US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

now noticed:
"The budget request delivered to Capitol Hill on Monday ..."

from where exactly would the money come? I mean what kind of a fund?
Trump seeks nearly $6B to counter North Korean missiles, repair Navy ships
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The Trump administration is seeking nearly $6 billion to pay for urgent missile defense improvements to counter the threat from North Korea, increased U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan and fast repairs to Navy ships in the Asia-Pacific theater.

The budget request delivered to Capitol Hill on Monday coincided with tough words for Pyongyang from U.S. President Donald Trump during the first stop of his lengthy Asia trip. Trump sought to ratchet up pressure on North Korea by refusing to rule out eventual military action and declaring that the United States “will not stand” for North Korea menacing America or its Asian allies.

Trump denounced North Korea as “a threat to the civilized” for pursuing nuclear weapons and the development of the long-range ballistic missiles to deliver them.

The spending request designates $4 billion of the total to support “additional efforts to detect, defeat, and defend against any North Korean use of ballistic missiles against the United States, its deployed forces, allies, or partners,” according to the document. That includes current and projected threats to the U.S. homeland, Guam, South Korea and Japan.

Portions of the money would be used for the construction of an additional ground-based interceptor field at Fort Greely, Alaska; the initial procurement of 20 new ground-based interceptors; ship-based missiles; and interceptors for the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, a U.S. mobile anti-missile system.

Roughly $1.2 billion in the request would allow the Defense Department to deploy an additional 3,500 U.S. troops to Afghanistan as part of Trump’s new strategy for the country where the U.S. has been fighting since 2001, according to the budget request. Trump in August unveiled his new plan for the 16-year Afghan war, declaring that American troops would “fight to win” by attacking enemies, “crushing” al-Qaida and preventing terrorist attacks against Americans.

About $700 million of the spending package would go to the Navy to make repairs to the destroyers John S. McCain and Fitzgerald. Both ships from the Pacific-based 7th Fleet were damaged in deadly collisions that led to eight top Navy officers, including the 7th Fleet commander, being fired from their jobs

The McCain and an oil tanker collided near Singapore in August, leaving 10 U.S. sailors dead. And seven sailors died in June when the Fitzgerald and a container ship collided off Japan.
 
"Now we’re doing two a year in 66 months." ...
VADM Johnson: Navy Must Reliably Execute 60-Month Attack Sub Construction Before Upping Build Rates
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The Navy and industry must prove they can reliably build a Virginia-class attack submarine in just 60 months before talks start about increasing the quantity of boats built each year, the Navy’s top uniformed acquisition official told USNI News.

While talks continue about the submarine industry’s workload and how much that workload can be increased – whether industry can handle not only the addition of the Columbia-class ballistic missile submarine program and the Virginia Payload Module but also an increase to two Virginia-class SSNs every year or even three in some years – those intimately involved in the Virginia-class program are closely monitoring the time it takes to build an SSN and deliver it to the operational fleet.

Vice Adm. David Johnson, the principal military deputy to the assistant secretary of the Navy for research, development and acquisition – and a former Virginia-class program manager and program executive officer for submarines – said achieving and preserving the shorter construction timeline has to trump greater quantity when talking about the future of SSN construction.

The Navy and its two shipyards, General Dynamics Electric Boat and Huntington Ingalls Industries’ Newport News Shipbuilding, have already reduced the delivery timeline by two years and cut cost by 20 percent, all while adding in greater capabilities through block upgrades, Johnson said. By the end of the Block IV submarine production, the yards will be on 60-month construction cycles, followed by three months of testing and a three-month post-shakedown availability, for a total of a 66-month delivery timeline.

“We have to achieve that if we’re actually going to do Columbia on time and even have anybody want to discuss potentially adding a third ship that’s a Virginia-class,” he told USNI News when asked how the Navy balances the shorter construction timeline versus wanting to produce more submarines per year.

“Most important: do what’s the plan, get that right. Build the enabling infrastructure, supplier base, the people, the shipbuilder facilities,” he said.
“We have a pretty good plan. Our intent is to work that plan, that’s what we do, so we don’t, in fact, grow those timelines, because longer timelines, more man hours, more people, you’re late, more money – that’s usually the wrong direction and that’s not what this enterprise is all about. We’re all about faster, less expensive, and better – that ought to be our mantra going into anything in the future.”

Johnson said that ultimately Congress will decide how many subs per year to fund, but cautioned that the sub-industry is seeing workload growth not experienced since the 1980s and that his priority now is following that plan to take time and cost out of SSN production.

Capt. Michael Stevens, the current Virginia-class submarine program manager, told USNI News at the conference that,
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, he was confident the program is moving in a good direction today.

