[Congressional Bills 112th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. 3254 Placed on Calendar Senate (PCS)]
Calendar No. 419
112th CONGRESS
2d Session
S. 3254
[Report No. 112-173]
To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2013 for military
activities of the Department of Defense, for military construction, and
for defense activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe
military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other
purposes.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
June 4, 2012
Mr. Levin, from the Committee on Armed Services, reported the following
original bill; which was read twice and placed on the calendar
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2013 for military
activities of the Department of Defense, for military construction, and
for defense activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe
military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other
purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2013''.
SEC. 2. ORGANIZATION OF ACT INTO DIVISIONS; TABLE OF CONTENTS.
(a) Divisions.--This Act is organized into four divisions as
follows:
(1) Division A-Department of Defense Authorizations.
(2) Division B-Military Construction Authorizations.
(3) Division C-Department of Energy National Security
Authorizations and Other Authorizations.
(4) Division D-Funding Tables.
(b) Table of Contents.--The table of contents for this Act is as
follows:
Sec. 1. Short title.
Sec. 2. Organization of Act into divisions; table of contents.
Sec. 3. Congressional defense committees.
Sec. 4. Scoring of budgetary effects.
DIVISION A--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE I--PROCUREMENT
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 101. Authorization of appropriations.
Subtitle B--Army Programs
Sec. 111. Multiyear procurement authority for Army CH-47F helicopters.
Subtitle C--Navy Programs
Sec. 121. Refueling and complex overhaul of the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln.
Sec. 122. Ford class aircraft carriers.
Sec. 123. Limitation on availability of amounts for second Ford class
aircraft carrier.
Sec. 124. Multiyear procurement authority for Virginia class submarine
program.
Sec. 125. Multiyear procurement authority for Arleigh Burke class
destroyers and associated systems.
Sec. 126. Authority for relocation of certain AEGIS weapon system
assets between and within the DDG-51 class
destroyer and AEGIS Ashore programs in
order to meet mission requirements.
Sec. 127. Designation of mission modules of the Littoral Combat Ship as
a major defense acquisition program.
Sec. 128. Transfer of certain fiscal year 2012 Procurement of
Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps funds.
Sec. 129. Transfer of certain fiscal year 2012 Procurement, Marine
Corps funds for procurement of weapons and
combat vehicles.
Sec. 130. Sense of Congress on Marine Corps amphibious lift and
presence requirements.
Sec. 131. Sense of Senate on Department of Navy fiscal year 2014 budget
request for tactical aviation aircraft.
Subtitle D--Air Force Programs
Sec. 141. Reduction in number of aircraft required to be maintained in
strategic airlift aircraft inventory.
Sec. 142. Treatment of certain programs for the F-22A Raptor aircraft
as major defense acquisition programs.
Sec. 143. Avionics systems for C-130 aircraft.
Sec. 144. Procurement of space-based infrared system satellites.
Sec. 145. Transfer of certain fiscal year 2011 and 2012 funds for
Aircraft Procurement for the Air Force.
Subtitle E--Joint and Multiservice Matters
Sec. 151. Multiyear procurement authority for V-22 joint aircraft
program.
Sec. 152. Limitation on availability of funds for full-rate production
of Handheld, Manpack, and Small Form/Fit
radios under the Joint Tactical Radio
System program.
Sec. 153. Shallow Water Combat Submersible program.
TITLE II--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 201. Authorization of appropriations.
Subtitle B--Program Requirements, Restrictions, and Limitations
Sec. 211. Next Generation Foundry for the Defense Microelectronics
Activity.
Sec. 212. Advanced rotorcraft initiative.
Sec. 213. Transfer of certain fiscal year 2012 Navy research,
development, test, and evaluation funds.
Sec. 214. Authority for Department of Defense laboratories to enter
into education partnerships with
educational institutions in United States
territories and possessions.
Sec. 215. Transfer of certain fiscal year 2012 Air Force research,
development, test, and evaluation funds.
Subtitle C--Missile Defense Matters
Sec. 231. Homeland ballistic missile defense.
Sec. 232. Regional ballistic missile defense.
Sec. 233. Missile defense cooperation with Russia.
