Steven Costa Program Manager, Ammunition Marine Corps Systems Command

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Transcription:

Steven Costa Program Manager, Ammunition Marine Corps Systems Command 703-432-8777 steven.costa@usmc.mil February 2014

Marine Corps Overview Force Structure & Equipment R&D Acquisition Fiscal Outlook Logistics - Drawdown Production - Industrial Base

Force Structure & Equipment The Marine Corps is America s Expeditionary Force in Readiness a balanced air-ground-logistics team. We are forward deployed and forward engaged: shaping, training, deterring and responding to all manner of crises and contingencies. We create options and decision space for our Nation s leaders. Alert and ready, we respond to today s crisis with today s force..today. Gen James F. Amos, Commandant of the Marine Corps 175K MARINE CORPS FORCE STRUCTURE BACKGROUND The Marine Corps optimal size to meet the requirements of the President s National Security Strategy, as identified by the 2010 Force Structure Review, is 186.8K. The Marine Corps began to build this force for a post-afghanistan environment, transitioning from its wartime high of 202K. The Budget Control Act of 2011 rendered that force size unaffordable. We then designed a 182.1K force, to be reached by 2016, that would still meet the National Security Strategy gy( (NSS) requirements with a smaller force, cut across all aspects of the Marine Air Ground Task Force. Concerned with the likelihood of future sequestration budgets beyond 2013, the Commandant of the Marine Corps (CMC) initiated a study in February to identify the future Marine Corps force structure that would best meet the NSS requirements, at a high rate of readiness, within the confines of those future budgetary constraints. Directed by the CMC s guidance to design a Marine Corps that maintains its crisis-response capability and forward presence, a 175K force emerged as the best we could do in addressing the operational requirements of steady state deployments, crisis i response activities, and potential major combat operations while preserving institutional health and readiness. At this size, the Marine Corps leverages its crisis response capability, which is crucial for the current and future threat environments, through lighter, agile, forward-deployed forces. We accept significant risk, however, in our ability to carry out major combat operations and sustain them with a smaller force.

Force Structure & Equipment (Cont d) 175K MARINE CORPS FORCE STRUCTURE (Cont d) MESSAGES A Marine Corps of 186.8K remains the optimal force level to meet the requirements of the President s National Security Strategy. A Marine Corps of 175K is the lowest level that can remain America s crisis response force capable of meeting the requirements of our Nation s strategy. This force provides a minimum acceptable level of readiness, yet maintains a forward presence as a part of the Navy-Marine Corps team. Decreased funding also reduces our ability to conduct equipment modernization and infrastructure sustainment. Over time, ageing equipment also puts at risk our ability to effectively respond to tomorrow s threats. A 175K Marine Corps is the best we could do to balance the operational requirements of steady-state deployments with our institutional health and readiness in the current fiscal environment. Sequestration undeniably affects our individual Marines and every aspect of our Corps. Marines on the forward edge of our Nation s security will remain the Corps number one priority and will continue to receive the full support they need. Despite an uncertain fiscal environment, the Marine Corps is prepared to adjust our planning by maintaining our priority: near-term unit readiness to support deployed and next-to-deploy forces. We will also preserve capability and capacity to meet the demands of combatant commands. Following that, we will support Fiscal Year 14 operations and exercises, with potential reduced participation levels for some exercises. We will be forced to reduce capacity to support near-term unit readiness for non-deployed crisis response and Fiscal Year 15 next-to-deploy to units. Additionally, there will be reduced investment in infrastructure sustainment and we will shift funds from equipment modernization to protect current readiness.

R&D Proponent: USMC/MARCORSYSCOM/PM Ammunition Background/Purpose/Objective: Very lightweight polymer material replaces most of the brass case, allowing reduction of weight of conventional brass cased ammunition by ~20%. Interoperable with current weapons & logistics sustainment. Operational benefits of lightweight ammunition will vary by platform and mission. Ground: Increase lethality; more ammo Air: More weight sensitive than ground. Increased range MK 323 Caliber.50 Ball Link PCT Accomplishments/Status: Fully Funded Upon successful qualification of the MK323 funds from legacy caliber.50 ammunition will be realigned to support Full Rate Production USMC Test and Evaluation: Initiated Sept 2013 Ongoing Successful Stakeholder Demo at Fort Bragg: Dec 2013 Over 4,000 rounds fired - 1 malfunction (operator induced) Successfully fired from GAU-19 Gatling.50 Cal and the GAU-21 (M3M) Qualification of 50 Caliber PCT Qualification of.50 Caliber PCT Final Qualification: 4th Qtr FY15 Initial Production: 4th Qtr FY16

Acquisition FY 2013 FY 2014 FY 2015 FY 2016 FY 2017 FY 2018 Total Small Arms 74,051 32,894 33,133 28,635 36,874 47,218 252,805 Linear Charge 34585 6088 5000 6088 1088 1089 53,938 40MM 22,086 13,888 7644 7644 7644 7643 66,549 60MM 0 6,717 1620 3350 3350 3350 18,387 81MM 3,763 9,162 0 0 0 0 12,925 120MM 24162 13361 13918 13917 15761 31007 112,126 25MM 1,534 1,887 60 0 0 0 3,481 Grenades 7,686 3,760 1217 1014 230 4229 18,136 Rockets 28,878 0 17653 44160 57451 56302 204,444 Artillery 105,939 970 0 49189 49188 50567 255,853 Demolition 0 418 1214 200 200 216 2,248 Fuzes 32,174 39,585 24161 32391 27783 26367 182,461 Non-Lethal 1,360 0 8625 8624 8624 10871 38,104 Source PRESBUD14

Acquisition (Cont d) Artillery -Outyear procurement of Alternative Warhead round for Dual Purpose Improved Conventional Munitions (DPICM) Fuzes - Precision i Guidance Kit (PGK) Rockets Light Anti-Armor Weapon (LAW) and Shoulder-Launched ed Multipurpose pose Assault Weapon (SMAW) 120MM Expeditionary Fire Support System (EFSS) and Multipurpose High Explosive (MPHE)

Fiscal Outlook 1087 PLANNED 860 885 785 628 395 244 362 467 402 332 161 227 193 203 255 289 FY03 FY04 FY05 FY06 FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 FY12 FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 FY17 FY18 FY19

Logistics - Drawdown Retrograde, Redeployment and Reconstitution (R3) Ammunition Basic Framework Requirement Cross (based on Forces) Serviceable Kuwait Level YES Consume Payback @ SYSCOM level Disposal YES Theater Requirement Requirement (based RFF 1200 & FAST Co) Cross Level Serviceable YES Ammunition Sustainment Vessels CONUS YES Store Payback @ Return to USMC Disposal Inventory SYSCOM level

Production - Industrial Base

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