“They’re coming in shorter and shorter. We’re contracting them shorter and shorter, so because sometimes we pulled that challenge so tight we haven’t quite made it – which is good, that means it was a good challenge,” he said.
“We’ve taken a year and a half out of the build. That’s impressive. And when we were doing 84 months, that was [delivering one submarine] a year. Now we’re doing two a year in 66 months. So we’re on the right slope, the builders are performing with great quality – that’s the other thing, we’re delivering these boats with excellent quality and they’re coming out of the post-shakedown availability even faster because of that. So all said and done, by the end of Block IV we’re going to be delivering these ships 48 months faster as compared to Block I boats to the fleet – that’s amazing and at two per year. So we’re very satisfied with the performance today, it’s a challenge and we want to keep challenging.”

Stevens noted that the addition of the Columbia and the Virginia Payload Module would be a tough transition for the Navy-industry team, “successful programs see the transition and manage the transition, and that’s really the hard part. And I think we have the right team onboard with the shipbuilders to do it.”

After buying the Ohio-class SSBNs in the 1980s and 1990s, submarine production dropped off, with the Navy buying just one or even no SSNs a year. Virginia-class submarine production revved up the two shipyards to a current two-a-year rate – this is the first year in recent history the Navy has both bought two submarines and delivered two submarines, Commander of U.S. Submarines Forces Vice Adm. Joseph Tofalo said at the conference. With the addition of the Columbia-class boomers, though, the Navy’s current plans include just one SSN in years the service also buys an SSBN, due to industrial base capacity and federal budget limitations. This spring the Navy formally announced its intention to add a second SSN in Fiscal Year 2021, when the Navy buys its first SSBN, but talks are still underway about the ability to continue that two-a-year pace, or even bump to three boats in years without Columbia-class acquisition.

This discussion of two or three a year matters greatly, as combatant commanders see a rise in threats around the globe and continue to request more and more attack submarines for their areas of responsibility. The Navy formally bumped its SSN requirement from 48 boats to 66, and the service would never reach today’s production plans. Building two a year in every year would get the Navy to 66 SSNs 2048, but of course leadership would like to get there sooner if feasible. Program Executive Officer for Submarines Rear Adm. Michael Jabaley said at the conference that the Navy is making an “incredibly strong effort” to insert the second submarine every year in the shipbuilding plan.

Still, despite that need for more hulls, Johnson’s comments served as a reminder that cost, schedule and quality had to remain top priorities for the sub-construction program, regardless of how many boats a year the Navy ultimately ends up buying.

Johnson, speaking to reporters after his remarks, said he could not guess what the ultimate shipbuilding pace would be, with that decision being in Congress’s hands, but he said lawmakers have been supportive of submarine development and acquisition efforts. Additionally, he said there is “united agreement at the Department (of Defense) level that we really do need submarines. Undersea is an advantage for the U.S. Navy; we want to sustain that advantage, so investing in capacity and upgrades, new technology – those are all things that are supported as we budget.”
 
Yesterday at 9:33 PM
“Through innovative legislative authority and contracting techniques, we’ve already reduced cost by $80 million per hull, to bring APUC down to $7.21 (billion),” Jabaley said.

I see ... let's wait for the twelfth sub, then

Columbia Class Ballistic Missile Sub On Schedule, Down to $7.2 Billion Apiece
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related is this quote:

"The service plans to buy the first Columbia-class submarine in fiscal 2021 and expects the vessel to enter service by 2031."

from
DoD Seeks to Modernize Nuclear Triad Via Columbia-Class Submarine, GBSD Procurements
November 6, 2017
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Saturday at 1:06 PM
after Jun 13, 2017
... am wondering how quickly is the Pentagon filling up with new appointees
so now I read with an interest
McCain to Navy Civilian Leadership Nominees: ‘We Want an Audit’
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If confirmed, provide an audit of acquisitions or risk cuts and delays in funding, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz) warned a pair of nominees to be top civilian leaders in the Navy.

Thomas Modly, nominee to be the Under Secretary of the Navy, and James Geurts, nominee to be the Navy’s top weapons buyer, appeared Tuesday before the Senate Armed Services Committee, chaired by McCain.

Both provided their visions for being stewards of Navy acquisitions, which focused on providing Congress a clear spending analysis and pledges to avoid cost overruns. At times, Modly and Geurts explained their thoughts on issues posed by senators was so in concert they preferred to defer to their colleague’s response. At other moments, each seemed to complete the other’s thought.

“I think one of the problems we’ve had is an inability to lock into requirements early,” Modly said, answering a question about how to avoid cost overruns. There’s a tendency to spend too much time tweaking programs, which causes entire project costs to increase with additional planning, studies, and tests.

