US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

quote of the day comes from inside of
Marine Corps Wants to Upgrade its K-MAX Pilotless Cargo Helicopters
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:

James Geurts, assistant secretary of the
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for research, development and acquisition, told Ernst that his service wants to develop a single, common data link to talk to anything unmanned "so we don't get into the situation where we have to have 10 different data links."
 
Jun 1, 2017
drone1_website.png

LOL haven't heard of this thing yet
Stratolaunch Aircraft Makes First Rollout To Begin Fueling Tests
5/31/2017
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now
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WOW. First flight of the worlds largest airplane. History is made.
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D4CduDYVUAIOe-m.jpg

D4CduDYVUAECWJ3.jpg

D4CduDZUEAEUyfu.jpg
 
so,
Is it already time to worry about the Pentagon budget?
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With six months before the first budget deadline, it may be already time to panic.

Lawmakers’ worries the
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between President Donald Trump and Democrats will cause a deadlock were on full display this week. If the two sides can’t reach a deal to ease statutory budget caps, a stopgap continuing resolution, or CR, could freeze the Pentagon’s budget at last year’s level, or leave the department in a worse state — automatic sequestration cuts could slash its budget by $71 billion.

After Congress’ spring recess, Democrats and Republicans must quickly work to settle sharp disagreements over spending for the Pentagon, domestic programs and the president’s wall at the
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. They have until Oct. 1 to avoid a continuing resolution and until January to avoid sequestration.

Republican lawmakers have been using budget hearings to warn that unless negotiations get into high gear, there’s potential to erase the military readiness gains enabled by the last two years of strong defense budgets. While common at this point in the budget cycle, the potential audiences for that message this time around will range from left-leaning Democrats to the White House.

Earlier this month, Politico
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that the White House wants to boost its leverage in the high-stakes talks with Democrats and Senate Republicans by delaying negotiations until after both the 2019 budget and the debt ceiling expire at the end of September. That suggests the fiscal year will start on a CR.

Because the already high chances of an impasse over funding for the president’s border wall increase in proximity to 2020 electoral politics, it’s possible lawmakers will abandon negotiations for easing spending caps and punt to a full-year continuing resolution, said Rick Berger, a former Senate Budget Committee staffer with the American Enterprise Institute.

“From the perspective of the Senate GOP, this is not a good idea because the longer we go without a deal, the higher the chance that everybody throws up their hands and just takes a full-year CR,” Berger said. “This then goes from ‘how do we thread the needle on a caps deal’ to ‘how do we blame the hell out of each other for the 2020 race.’ Once that momentum gathers, it’s going to be really hard to stop.”

At an April 4 budget hearing, Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman
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, R-Okla., asked Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson to outline the impact of sequestration on her service, if there’s no deal. She said the resulting $29 billion cut would be “absolutely devastating in scope and scale.”

“That would be no F-35s, cut all of the KC-46s, stop the B-21 program, no ground-based strategic deterrent, no research, development, test and evaluation for any space system, most of the fourth- and fifth-generation [fighter jet] modifications, and all of science and technology,” she said. “Or, $29 billion means all of weapons systems sustainment, all flying hours, all base operations and airfield support, and all munitions, together, make $29 billion.”

In the same vein, AirLand Subcommittee Chairman Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., prompted the Air Force’s chief, Gen. David Goldfein, to spell out how a full-year continuing resolution would do much the same thing.

“Sequester would be the worst thing, but it’s hard to imagine we’d go back to the actual sequester levels. But a proposal that’s being batted around — a full-year continuing resolution — is almost the worst thing imaginable?” Cotton asked, to which Goldfein replied: “Yes, sir.”

One significant and positive sign this week is that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., announced this week that talks have begun at the staff level. The impact of those talks is unclear for now.

House Democrats failed to pass a 2020 spending plan this week amid internal divisions, but they did pass a measure that
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at $1.3 trillion for 2020, about a $350 billion increase from 2019. That in turn allows House appropriators to begin drafting their 2020 spending bills.

The House bill that was scuttled Tuesday aimed to reset spending limits for defense at $733 billion for fiscal 2020 and $749 billion for fiscal 2020. The nondefense side of the budget also would come in well-above statutory budget caps, at $631 billion and $646 billion, respectively.

Progressive Democrats balked because the defense side was too high and the nondefense side was too low. Still, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., may use the coming weeks to sway her members, and if that fails, to team with Republican leaders — just as former GOP House Speakers John Boehner and Paul Ryan had to team with Pelosi to pass bills their Tea Party wing wouldn’t accept.

