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Navy Affairs Committee

Navy Affairs Committee. NLUS National Convention St. Thomas, USVI July 2006. Welcome/Agenda. Sign-in/Identification of Committee Members NLUS Vision/Mission/Goals & Navy Affairs Purpose Statements Intro of Sea Services Committee Chair NLUS Maritime Policy “process”

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Navy Affairs Committee

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  1. Navy Affairs Committee NLUS National Convention St. Thomas, USVI July 2006

  2. Welcome/Agenda • Sign-in/Identification of Committee Members • NLUS Vision/Mission/Goals & Navy Affairs Purpose Statements • Intro of Sea Services Committee Chair • NLUS Maritime Policy “process” • Provide Synopsis and Key Points of NLUS Maritime Policy Statement—Key Communication Points for Membership • Council/Geographic Issues/Recommendations • Major events in next year in your region • Summary of Action Items

  3. NLUS Vision/Mission • Vision: The NLUS will be the preferred resource for the education of both the U.S. Congress and the American Public on our Sea Services • Mission: The NLUS is a civilian organization dedicated to informing the American people and their government that the USA is a maritime nation and that its national defense and economic well being are dependent upon strong Sea Services – U.S. Navy, U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Coast Guard and U.S. Merchant Marine

  4. NLUS Goals • Educate national leaders and the nation • Support the men and women of the Sea Services • Provide assistance to sea service families • Support youth programs

  5. Navy Affairs Purpose Statement • In support of the goals & objectives of NLUS: • Communicate with its membership • Engender Public Support for Navy Programs as described in the Maritime Policy Statement • Follow the Navy’s key programs through the legislative process, supporting the Navy position as appropriate

  6. Navy Affairs Purpose Statement(continued) • Foster increased recognition for the Navy at National/Regional/Council/Local level through: • Educating membership/elected representatives • Support of recognition programs for active & reserve Navy personnel • Support of key events (commissioning, ship visits, returning deployers, etc.) • Sponsoring Sea Cadet and NJROTC units and recognition • Providing SEAPOWER Magazine subscriptions to schools

  7. Maritime Policy Process • Navy League requests briefings from the: • Navy -- Marine Corps • Coast Guard -- Maritime Administration • The Chair of the Sea Services for NLUS and each of his committee chairs and the Chair of the Maritime Policy & Resolutions Committee attend all of the briefings, given at the flag/general officer level by each of the Sea Services • With due respect to the service positions, the Maritime Policy Committee members respectively draft their sections which is then vetted among the entire committee before being presented to the NLUS Board of Directors for approval and publication • NLUS permanent staff then publish and use the Statement to lobby the Hill and educate NLUS members

  8. Threat Dictates Revised Strategy COCOMs Shaping & Stability Ops GWOT COCOMs Major Combat Ops HLS/ HLD COCOMs NORTHCOM

  9. CNO’s Vision (summary) A combat-ready Navy—forward deployed, rotational and surge capable, large-, agile- and lethal-enough to deter any threat & defeat any foe in support of the Joint Force. CNO’s Priorities • Sustain Current Readiness • Build the Fleet (ships, aircraft, submarines) of the future (while offering more stability to our shipbuilders) • Develop the Navy’s 21st century leaders

  10. “Building Upon” Sea Power 21 • SeaStrike—Projecting precise, persistent offensive power (N78-NAVAIR) • SeaShield—Projecting global defensive assurance (N76/NAVSEA) • SeaBasing—Projecting joint operational independence (N75/NAVSEA) • FORCEnet—Connecting the Force to achieve battlespace dominance (N61/SPAWAR)

  11. NLUS Priority Items • Stabilize the Navy’s procurement and modernization accounts in order to gain/sustain Congressional support for ship/aircraft/submarine construction & conversion • Advanced and split year funding for “leveling” budget spikes and yard loading • CNO/SECNAV decide on a ship count number and the strategy to get there, gain Congressional support for the funding, and execute

  12. Sea StrikeProjecting Precise & Persistent Offensive Power • 12 Carriers and associated air wings, including full funding of CVN-21 • Multi-year procurement of F/A-18E/F, E-2C/D & full development of JSF • Sustain DD(X) development, dual lead ship acquisition strategy and FY07 SCN • Sustain conversion of 4 SSBNs to SSGNs • Implement Aegis CG Mod program for SLEP and modernization • Continue DDG Mod program