Geurts followed Modly’s comment, adding he’ll bring “a sense of urgency in the whole organization.”

While it was apparently heartening to many committee members hearing two of the people tapped to become Navy budget hawks speak about reigning in what often seems like runaway spending on such projects as the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter and the Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carrier (CVN-78), not every senator was willing to give Geurts and Modly a free pass on spending questions.

McCain said the Senate Armed Services Committee recently learned at another hearing how $50 million worth of money he said was totally wasted.

“Witnesses have come before and say we’ll do an audit,” McCain said to Modly. “An audit has not been done. I want you and Mr. Geurts to make this your highest priority.”

If the Navy doesn’t provide better fiscal accountability, McCain said his committee will block future system acquisitions and authorizations.

“You cannot run an organization efficiently if you don’t know how much it costs,” McCain said. “Be warned, we want an audit.”

Geurts concurred an audit of Navy spending would occur, and when it came to spending on emerging technologies, he would be the person held responsible for any overruns. Geurts is currently the U.S. Special Operations Command top acquisition executive. If confirmed, he will in effect be doing the same job, but on a much larger scale for an entire department than what he’s done for the combatant command.

An audit will be done, Modly said. Given his background as a managing director with PricewaterhouseCoopers, a few senators sounded hopeful this business experience would bring some clarity to Navy spending.

“I am firmly committed to driving the Department of the Navy to embody two prominent characteristics: agility and accountability,” Modly said during his testimony. “I believe these are the two most powerful indicators in determining whether any organization, public or private, will be successful over the long run.”

Modly grew up outside Cleveland, and remains an avid Indians and Cavaliers fan, according to social media profiles. Through hard work he earned an admission to the U.S. Naval Academy – he graduated in 1983 – and remains committed to supporting the country that took in his parents.

Both his parents emigrated to the U.S. to escape living behind the Iron Curtain. His father escaped Hungary 69 years ago because, Modly said during his testimony Tuesday, he didn’t join the communist party and would be shut out of any chance of having a successful career.

During his testimony Tuesday, Modly recalled his first visit to Hungary in the earl 1980s. In the square near where his father grew up, Modly said he could see the Hungarian parliament building, which at the time had a big red star atop. Today, the star is gone, but in the square is a statue of Ronald Reagan.

“I served as an active duty officer in the Navy with President Reagan and the American people fully committed to rebuilding our military and most specifically a 600-ship navy, to push back the challenge of the Soviet Union and protect our interests around the globe,” Modly said.

After serving as a Navy helicopter pilot for seven years, Modly worked in academia, the private sector, and public sector. In the early 2000s, Modly worked at the Pentagon, leading the Department of Defense’s business transformation efforts.

Today, Modly is in charge of PricewaterhouseCoopers’ Global Government and Public Services sector. He’s worked for the firm for a decade. According to his work bio, Modly has direct account responsibility for PwC’s Navy, Marine Corps and Office of the Secretary of Defense accounts. He is also PwC’s Global Account Leader for NATO, where the firm is engaged in substantial transformational projects as part of the NATO Reform Agenda. He also has a son and son-in-law serving in the Air Force.

“You have to have some confidence between an organization spending money and an organization giving the money,” Modly said, referring to the relationship between Congress and the Navy.
“Right now, there’s not that confidence.”
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
now noticed:
"The budget request delivered to Capitol Hill on Monday ..."

from where exactly would the money come? I mean what kind of a fund?
Trump seeks nearly $6B to counter North Korean missiles, repair Navy ships
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My neighbor Steve H. a combat veteran with a purple heart, is flying to Seoul to meet President Trump, and then on back to Vietnam to meet Vietnamese veterans who fought for the other team. Steve is a Christian, and has been to Vietnam several times before, and has reconnected with the "Boys of 67", I believe that's the title of his book.

He has shed many tears, and shared hugs and warm conversations with those who were our adversaries. Time has a way of giving each of us perspective, and forgiveness is a "cleansing wellspring".

Steve was given the VIP treatment by SouthWest Airlines, and the Captain and Flight Crew allowed Steve to board 20 mins before other passengers, and placed him "up front", asking him many questions..When the other passengers boarded, the Captain announced his presence and service over the PA and the whole of the passengers and crew clapped and thanked Steve H..

he was greatly humbled and thankful, but he's just that kind of guy!
 
the author should've started with "lawmakers will have to reconcile the cost of the measure with existing spending caps in place"
Congress' $700 billion defense authorization deal includes 20,000 new troops, rejects Space Corps
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Congressional negotiators on Wednesday agreed on a $700 billion defense authorization plan for fiscal 2018, including a 2.4 percent pay raise for troops and a boost in military end strength of more than 20,000 service members.