Sec. 234. Next generation Exo-atmospheric Kill Vehicle.
Sec. 235. Modernization of the Patriot air and missile defense system.
Sec. 236. Medium Extended Air Defense System.
Sec. 237. Availability of funds for Iron Dome short-range rocket
defense program.
Subtitle D--Reports
Sec. 251. Mission Packages for the Littoral Combat Ship.
Sec. 252. Comptroller General of the United States annual reports on
the acquisition program for the Amphibious
Combat Vehicle.
Sec. 253. Conditional requirement for report on amphibious assault
vehicles for the Marine Corps.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
Sec. 271. Transfer of administration of Ocean Research and Resources
Advisory Panel from Department of the Navy
to National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration.
TITLE III--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 301. Operation and maintenance funding.
Subtitle B--Energy and Environmental Provisions
Sec. 311. Department of Defense guidance on environmental exposures at
military installations.
Sec. 312. Funding of agreements under the Sikes Act.
Sec. 313. Limitation on availability of funds for procurement of
alternative fuel.
Subtitle C--Logistics and Sustainment
Sec. 321. Repeal of certain provisions relating to depot-level
maintenance.
Subtitle D--Reports
Sec. 331. Annual report on Department of Defense long-term corrosion
strategy.
Sec. 332. Modified deadline for Comptroller General review of annual
report on prepositioned materiel and
equipment.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
Sec. 341. Savings to be achieved in civilian workforce and contractor
employee workforce of the Department of
Defense.
Sec. 342. NATO Special Operations Headquarters.
Sec. 343. Repeal of redundant authority to ensure interoperability of
law enforcement and emergency responder
training.
TITLE IV--MILITARY PERSONNEL AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Active Forces
Sec. 401. End strengths for active forces.
Subtitle B--Reserve Forces
Sec. 411. End strengths for Selected Reserve.
Sec. 412. End strengths for Reserves on active duty in support of the
Reserves.
Sec. 413. End strengths for military technicians (dual status).
Sec. 414. Fiscal year 2013 limitation on number of non-dual status
technicians.
Sec. 415. Maximum number of reserve personnel authorized to be on
active duty for operational support.
Subtitle C--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 421. Military personnel.
TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY
Subtitle A--Officer Policy
Sec. 501. Extension of relaxation of limitation on selective early
discharges.
Sec. 502. Exception to 30-year retirement for regular Navy warrant
officers in the grade of chief warrant
officer, W-5.
Sec. 503. Modification of definition of joint duty assignment to
include all instructor assignments for
joint training and education.
Sec. 504. Sense of Senate on inclusion of assignments as academic
instructor at the military service
academies as joint duty assignments.
Subtitle B--Reserve Component Management
Sec. 511. Authority for appointment of persons who are lawful permanent
residents as officers of the National
Guard.
Sec. 512. Reserve component suicide prevention and resilience program.
Subtitle C--General Service Authorities
Sec. 521. Diversity in the Armed Forces and related reporting
requirements.
Sec. 522. Modification of authority to conduct programs on career
flexibility to enhance retention of members
of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 523. Authority for additional behavioral health professionals to
conduct pre-separation medical examinations
for post-traumatic stress disorder.
Sec. 524. Quarterly reports on involuntary separation of members of the
Armed Forces.
Sec. 525. Review of eligibility of victims of domestic terrorism for
award of the Purple Heart and the Defense
Medal of Freedom.
Subtitle D--Military Justice and Legal Matters Generally
Sec. 531. Clarification and enhancement of the role of the Staff Judge
Advocate to the Commandant of the Marine
Corps.
Sec. 532. Additional information in reports on annual surveys of the
committee on the Uniform Code of Military
Justice.
Subtitle E--Sexual Assault, Hazing, and Related Matters
Sec. 541. Authority to retain or recall to active duty reserve
component members who are victims of sexual
assault while on active duty.
Sec. 542. Additional elements in comprehensive Department of Defense
policy on sexual assault prevention and
response.
Sec. 543. Hazing in the Armed Forces.
Subtitle F--Education and Training
Sec. 551. Inclusion of the School of Advanced Military Studies Senior
Level Course as a senior level service
school.
