US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Feb 27, 2016
scary in several ways:
Admiral: Time is running out to begin updating nukes

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scarier is several ways:
A Firewalled Nuke Fund Is Bad Budgeting and Bad Planning
It’s a budget gimmick that would promote waste and push off hard choices about tomorrow’s nuclear arsenal.

The recent Nuclear Security Summit was certainly the last act for an administration that appears to have run out of gas on what could—and should—have been a signature presidential initiative. Since 2010, President Barack Obama’s administration has been treading water in advancing the president’s goal of seeking the peace and security of a world (outside of Iran) without nuclear weapons. That was the year the last U.S. Nuclear Posture Review was done and the year Washington and Moscow agreed to very modest nuclear arsenal reductions in the New START Treaty. As a parting gift to the next administration, the Defense Department is considering funding a nuclear force for the future that, if carried out by Obama’s successor, would be both fiscally wasteful and strategically unnecessary.

The military services think they have a dilemma. A tidal wave of costly strategic nuclear modernization programs are bearing down on the defense budget over the next couple of decades, just when the services and members of Congress are anxious to take advantage of a now-rising defense budget to buy additional conventional (or, non-nuclear) military hardware. Maintaining and modernizing the U.S. nuclear arsenal over the next 30 years, according to the
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will cost nearly $1 trillion, a number supported by
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from the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. The cost could come to
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in the next 15 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office..

At the core of this nuclear modernization goal lie four expensive programs: a new nuclear-tipped cruise missile ($25 billion); a land-based missile to succeed the current Minuteman ($62 billion); 80 to 100 new B-21 bombers ($100 billion); and 12 new ballistic missile submarines ($139 billion). Not surprisingly, the Navy and Air Force would prefer to pay for nuclear modernization through an increase in their budgets rather than to cut funding for conventional hardware programs. Voilà! The Navy’s proposed National Sea-Based Deterrence Fund, or NSBDF, leaps into existence to solve this problem. The idea is to move the money out from the service budgets and into a different, and arguably more protected, account. The services already did this with missile defense, off-loading more than $200 billion since President Reagan first proposed it in 1983, by creating a new office and budget line under the secretary of defense. Although Pentagon Comptroller Michael McCord is “skeptical” about creating a new fund that implied new money, congressional authorizers wrote the separate Navy fund into the fiscal 2016 defense authorization act. (Appropriators failed to provide any separate resources for the fund.) Once the Navy fund had been put on the table, the Air Force was not far behind in asking that it, too, be included.

When pressed by interested members of Congress, the Pentagon’s senior leaders crumpled like a cheap suit. Defense Secretary Ash Carter has set a new tone, saying at a congressional hearing last month that, “a broader nuclear deterrent fund may be appropriate.” Carter’s willingness to overturn McCord and entertain a bad budgetary and planning idea reflects a growing perception in the Pentagon that Congress is now willing to increase defense spending above caps set five years ago by growing the regular defense budget rather than rely on increases in the off-books “war budget” known as the Overseas Contingency Operations, or OCO, account.

In the Pentagon’s logic, funding from training troops, mission readiness, or the other major conventional weapons programs cannot be cut to accommodate the absolutely necessary fiscal requirement for strategic force modernization. And since our strategic nuclear forces protect the entire nation, funds for nuclear modernization should be simply added to the budget, without cutting anything.

This is bad budgeting and bad planning. It would further erode any remaining budgetary discipline at DOD (where does the precedent of setting aside special funding stop?). And instead of using budget constraints to encourage the Pentagon to set priorities and make choices, it sends an all-too-common message to the services to simply request more. Nothing could do a greater disservice to U.S. national security than to allow such a profligate spending message to be sent to the Defense Department.

The Pentagon’s budgetary gimmick would not be necessary if the next administration can finally come to grips with how many and what type of strategic nuclear weapons and delivery systems are necessary to defend the nation. Despite the Obama administration’s conclusion that our security can be ensured with a strategic nuclear force only two-thirds the size permitted under New START, our nuclear force planning remains stuck in a Cold-War time warp, still inflating the number of warheads and platforms deemed necessary both to deter an enemy nuclear attack on the United States or its allies and to fight and win a nuclear war should deterrence fail.

