also was vice chairman and chief financial officer for Intercontinental Exchange Inc., a financial market company, and president of Crossroads Group, a venture capital firm that was bought by Lehman Brothers in 2003.

Trump's first choice for Navy secretary, businessman Philip Bilden, withdrew from consideration in February. Bilden cited privacy concerns and the difficulty of separating from his business interests.

The Senate must approve of Spencer's nomination.
now let's wait and see
Feb 15, 2017

WHEN REPEAT WHEN THE NAVY GETS ITS SECRETARY?
 
Yesterday at 8:12 AM
now I read
Here's What the Navy Wants to Do With 4K More Sailors
source:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
and
US Army’s FY18 wish list would grow force by 17,000 soldiers
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The U.S. Army’s $12.7 billion wish list for fiscal 2018 asks to grow the total force by another 17,000 troops, would further increase munitions stockpiles, and would further modernize both brigade combat teams and vertical lift capabilities.

The wish list — known formally as an unfunded requirements list — is typically sent to Congress by each of the services to help guide Capitol Hill in considering what additional funding beyond the budget request Congress might provide as lawmakers begin to draft the policy and spending bills.

The Army’s $166 billion budget request for FY18 was released on May 23. It funds a 1,018,000 total force, which maintains the status quo and the end strength mandated in the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act, a better deal than was previously anticipated. The budget request also prioritized munitions stockpiles and modernization for armored brigade combat teams.

The unfunded requirements list in 2018 — obtained by Defense News — shows the Army would want to grow the force beyond the status quo, asking for $3.1 billion to add 10,000 troops for the active force, 4,000 for the Army National Guard and 3,000 for the Army Reserve.

The funding would support the pay, training, sustainment, infrastructure and equipping of the additional soldiers.

It would also provide for three security force assistance brigades; two Short-Range Air Defense, or SHORAD, battalions; two Multiple-Launch Rocket System battalions; cyber operations forces; a multi-domain headquarters; and a division and a corps headquarters.

In its FY18 budget request, the Army announced plans to create two security force assistance brigades “as a tool for combatant commanders to shape their areas of responsibility in ways that deter and prevent conflict and set the theater to enable the United States and its allies and partners to prevail if conflict becomes necessary,” an overview of the budget reads.

The wish list also includes adding a combat service support battalion, a heavy truck company and a maintenance support company.

During a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing last week, Chairman Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., expressed concern over the Army not being able to grow the force larger than what was mandated in 2017. And while the Army was able to fund more modernization efforts in FY18 than it has been able to in the past, McCain said he was also concerned that was enough to strengthen the force.

Speaking generally about the budget during that hearing, Army Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Milley said it stopped the bleeding, but further and consistent funds would be required to truly heal the force.

While the Army is prioritizing air-and-missile defense, particularly SHORAD, long-range fires, munitions shortfalls and enhancing the lethality of brigade combat teams, the wish list asks for $4.9 billion in additional funds within the service’s top 10 modernization priorities.

The largest amounts would be funneled into modernization accounts that would further enhance mobility, lethality and protection of vertical lift and the brigade combat teams, or BCT. The Army would want an additional $2.5 billion for the BCTs and $1.1 million for vertical lift.

The FY18 budget took another appetite suppressant on aviation modernization, so the wish list attempts to make that up with funds for nine additional AH-64E Apache attack helicopters, three more UH-60 Victor-model Black Hawk utility helicopters as well as three recapitalized versions. The list also includes nine new-build CH-47F Block I Chinook cargo helicopters.

On the ground vehicle side, the Army would recapitalize 33 M2A4 Bradley Fighting Vehicles, 29 more Abrams tanks and 35 Hercules Recovery Vehicles as well as M872 trailers that address “critical mobility shortfalls across the Army,” according to the document.

Other modernization funding would go toward accelerating a replacement of radiation detection capability; developing assured positioning, navigation and timing in a GPS-denied environment; procuring hardware for route-clearance Medium Mine Protected Vehicles; and buying 12 Assault Breacher Vehicles, four Combat Dozer Blades and eight full-width mine plows for the 15th and 16th armored brigade combat teams.

The FY18 budget did shore up some of the munition stockpile shortages concerning the Army, but its wish list asks for $2.3 billion more for missiles, ammunition and funding for the industrial base.

The list asks for 75 more Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) missiles, 147 more Patriot Missile Segment Enhancement missiles, 42 Patriot Enhanced Launcher Electronics Systems and 70 Patriot launcher modification kits.

Funding would also include a 66 percent increase in Guided Multiple-Launch Rocket System production capacity “to meet critical combat requirements and war reserves in Fires, Air and Missile Defense and SHORAD,” the document states.

The list also includes funding for the Cannon-Delivered Area Effects Munitions bridging strategy to possibly replace the Dual-Purpose Improved Conventional Munitions cluster munition. The ban on cluster munitions goes into effect on Jan.1, 2019.

The service also wants to bring production capacity for Excalibur munitions to its maximum rate of 3,000 rounds “in order to keep pace with combat requirements and slow the depletion of war reserves,” the list includes.

To meet urgent operational needs in theater, the list also would procure guided Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System rockets.

The Army also wants $1.8 billion for war-fighter readiness to keep BCT training proficiency aligned with increased operational tempo as well as other training rotations and related sustainment, infrastructure and equipment.

Lastly, the service is asking for an additional $579.1 million for infrastructure projects it couldn’t include in the FY18 request. The list asks to fund construction of six readiness centers for the reserve components, other maintenance facilities and barracks among other construction projects.
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Seawolf in Arctic filmed by a Russian Mi-8 !

A video has been published in which a Russian helicopter, perhaps an Mi-8, is supposed to discover an American submarine on the surface in the Arctic; Probably one of the Sea Wolf class submarines of the US NAVY

According to the video, the scene may have been filmed in 2015 during the deployment of the USS Sea Wolf submarine in its 6-month campaign for the region ...

The crux of the matter is that in the Russian recording is seen something that does not fit with the information that have published the Americans of that campaign and is that the submarine seems to have damage to the sail, which is revealed if we take a look at the following Video captures

Apparently, the sonar deck of the sail has been removed or detached, and it does not seem to make sense to do so during a mission unless it is an emergency resulting from operations, probably because it was damaged by ice or emerging.

It is not the same to sail by the Arctic ice-cream than to do it by the Atlantic or the Pacific or by the Mediterranean.

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