Sec. 552. Modification of eligibility for associate degree programs
under the Community College of the Air
Force.
Sec. 553. Support of Naval Academy athletic programs.
Sec. 554. Grade of commissioned officers in uniformed medical accession
programs.
Sec. 555. Authority for service commitment for Reservists who accept
fellowships, scholarships, or grants to be
performed in the Selected Reserve.
Sec. 556. Repeal of requirement for eligibility for in-State tuition of
at least 50 percent of participants in
Senior Reserve Officers' Training Corps
program.
Sec. 557. Modification of requirements on plan to increase the number
of units of the Junior Reserve Officers'
Training Corps.
Sec. 558. Consolidation of military department authority to issue arms,
tentage, and equipment to educational
institutions not maintaining units of the
Junior ROTC.
Sec. 559. Modification of requirement for reports in Federal Register
on institutions of higher education
ineligible for contracts and grants for
denial of ROTC or military recruiter access
to campus.
Sec. 560. Comptroller General of the United States report on the
Reserve Officers' Training Corps.
Subtitle G--Defense Dependents' Education and Military Family Readiness
Matters
Sec. 571. Impact aid for children with severe disabilities.
Sec. 572. Continuation of authority to assist local educational
agencies that benefit dependents of members
of the Armed Forces and Department of
Defense civilian employees.
Sec. 573. Amendments to the Impact Aid program.
Sec. 574. Military spouses.
Sec. 575. Modification of authority to allow Department of Defense
domestic dependent elementary and secondary
schools to enroll certain students.
Sec. 576. Sense of Congress regarding support for Yellow Ribbon Day.
Subtitle H--Other Matters
Sec. 581. Family briefings concerning accountings for members of the
Armed Forces and Department of Defense
civilian employees listed as missing.
Sec. 582. Enhancement of authority to accept gifts and services.
Sec. 583. Clarification of authorized Fisher House residents at the
Fisher House for the Families of the Fallen
and Meditation Pavilion at Dover Air Force
Base, Delaware.
Sec. 584. Report on accuracy of data in the Defense Enrollment
Eligibility Reporting System.
TITLE VI--COMPENSATION AND OTHER PERSONNEL BENEFITS
Subtitle A--Pay and Allowances
Sec. 601. Rates of basic allowance for housing for Army National Guard
and Air National Guard members on full-time
National Guard duty.
Subtitle B--Bonuses and Special and Incentive Pays
Sec. 611. One-year extension of certain bonus and special pay
authorities for reserve forces.
Sec. 612. One-year extension of certain bonus and special pay
authorities for health care professionals.
Sec. 613. One-year extension of special pay and bonus authorities for
nuclear officers.
Sec. 614. One-year extension of authorities relating to title 37
consolidated special pay, incentive pay,
and bonus authorities.
Sec. 615. One-year extension of authorities relating to payment of
other title 37 bonuses and special pays.
Sec. 616. Increase in amount of officer affiliation bonus for officers
in the Selected Reserve.
Sec. 617. Increase in maximum amount of incentive bonus for reserve
component members who convert military
occupational specialty to ease personnel
shortages.
Subtitle C--Travel and Transportation Allowances
Sec. 631. Permanent change of station allowances for members of
Selected Reserve units filling a vacancy in
another unit after being involuntarily
separated.
Sec. 632. Authority for comprehensive program for space-available
travel on Department of Defense aircraft.
Subtitle D--Disability, Retired Pay, and Survivor Benefits
Sec. 641. Repeal of requirement for payment of Survivor Benefit Plan
premiums when participant waives retired
pay to provide a survivor annuity under
Federal Employees Retirement System and
termination of payment of Survivor Benefit
Plan annuity.
Sec. 642. Repeal of automatic enrollment in Family Servicemembers'
Group Life Insurance for members of the
Armed Forces married to other members.
Subtitle E--Military Lending Matters
Sec. 651. Enhancement of protections on consumer credit for members of
the Armed Forces and their dependents.
Sec. 652. Additional enhancements of protections on consumer credit for
members of the Armed Forces and their
dependents.