Today, the United States has the capability, using just submarines, to conduct a range of large-scale and limited nuclear attacks. In addition to their operational flexibility, the SSBNs are a highly survivable nuclear platform. The odds that any enemy could achieve a catastrophic breakthrough in anti-submarine warfare capabilities or that the United States would suffer a catastrophic failure in the warheads used on the Trident’s missiles are close to zero. A small strategic bomber force based on the current aircraft (B-52, B-1, and B-2) and nuclear bombs could provide added insurance.

Creating a separate fund to protect service budgets from the costs of modernizing strategic nuclear weapons not only cheats the American taxpayer but also fuels an unnecessarily large arsenal stuffed with weapons America does not need to remain safe. Rather than make tough programmatic and budget choices on the size and structure of America’s strategic nuclear forces, Congress and now the Obama administration have opened up an irresponsible and unsustainable path for strategic force modernization that only kicks the can down the road.
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... it took some time but:
Navy Successfully Completes First Live Fire Test Of SeaRAM From Destroyer

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related:
Navy, Marines Developing New CONOPS For Contested Littoral Operations
The Navy and Marine Corps are developing concepts of operations for littoral operations in contested environments, including near Syria with Russian anti-access weapons deployed, officials told the Senate Armed Services seapower subcommittee this week.

After Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.) asked about the effect of Russian weapons like the S-400 Triumf anti-aircraft missile system and P-800 Oniks supersonic anti-ship cruise missile on operations in the Eastern Mediterranean, Deputy Commandant for Combat Development and Integration Lt. Gen. Robert Walsh said that the chief of naval operations and commandant of the Marine Corps had tasked the Naval Board with looking at that type of scenario.

The Naval Board, which Walsh co-chairs, is working with the Naval Development Warfare Center and the Marines’ Combat Development “to write a concept for littoral operations in a contested environment … across all the places we look at,” Walsh said.
“One of the areas is Syria.”

The study also includes a range of military operations, including noncombatant evacuation operations up to high-end conflict.

“What we’re definitely seeing is those threats impact us, and we’re going to have to work much closer and integrate with the rest of the battle force,” he said.
“The Amphibious Ready Group is certainly not going to have all the capabilities to be able to operate independently, and it’s going to need the rest of the battle force to integrate and operate closely and work together with the high-end threats that the cruisers and destroyers bring, the carriers bring, along with the submarine force.”

Vice Adm. Joseph Mulloy, deputy chief of naval operations for integration of capabilities and resources, agreed that the combination of platforms in the region would be important to dealing with advanced threats.

“If you have an E-2D, the Advanced Hawkeye airplane, that has a good link up with our cruisers with (Aegis) Block 9 – if that’s the force you have, you can be closer” to the shore, Mulloy said.
“Other times you have to be farther away. So it’s a combination [of concepts of operations], the ability to operate, and then the equipment you bring.”

Mulloy added that operations in the Eastern Mediterranean and Black Sea now present as much of a threat to naval forces as operations near China, due to the introduction of advanced electronics and weapons.

Navy acquisition chief Sean Stackley told the subcommittee that the Navy had been particularly focused on fielding rapid capabilities to keep the four Mediterranean-based guided missile destroyers safe from the evolving threats in the region. Two years ago the Navy developed and fielded a “transportable electronic warfare module to specifically deal with the threat” Ayotte described from Russian anti-ship and anti-plane systems. And last year the Navy engineered, tested and fielded a way to combine the SeaRAM Anti-Ship Missile Defense System – in production to be installed on Littoral Combat Ships – with the destroyers’ Aegis Combat System. Both efforts were accomplished within a year, Stackley said, and “this type of turnaround as the threat emerges is frankly what we need to be doing every day.”
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I'm at a really noisy Starbucks right now, so perhaps I didn't hear properly what's said in this interesting video, but ... is there really "a 15,000 Marine infantry regiment" as the source of the video
The Basics: How the U.S. Marines Fight
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says? I mean how many Battalions would such a Regiment have?? (if the question doesn't make sense, EDIT I'm sorry, just school me on the USMC principal organization :) that's what I've wanted to look at for a really long time)
 
Last edited:

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Wait me for Orbat, TOE :) you know i love it from long time in more but not Dady hehe

15000 pers in general for a Division, ~ 10/20000+.