“I don’t participate in the German word ‘Schadenfreude,’ taking delight in other people’s misery, but these things can become miserable,” Rep. Jeff Fortenberry, R-Neb., a member of the Appropriations Committee, told
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. “Shoe’s on the other foot.”

In spite of the fears on display in Congress, Center for Strategic and International Studies defense budget analyst Todd Harrison was skeptical Washington would stumble into a full-year CR — “It’s never happened because it’s impractical” — much less a sequester, which happened once, in 2013.

“Democrats don’t want a sequester either because if it gets triggered, you’re talking massive cuts to nondefense programs as well as defense programs,” Harrison said.

After border wall funding is subtracted from the defense budget, it’s about $742 billion, which is less than a 1% difference from the president’s budget request and theoretically an easy gap to bridge. “So why would anyone let the budget caps stay where they are and sequester be triggered?” Harrison asked.

Indeed, why are lawmakers even bringing it up?

“Old habits die hard,” Harrison said. “What folks have become accustomed to doing with these hearings is saying: ‘We have to scare everyone about sequestration,’ right? ‘Scare everyone about a full-year CR.’ ”

In a roundtable with reporters, the House Armed Services Committee’s ranking member, Rep. Mac Thornberry, R-Texas, said he believes Congress has a center mass that wants a strong defense budget. The nightmare scenarios can’t be ruled out given the last few years of dysfunction, but they’re unlikely.

“Both parties have a political interest in continuing to make the progress that we’ve begun to make on readiness and other things,” Thornberry said. “Even though there’s some fringe elements in both parties, the mass of both parties know that both of us have a responsibility to help defend the country as the Constitution requires us to do.”

If the resistance is in the White House, it can be overcome, but Congress must unify on a spending deal.

“Obviously the president can sign it or not, but I think you can have a genuine bipartisan effort in the Capitol that would result in a very strong vote,” Thornberry said. “That would send a strong message to the president. That’s our job. We ought to do it.”
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Couple videos of interest
First meet the XM913.
This is a modified 50mm Bushmaster chain gun for the Bradley replacement
This baby has been trailed for use not just as a IFV gun but as a C-RAM system meaning it could also find a home in the Navy.

And an old friend with a new name the XM914 aka M230LF. The Army and Marines seem to be pushing using it from light vehicles as a semi replacement for the Ma Duce.
Here on a CROWS mounted to a USMC UGV prototype.
 
Yesterday at 7:18 AM
didn't know
Trump picks next chief of naval operations
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“Sailor 2025”
and didn't know
Trump nominates Vice Adm. Bob Burke for 4th Star, VCNO job
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either
With the blessing of President Donald J. Trump, the Navy continues to reshuffle its top deck, asking lawmakers to promote the Chief of Naval Personnel,
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, to become the Vice Chief of Naval Operations.

If greenlighted by the Senate, Burke will pick up his fourth star and replace Adm. Bill Moran, the president’s pick to become the Chief of Naval Operations.

The 31st
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, is retiring.

Burke’s proposed elevation to VCNO was contained in the same Thursday
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message issued by acting Secretary of Defense Patrick M. Shanahan that announced the nomination of Moran.

It’s not the first time that
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When Moran was the Navy’s top personnel officer, Burke served as a key deputy, directing plans and policies.

When Burke, a career submariner, replaced Moran as chief of personnel on May 27, 2016, he continued and expanded many of the reforms initiated by his former boss.

A key Burke’s deputy,
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., already has been
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to become the 59th chief of naval personnel.

Burke’s legacy as the Navy’s personnel chief drew applause within the service for his tireless efforts to improve life for both officers and their enlisted sailors.

His reforms included revamping fitness reports and evaluations, hiking the number of no-test meritorious advancements and successfully lobbying Congress to
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in the 21st century.

A native of Portage, Michigan, Burke commanded the Norfolk-based attack submarine Hampton and later became commodore of Submarine Development Squadron 12 in Groton, Connecticut.

The United States Submarine League bestowed upon him the
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in 2004.

The next year, the Navy named him the recipient of the Vice Admiral James Bond Stockdale Award for Inspirational Leadership.

He also served as the deputy commander of 6th Fleet, director of operations for U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa and commander of Submarine Group 8.

His decorations include the Defense Superior Service Medal and five Legion of Merit medals.
 
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