Sec. 653. Relief in civil actions for violations of protections on
consumer credit extended to members of the
Armed Forces and their dependents.
Sec. 654. Modification of definition of dependent for purposes of
limitations on terms of consumer credit
extended to members of the Armed Forces and
their dependents.
Subtitle F--Other Matters
Sec. 661. Transitional compensation for dependent children who are
carried during pregnancy at time of
dependent-abuse offense.
TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--TRICARE Program
Sec. 701. Extension of TRICARE Standard coverage and TRICARE dental
program for members of the Selected Reserve
who are involuntarily separated.
Sec. 702. Inclusion of certain over-the-counter drugs in TRICARE
uniform formulary.
Sec. 703. Expansion of evaluation of the effectiveness of the TRICARE
program.
Subtitle B--Other Health Care Benefits
Sec. 711. Use of Department of Defense funds for abortions in cases of
rape and incest.
Sec. 712. Availability of certain fertility preservation treatments for
members of the Armed Forces on active duty.
Sec. 713. Modification of requirements on mental health assessments for
members of the Armed forces deployed in
connection with a contingency operation.
Subtitle C--Health Care Administration
Sec. 721. Clarification of applicability of certain authority and
requirements to subcontractors employed to
provide health care services to the
Department of Defense.
Sec. 722. Research program to enhance Department of Defense efforts on
mental health in the National Guard and
Reserves through community partnerships.
Subtitle D--Reports and Other Matters
Sec. 731. Reports on performance data on Warriors in Transition
programs.
Sec. 732. Report on Department of Defense support of members of the
Armed Forces who experience traumatic
injury as a result of vaccinations required
by the Department.
Sec. 733. Plan to eliminate gaps and redundancies in programs of the
Department of Defense on psychological
health and traumatic brain injury among
members of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 734. Report on implementation of recommendations of the
Comptroller General of the United States on
prevention of hearing loss among members of
the Armed Forces.
TITLE VIII--ACQUISITION POLICY, ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT, AND RELATED
MATTERS
Subtitle A--Provisions Relating to Major Defense Acquisition Programs
Sec. 801. Limitation on use of cost-type contracts.
Sec. 802. Acquisition strategies for major subsystems and subassemblies
on major defense acquisition programs.
Sec. 803. Management structure for developmental test and evaluation.
Sec. 804. Assessments of potential termination liability of contracts
for the development or production of major
defense acquisition programs.
Sec. 805. Technical change regarding programs experiencing critical
cost growth due to change in quantity
purchased.
Sec. 806. Repeal of requirement to review ongoing programs initiated
before enactment of Milestone B
certification and approval process.
Subtitle B--Acquisition Policy and Management
Sec. 821. One-year extension of temporary limitation on aggregate
annual amount available for contract
services.
Sec. 822. Prohibition of excessive pass-through contracts and charges
in the acquisition of services.
Sec. 823. Availability of amounts in Defense Acquisition Workforce
Development Fund for temporary members of
workforce.
Sec. 824. Department of Defense policy on contractor profits.
Sec. 825. Modification of authorities on internal controls for
procurements on behalf of the Department of
Defense by certain non-defense agencies.
Sec. 826. Extension of pilot program on management of supply-chain
risk.
Subtitle C--Amendments Relating to General Contracting Authorities,
Procedures, and Limitations
Sec. 841. Applicability of Truth in Negotiations Act to major systems
and related subsystems, components, and
support services.
Sec. 842. Maximum amount of allowable costs of compensation of
contractor employees.
Sec. 843. Department of Defense access to and use of contractor
internal audit reports.
Sec. 844. Enhancement of whistleblower protections for contractor
employees.
Sec. 845. Extension of contractor conflict of interest limitations.
Sec. 846. Repeal of sunset for certain protests of task and delivery
order contracts.
Subtitle D--Provisions Relating to Wartime Contracting
Sec. 861. Responsibility within Department of Defense for contract
support for overseas contingency
operations.
Sec. 862. Annual reports on contract support for overseas contingency
operations involving combat operations.
Sec. 863. Inclusion of contract support in certain requirements for
Department of Defense planning, joint
professional military education, and
management structure.