  13. Sea ShieldProjecting Global Defensive Assurance • Continue development, procurement & deployment of Navy portion of Ballistic Missile Defense System (the only service which is fielding successful system to date) • Sustain the construction of LCS Flight 0 (dual track—4 ships) and their mission modules • Develop & procure MMA/P8 (P-3C replacement) & the BAMS UAV

  14. Sea BasingProjecting Joint Operational Independence • In support of 12 ESGs, complete LHD Class construction, continue LPD-17 Class construction & and fund the LHA(R) • Continue funding for CLF ships (oiler, ammo, dry cargo, LMSRs) in order to round out Maritime Preposition Force (Future) Squadrons • Fund development & procurement of surface and air “connectors” to move warfighters and sustainment from advance bases to the sea base to the shore

  15. FORCEnetConnecting the Joint Force to Achieve Battlespace Dominance • Integrate operational pictures across serce lines & among air/ground/naval forces • GCCS-M; GCCS-A • Establish globally networked Joint Force Maritime Component Commanders (JFMCCs), linking geographically dispersed units of the Sea Base from joint command level to the tactical level

  16. Shipbuilding • What’s the number? • Navy has been “counseled” by Congress to tell them what they need (vice a 55 ship range) • Taskers are out, CNO will decide on a defendable number, get Secretariat approval, print the T-shirts and testify • For 2006: • President’s budget – 4 ships (1-SSN, 1-LCS, 1-T-AKE, 1-LPD) • NLUS – advocates “more than” a 300 ship, 45 attack submarine Navy, split year funding for large capital ships, level loading the shipyards and advance procurement for long lead items which contributes to level loading

  17. Shipbuilding (continued) • CVN-21 – slipped from ’07 to ‘08 • New Electrical Generation & Distribution • Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System (EMALS) • New Propulsion Plant • Advanced Flight Deck Design • Advanced Arresting Gear • 500-900 Fewer Billets (ship & air wing) • Significant Reductions in Total Operating Cost • Backfit Selected Improvements to Fleet Carriers

  18. Shipbuilding -- LCS • Implement Technologies As They Mature • LCS – 10 of 22 technologies fully mature at start of System Development • First 2 ships mission modules w/existing technology • Warfighting Dominance in the Littorals • Focused Mission—achieved by reconfigurable “Mission Modules: ASW, ASUW or MW • Fast (40 – 50 knots), maneuverable, shallow draft • Heavy reliance on “off-board” and unmanned systems • Construction commenced in 2005 • IOC 2007—55 ships over 30 year SCN

  19. Take-Away • > 300+ Ship Navy • > 8 -10 ships/year new construction • Support DD(X) & LCS as next generation • Continue DDG-51 through 62 ships • Sustain LPD-17 Class through at least 9 units • 130-250 Aircraft procurement per year over FYDP • F/A-18E/F & E-2C/D Multi-year procurement • Complete JSF development • Follow-on to P-3 and EA-6B (MMA) • Protect Sealift procurement • Guard against further ‘encroachment’ of vital training sites

  20. Wrap-Up • Council/Geographic Issues/ Recommendations • Major events in next year in your region • Action Items

  21. Back Up

  22. Future Naval Forces Structure • Aircraft Carriers 11 • Surface Combatants 88 • Littoral Combat Ships 55 • Attack Submarines 48 • Cruise Missile Submarines 4 • Ballistic Missile Submarines 14 • Expeditionary Warfare Ships 31 • Combat Logistics Force 30 • Maritime Prepositioning Force (Future) 12 • Support Vessels 20 • Total 313 * Indexed to the DoD FY 2010 threat assessments and compliant with QDR 06 and Strategic Planning Guidance

  23. Topical Programs/Issues • DD(X) – will deliver precision strike and volume fires to support assured access • Local area defense/ASW/ASUW capabilities • 14.5 Ktons/80 VLS cells/2-155 mm Advanced Gun Systems w/920 rounds / Tomahawk Blk IV / 57 mm Guns • Integrated Electric Drive Propulsion & Power Distribution System • Dual Band Radar/EO-IR System/Acoustic Sensors • Stealthy radar cross section (1/2 RCS of DD-963) • Crew size 142

  24. Topical Programs/Issues (cont’d) • CG(X) • Rounds out the Surface Combatant Family of Ships (SCFOS) • Build on DD(X) technologies • Provide an “umbrella” of air and missile defense • Air Defense protection for Carrier and Expeditionary Strike Groups

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