A Rgt do 3200 pers in 3 x Battalions/Bat of 950 with Rgt's HQ etc... in more.

A USMC Division about 18000 pers. big, USA have big Divisions especialy USMC coz much personnal for logistic for support combat units, it is a very rich country and from WWII have always that, many vehicles for this time, luxury means.

The 1st Division/West Coast in fact reinforced with Elts of 3rd Hawai/Japan get more, Inf and Art Rgt with 4 Bat ! about 23000 pers the more big Division in the World with the 1st Cavalry ~ 20000 pers.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
I'm at a really noisy Starbucks right now, so perhaps I didn't hear properly what's said in this interesting video, but ... is there really "a 15,000 Marine infantry regiment" as the source of the video
The Basics: How the U.S. Marines Fight
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says? I mean how many Battalions would such a Regiment have?? (if the question doesn't make sense, EDIT I'm sorry, just school me on the USMC principal organization :) that's what I've wanted to look at for a really long time)
Okay I think something got lost in translation.
The Smallest Infantry formation is the fire and maneuver team of 2 next is a fire team of 4 a squad varies based on doctrine but is 2-3 fire teams for USMC 3 for a 12 man rifle squad. a section or patrol is 2-3 squads, a Platoon is 26-55 squads a Company is 2-8 platoons (( the Commonwealth armies use the term Squadron) 80-250 men just to help those who got lost), A US Battalion is ( Commonwealth armies use the term regiment ) is 2-6 Companies, a US regiment is 2+ battalions for about 1000-3000, A Brigade is 2 regiments or 3-6 battalions for about 3,000 to 5,000, a division is about 2-4 Brigades, a corps which is 2 divisions a Army is 2 Corps and a Theater is anything over 4 armies.
Now that's the Classical Table, but the Marines and modern forces are a bit different because of there specialized nature.
A Marine Expeditionary Brigade is a combined arms formation of Marines and sailors who in total number 14,500 men. which is huge in theory it should be a Division except it's made up of a unique mix.
The Command element is the command staff, a regiment each of Communications, Intelligence, MP's, and Electronic warfare. added to this are a company of Force Recon and a Air naval gunfire liaison company.
The Ground Combat element is the Grunts a modern regimental combat team. a infantry regiment ( 3 infantry battalions ) 48 AAV, 27 LAV, 14 MBT, 2 ARV ( Tank Tow Trucks), 2 Armored Breaching vehicles,
1 artillery battalion with 24 155mm howitzers.
then the Aviation Combat element. This tends to fluctuate
about 3 squadron's AV 8B Harrier ( 45),
2 Squadrons FA18C/D (24)
( These two are to be replaced in the future with F35B so figure maybe 60-70 F35 across 5 squadrons)
5 EA6B ( The Marines still use Prowlers )
6 KC 130J
32 CH53E ( to be replaced with CH53K)
48 MV22
18 AH1
9 UH 1
45 Stinger missile teams
and 1 Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron and 1 Marine Wing support Squadron to keep the Engines lit and the Tires rolling

Finally the Logistics Combat Element
A regiment of Logistics specialists with cranes fuel and water trucks, forklifts, bridging equipment, road graters, generators, logistics trucks water purifying equipment and more.

now is there a "a 15,000 Marine infantry regiment" more likely a 1500 Marine Infantry regiment.
 

Brumby

Major
I'm at a really noisy Starbucks right now, so perhaps I didn't hear properly what's said in this interesting video, but ... is there really "a 15,000 Marine infantry regiment" as the source of the video
The Basics: How the U.S. Marines Fight
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says? I mean how many Battalions would such a Regiment have?? (if the question doesn't make sense, EDIT I'm sorry, just school me on the USMC principal organization :) that's what I've wanted to look at for a really long time)
The way Marines are organised is different from the traditional army units because of their expeditionary nature. A simplified organization and description is produced below (disclaimer : not my work)

upload_2016-4-10_17-49-12.png
upload_2016-4-10_17-49-38.png
 
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