Sec. 864. Risk assessment and mitigation for contractor performance of
critical functions in support of overseas
contingency operations.
Sec. 865. Extension and modification of reports on contracting in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
Sec. 866. Extension of temporary authority to acquire products and
services in countries along a major route
of supply to Afghanistan.
Sec. 867. Compliance with Berry amendment required for uniform
components supplied to Afghanistan military
or Afghanistan National Police.
Sec. 868. Sense of Senate on the contributions of Latvia and other
North Atlantic Treaty Organization member
nations to the success of the Northern
Distribution Network.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
Sec. 881. Requirements and limitations for suspension and debarment
officials of the Department of Defense.
Sec. 882. Uniform contract writing system requirements for the
Department of Defense.
Sec. 883. Comptroller General of the United States review of use by the
Department of Defense of urgent and
compelling exception to competition.
Sec. 884. Authority to provide fee-for-service inspection and testing
by Defense Contract Management Agency for
certain critical equipment in the absence
of a procurement contract.
Sec. 885. Disestablishment of Defense Materiel Readiness Board.
Sec. 886. Modification of period of wait following notice to Congress
of intent to contract for leases of certain
vessels and vehicles.
Sec. 887. Extension of other transaction authority.
TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT
Subtitle A--Department of Defense Management
Sec. 901. Definition and report on terms ``preparation of the
environment'' and ``operational preparation
of the environment'' for joint doctrine
purposes.
Sec. 902. Expansion of duties and responsibilities of the Nuclear
Weapons Council.
Subtitle B--Space Activities
Sec. 911. Operationally Responsive Space Program Office.
Sec. 912. Commercial space launch cooperation.
Sec. 913. Reports on integration of acquisition and capability delivery
schedules for components for major
satellite acquisition programs and funding
for such programs.
Sec. 914. Department of Defense representation in dispute resolution
regarding surrender of Department of
Defense bands of electromagnetic
frequencies.
Subtitle C--Intelligence-Related and Cyber Matters
Sec. 921. Authority to provide geospatial intelligence support to
security alliances and international and
regional organizations.
Sec. 922. Army Distributed Common Ground System.
Sec. 923. Rationalization of cyber networks and cyber personnel of the
Department of Defense.
Sec. 924. Next-generation host-based cyber security system for the
Department of Defense.
Sec. 925. Improvements of security, quality, and competition in
computer software procured by the
Department of Defense.
Sec. 926. Competition in connection with Department of Defense data
link systems.
Sec. 927. Integration of critical signals intelligence capabilities.
Sec. 928. Collection and analysis of network flow data.
Sec. 929. Department of Defense use of National Security Agency cloud
computing database and intelligence
community cloud computing infrastructure
and services.
Sec. 930. Electro-optical imagery.
Sec. 931. Software licenses of the Department of Defense.
Sec. 932. Defense Clandestine Service.
Sec. 933. Authority for short-term extension of lease for aircraft
supporting the Blue Devil intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance program.
Sec. 934. Sense of Senate on potential security risks to Department of
Defense networks.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
Sec. 941. National Language Service Corps.
Sec. 942. Report on education and training and promotion rates for
pilots of remotely piloted aircraft.
TITLE X--GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Financial Matters
Sec. 1001. General transfer authority.
Sec. 1002. Authority to transfer funds to the National Nuclear Security
Administration to sustain nuclear weapons
modernization.
Sec. 1003. Audit readiness of Department of Defense statements of
budgetary resources.
Sec. 1004. Report on effects of budget sequestration on the Department
of Defense.
Subtitle B--Counter-Drug Activities
Sec. 1011. Extension of authority for joint task forces to provide
support to law enforcement agencies
conducting counter-terrorism activities.
Sec. 1012. Requirement for biennial certification on provision of
support for counter-drug activities to
certain foreign governments.
Sec. 1013. Authority to support the unified counterdrug and
counterterrorism campaign in Colombia.
Sec. 1014. Quarterly reports on use of funds in the Drug Interdiction
and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide
account.
Subtitle C--Naval Vessels and Shipyards
Sec. 1021. Retirement of naval vessels.
Sec. 1022. Termination of a Maritime Prepositioning Ship squadron.