It also adds 90 new joint strike fighters to the military’s fleet and a third new littoral combat ship, but dumps controversial plans for a new “Space Corps” in favor of less ambitious bureaucratic changes within the Defense Department’s space programs.

The plan still needs final approval from the full House and Senate in coming weeks, and lawmakers will have to reconcile the cost of the measure with existing spending caps in place. The conference plan is roughly $85 billion above what is allowed under law for fiscal 2018, and no firm agreement has been reached yet on how to deal with that issue.

But lawmakers on the House and Senate Armed Services Committees have maintained for months that a sizable boost in defense spending is needed to keep up with military readiness and modernization shortfalls.

The measure — which sets aside about $626 billion for base defense funding and $66 billion for overseas contingency operations — includes money to pay for significant end strength boosts for each of the services, in keeping with requests from the White House.

The compromise bill would add 8,500 new soldiers (7,500 in active duty, 500 each in the Army National Guard and Army Reserve), 5,000 new sailors (4,000 in active duty, 1,000 in the reserves), 5,800 new airmen (4,100 in active duty, 900 in the Guard, 800 in the Reserve) and 1,000 new active-duty Marines.

Under the measure, current personnel would see a 2.4 percent pay raise next year, 0.3 percent above what President Donald Trump had recommended. The 2.4 percent mark equals the expected pay growth based on private sector wages, and would be the largest boost for troops since 2010.

It translates into about a $680 annual boost from 2017 pay for younger enlisted ranks, and about $1,080 a year for more senior enlisted and junior officers. A mid-career officer will see almost $2,000 a year extra under the plan.

Negotiators dropped controversial plans in earlier authorization drafts to establish a new Space Corps in coming years, instead opting for more technical changes in management and procurement rules for existing Air Force space programs. The White House and Pentagon had opposed the idea, calling it an extra level of bureaucracy.

The conference committee also opted not to include any language in the measure related to transgender troops, who have been at the center of legal fights since Trump announced over social media this summer he intended to block transgender individuals from enlisting and dismiss outed members from the ranks.

And they also jettisoned a Senate plan to trim housing benefits for dual-military couples, leaving the basic allowance for housing program untouched for now.

But the lawmakers did include in the compromise bill the so-called “Amazon amendment,” which will allow defense officials to buy certain items online from commercial retailers. House Committee members had said the provision would help make defense procurement less complicated and expensive.

And they included a permanent extension of the Special Survivor Indemnity Allowance, which pays about $300 a month to military widows and widowers to offset other lost benefits. Those stipends were set to expire in May 2018.

The conference is set to authorize five more ships than requested in the president’s budget, along with extra funding for Army helicopters and Trump’s proposed build-up of the Air Force fleet.

The measure now moves to the House and Senate chamber floors, where the path ahead is uncertain.

Lawmakers have until mid-December to work out an appropriations plan for the final nine months of fiscal 2018, and that decision is likely to affect the timing of a defense authorization bill vote. But committee staffers said they were confident of broad support for the authorization plan’s spending levels, even with the looming budget uncertainty.
 
Yesterday at 8:01 PM
I guess it's important
US installs final ground-based missile interceptor to counter ICBM threat
1 hour ago
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related:
Trump requests a 4th missile defense field at Fort Greely
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The Trump administration has asked Congress to fund a fourth missile defense silo field at Fort Greely, Alaska.

The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reports that U.S. President Donald Trump wrote a letter to Congress on Monday requesting $200 million to build the defense field.

Fort Greely is home to most of the United States’ ground-based midcourse missile interceptors, which are designed to protect the United States by intercepting long-range missiles as they fly outside the atmosphere. In a statement to Defense News, the U.S. Missile Defense Agency confirmed the final ground-based interceptor for the Ground-based Midcourse Defense system is in place at Fort Greely.

Trump wrote that the request is a part of “additional efforts to detect, defeat and defend against any North Korean use of ballistic missiles.”

The defense field is just a piece of the $5.9 billion Trump wants added to this year’s budget, $4 million of which was requested for missile defense and North Korea-related military spending.
 
let's face it
Report: Full cost of U.S. wars overseas approaching $6 trillion
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Overseas combat operations since 2001 have cost the United States an estimated $4.3 trillion so far, and trillions more in veterans benefits spending in years to come, according to the latest analysis from the Costs of War project.

The annual analysis from Brown University’s Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs shows a steadily growing tally for the 16 years of wars overseas. Study author Neta Crawford said the goal of the ongoing project is to better illustrate the true costs of overseas military operations.