Sec. 1023. Sense of Congress on recapitalization for the Navy and Coast
Guard.
Subtitle D--Counterterrorism
Sec. 1031. Extension of certain prohibitions and requirements relating
to detainees at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Subtitle E--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations
Sec. 1041. Enhancement of responsibilities of the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff regarding the National
Military Strategy.
Sec. 1042. Modification of authority on training of special operations
forces with friendly foreign forces.
Sec. 1043. Extension of authority to provide assured business
guarantees to carriers participating in
Civil Reserve Air Fleet.
Sec. 1044. Participation of veterans in the Transition Assistance
Program of the Department of Defense.
Sec. 1045. Modification of the Ministry of Defense Advisor Program.
Sec. 1046. Interagency collaboration on unmanned aircraft systems.
Sec. 1047. Sense of Senate on notice to Congress on unfunded
priorities.
Subtitle F--Reports
Sec. 1061. Report on strategic airlift aircraft.
Sec. 1062. Repeal of biennial report on the Global Positioning System.
Sec. 1063. Repeal of annual report on threat posed by weapons of mass
destruction, ballistic missiles, and cruise
missiles.
Subtitle G--Nuclear Matters
Sec. 1071. Strategic delivery systems.
Sec. 1072. Requirements definition for combined warhead for certain
missile systems.
Sec. 1073. Congressional Budget Office estimate of costs of nuclear
weapons and delivery systems.
Subtitle H--Other Matters
Sec. 1081. Redesignation of the Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies
as the William J. Perry Center for
Hemispheric Defense Studies.
Sec. 1082. Technical amendments to repeal statutory references to
United States Joint Forces Command.
Sec. 1083. Sense of Congress on non-United States citizens who are
graduates of United States educational
institutions with advanced degrees in
science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics.
TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL MATTERS
Sec. 1101. Authority for transportation of family household pets of
civilian personnel during evacuation of
non-essential personnel.
Sec. 1102. Expansion of experimental personnel program for scientific
and technical personnel at the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency.
Sec. 1103. One-year extension of discretionary authority to grant
allowances, benefits, and gratuities to
personnel on official duty in a combat
zone.
TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS
Subtitle A--Assistance and Training
Sec. 1201. Extension of authority to build the capacity of foreign
military forces and modification of notice
in connection with initiation of
activities.
Sec. 1202. Extension of authority for non-reciprocal exchange of
defense personnel between the United States
and foreign countries.
Sec. 1203. Authority to build the capacity of certain counterterrorism
forces in Yemen and East Africa.
Sec. 1204. Limitation on availability of funds for State Partnership
Program.
Subtitle B--Matters Relating to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan
Sec. 1211. Commanders' Emergency Response Program in Afghanistan.
Sec. 1212. Extension of authority to support operations and activities
of the Office of Security Cooperation in
Iraq.
Sec. 1213. One-year extension and modification of authority to use
funds for reintegration activities in
Afghanistan.
Sec. 1214. One-year extension and modification of authority for program
to develop and carry out infrastructure
projects in Afghanistan.
Sec. 1215. Extension of Pakistan Counterinsurgency Fund.
Sec. 1216. Extension and modification of authority for reimbursement of
certain coalition nations for support
provided to United States military
operations.
Sec. 1217. Extension and modification of logistical support for
coalition forces supporting certain United
States military operations.
Sec. 1218. Strategy for supporting the achievement of a secure
presidential election in Afghanistan in
2014.
Sec. 1219. Independent assessment of the Afghan National Security
Forces.
Sec. 1220. Report on Afghanistan Peace and Reintegration Program.
Subtitle C--Reports
Sec. 1231. Review and reports on Department of Defense efforts to build
the capacity of and partner with foreign
security forces.
Sec. 1232. Additional elements in annual report on military and
security developments involving the
People's Republic of China.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
Sec. 1241. Improved administration of the American, British, Canadian,
and Australian Armies' Program.
Sec. 1242. United States participation in Headquarters Eurocorps.
Sec. 1243. Department of Defense participation in European program on
multilateral exchange of air transportation
and air refueling services.
Sec. 1244. Authority to establish program to provide assistance to
foreign civilians for harm incident to
combat operations of the Armed Forces in
foreign countries.
Sec. 1245. Limitation on availability of funds for certain capital
projects in connection with overseas
contingency operations.
TITLE XIII--COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION
Sec. 1301. Specification of Cooperative Threat Reduction programs and
funds.
Sec. 1302. Funding allocations.
TITLE XIV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Military Programs
Sec. 1401. Working capital funds.
Sec. 1402. National Defense Sealift Fund.
Sec. 1403. Defense Health Program.
Sec. 1404. Chemical Agents and Munitions Destruction, Defense.
Sec. 1405. Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide.
Sec. 1406. Defense Inspector General.
Subtitle B--National Defense Stockpile
Sec. 1411. Release of materials needed for national defense purposes
from the Strategic and Critical Materials
Stockpile.
Subtitle C--Chemical Demilitarization Matters
Sec. 1421. Supplemental chemical agent and munitions destruction
technologies at Pueblo Chemical Depot,
Colorado, and Blue Grass Army Depot,
Kentucky.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
Sec. 1431. Authorization of appropriations for Armed Forces Retirement
Home.
Sec. 1432. Additional Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support Teams.
TITLE XV--AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 1501. Purpose.
Sec. 1502. Procurement.
Sec. 1503. Research, development, test, and evaluation.
Sec. 1504. Operation and maintenance.
Sec. 1505. Military personnel.
Sec. 1506. Working capital funds.
Sec. 1507. Defense Health Program.
Sec. 1508. Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide.
Sec. 1509. Defense Inspector General.
Subtitle B--Financial Matters
Sec. 1521. Treatment as additional authorizations.
Sec. 1522. Special transfer authority.
Subtitle C--Limitations and Other Matters
Sec. 1531. Afghanistan Security Forces Fund.
Sec. 1532. Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Fund.
Sec. 1533. Plan for transition in funding of United States Special
Operations Command from supplemental
funding for overseas contingency operations
to recurring funding under the future-years
defense program.
Sec. 1534. Extension of authority on Task Force for Business and
Stability Operations in Afghanistan.
Sec. 1535. Assessments of training activities and intelligence
activities of the Joint Improvised
Explosive Device Defeat Organization.
TITLE XVI--MILITARY COMPENSATION AND RETIREMENT MODERNIZATION
COMMISSION
Sec. 1601. Short title.
Sec. 1602. Purpose.
Sec. 1603. Definitions.
Sec. 1604. Military Compensation and Retirement Modernization
Commission.
Sec. 1605. Commission hearings and meetings.
Sec. 1606. Principles and procedure for Commission recommendations.
Sec. 1607. Consideration of Commission recommendations by the President
and Congress.
Sec. 1608. Pay for members of the Commission.
Sec. 1609. Executive Director.
Sec. 1610. Staff.
Sec. 1611. Contracting authority.
Sec. 1612. Judicial review precluded.
Sec. 1613. Termination.
Sec. 1614. Funding.
TITLE XVII--NATIONAL COMMISSION ON THE STRUCTURE OF THE AIR FORCE
Sec. 1701. Short title.
Sec. 1702. Establishment of Commission.
Sec. 1703. Duties of the Commission.
Sec. 1704. Powers of the Commission.
Sec. 1705. Commission personnel matters.
Sec. 1706. Termination of the Commission.
Sec. 1707. Funding.
Sec. 1708. Limitation on availability of funds for reductions to the
Air National Guard and the Air Force
Reserve.
Sec. 1709. Funding for maintenance of force structure of the Air Force
pending Commission recommendations.
Sec. 1710. Retention of core functions of the Electronic Systems Center
at Hanscom Air Force Base pending future
structure study.
DIVISION B--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATIONS
Sec. 2001. Short title.
Sec. 2002. Expiration of authorizations and amounts required to be
specified by law.
TITLE XXI--ARMY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2101. Authorized Army construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2102. Family housing.
Sec. 2103. Authorization of appropriations, Army.
Sec. 2104. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2010 project.
Sec. 2105. Extension of authorizations of certain fiscal year 2009
projects.