“Every war costs money before, during and after it occurs — as governments prepare for, wage, and recover from armed conflict by replacing equipment, caring for the wounded and repairing infrastructure destroyed in the fighting,” she wrote in the 2017 report.

Of the total, only about $1.9 trillion has been reported by defense officials as official overseas contingency operations funding.

But the research includes another $880 billion in new base defense spending related to combat efforts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and Pakistan since 2001, as well as about $780 billion in boosted Department of Homeland Security costs in that time frame.

Veterans spending has increased by almost $300 billion so far as a result of those conflicts, and future spending on those benefits over the next four decades is estimated to top $1 trillion more.

Crawford noted that all of the costs could rise with President Donald Trump’s recent decision to boost U.S. end strength in Afghanistan.

“There is no end in sight to the U.S. military presence in Afghanistan and the associated operations in Pakistan,” she wrote.

Administration officials have already requested about $70 billion more in overseas contingency spending as part of their fiscal 2018 budget proposal. The entire federal budget plan, including mandatory benefits spending, totals about $4 trillion.

The full Costs of War report is available
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Yesterday at 7:59 PM
the author should've started with "lawmakers will have to reconcile the cost of the measure with existing spending caps in place"
Congress' $700 billion defense authorization deal includes 20,000 new troops, rejects Space Corps
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related:
Congress set to authorize 13 ships in 2018, but don’t cut steel just yet
The House and Senate’s compromise version of the 2018 National Defense Authorization Act authorizes the U.S. Navy to buy 13 ships — five more than the administration asked for in its budget proposal. But actually getting that money to the Navy faces headwinds.
The big shipbuilding authorization is a step in the right direction for a Navy looking to add about 75 hulls to its fleet, but any progress on that is going to have to wait on the Republican-led effort to pass tax reform.

All signs on Capitol Hill point to zero progress on a budget deal that would raise budget caps until the tax reform package is passed, said Todd Harrison, a budget expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

What that means is that unless Congress can find a deal sooner rather than later, the Defense Department is likely to have to live under a continuing resolution, which locks in spending at the previous year’s levels and stymies big investments in modernization acquisitions programs, Harrison said.

A conference committee preserved three littoral combat ships that came out of the House Armed Services Committee, notable because the president’s budget initially requested just one. The fight over LCS funding spilled into the public sphere after White House budget director Mick Mulvaney told a conservative radio host that the Navy didn’t even want them.

The committee also added a destroyer, an amphibious transport dock, an expeditionary sea base and a cable ship, according to a congressional staffer who spoke on background.

The NDAA also authorizes the full cost of repairs for the destroyers Fitzgerald and John S. McCain, which were
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this summer.

The total authorization blithely treads over the Budget Control Act to the tune of about $85 billion, which would trigger budget caps and across-the-board spending cuts if that level were to be approved in a final budget.

The total budget, with base funding and overseas contingency funding, is authorized at $700 billion.

Taxes, taxes, taxes
The big shipbuilding authorization is a step in the right direction for a Navy looking to add about 75 hulls to its fleet, but any progress on that is going to have to wait on the Republican-led effort to pass tax reform.

All signs on Capitol Hill point to zero progress on a budget deal that would raise budget caps until the tax reform package is passed, said Todd Harrison, a budget expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

What that means is that unless Congress can find a deal sooner rather than later, the Defense Department is likely to have to live under a continuing resolution, which locks in spending at the previous year’s levels and stymies big investments in modernization acquisitions programs, Harrison said.

“It’s par for the course given the budget process and how its gone for the past eight years or so, and that is to say the budget process has not been working,” he said. “Tax reform is No. 1 on the agenda, and they are not going to move onto any serious discussion of a budget deal until they are through tax reform.”

But even if tax reform passes, it might not bode well for the kind of big boost in defense spending the House and Senate Armed Services committees are seeking.

“If they succeed in passing tax reform, it doesn’t automatically mean a big boost to defense spending because tax reform will increase the deficit significantly,” Harrison said. “It may make it harder to raise defense spending in the future.”
source is DefenseNews
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hahaha answering myself what I asked Tuesday at 8:07 PM
now noticed:
"The budget request delivered to Capitol Hill on Monday ..."

from where exactly would the money come? I mean what kind of a fund?
Trump seeks nearly $6B to counter North Korean missiles, repair Navy ships
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:
they simply added it to the 2018 budget request ("The bill was also updated to include a late Navy request: funding for repairs to Navy destroyers USS Fitzgerald (DDG-62) and USS John S. McCain (DDG-56), ..."
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)
 
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