Sec. 2106. Extension of authorizations of certain fiscal year 2010
projects.
Sec. 2107. Additional authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2013
project.
TITLE XXII--NAVY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2201. Authorized Navy construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2202. Family housing.
Sec. 2203. Improvements to military family housing units.
Sec. 2204. Authorization of appropriations, Navy.
Sec. 2205. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2012 project.
Sec. 2206. Extension of authorizations of certain fiscal year 2009
projects.
Sec. 2207. Extension of authorizations of certain fiscal year 2010
projects.
Sec. 2208. Realignment of Marines in the Asia-Pacific Region.
TITLE XXIII--AIR FORCE MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2301. Authorized Air Force construction and land acquisition
projects.
Sec. 2302. Family housing.
Sec. 2303. Improvements to military family housing units.
Sec. 2304. Authorization of appropriations, Air Force.
Sec. 2305. Extension of authorizations of certain fiscal year 2010
projects.
TITLE XXIV--DEFENSE AGENCIES MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Subtitle A--Defense Agency Authorizations
Sec. 2401. Authorized Defense Agencies construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2402. Authorized energy conservation projects.
Sec. 2403. Authorization of appropriations, Defense Agencies.
Sec. 2404. Extension of authorization of certain fiscal year 2010
project.
Sec. 2405. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2012 project.
Sec. 2406. Additional authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2013
project.
Subtitle B--Chemical Demilitarization Authorizations
Sec. 2411. Authorization of appropriations, chemical demilitarization
construction, defense-wide.
Sec. 2412. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
1997 project.
TITLE XXV--NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION SECURITY INVESTMENT
PROGRAM
Sec. 2501. Authorized NATO construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2502. Authorization of appropriations, NATO.
TITLE XXVI--GUARD AND RESERVE FORCES FACILITIES
Subtitle A--Project Authorizations and Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 2601. Authorized Army National Guard construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2602. Authorized Army Reserve construction and land acquisition
projects.
Sec. 2603. Authorized Navy Reserve and Marine Corps Reserve
construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2604. Authorized Air National Guard construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2605. Authorized Air Force Reserve construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2606. Authorization of appropriations, National Guard and Reserve.
Subtitle B--Other Matters
Sec. 2611. Extension of authorization of certain fiscal year 2009
project.
Sec. 2612. Extension of authorization of certain fiscal year 2010
projects.
TITLE XXVII--BASE REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE ACTIVITIES
Sec. 2701. Authorization of appropriations for base realignment and
closure activities funded through
Department of Defense Base Closure Account
1990.
Sec. 2702. Authorization of appropriations for base realignment and
closure activities funded through
Department of Defense Base Closure Account
2005.
Sec. 2703. Technical amendments to section 2702 of fiscal year 2012
Act.
Sec. 2704. Criteria for decisions involving certain base closure and
realignment activities.
TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Military Construction Program and Military Family Housing
Changes
Sec. 2801. Authorized cost and scope variations.
Sec. 2802. Comptroller General report on in-kind payments.
Sec. 2803. Extension of temporary, limited authority to use operation
and maintenance funds for construction
projects in certain areas outside the
United States.
Subtitle B--Real Property and Facilities Administration
Sec. 2811. Authority to accept as consideration for leases of non-
excess property of military departments and
Defense Agencies real property interests
and natural resource management services
related to agreements to limit
encroachment.
Sec. 2812. Clarification of parties with whom Department of Defense may
conduct exchanges of real property at
military installations.
Subtitle C--Energy Security
Sec. 2821. Guidance on financing for renewable energy projects.
Sec. 2822. Continuation of limitation on use of funds for Leadership in
Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Gold
or Platinum certification.
Sec. 2823. Prohibition on biofuel refinery construction.
Subtitle D--Land Conveyances
Sec. 2831. Land conveyance, local training area for Browning Army
Reserve Center, Utah.
Sec. 2832. Use of proceeds, land conveyance, Tyndall Air Force Base,
Florida.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
Sec. 2841. Clarification of authority of Secretary to assist with
development of public infrastructure in
connection with the establishment or
expansion of a military installation.
Sec. 2842. Petersburg National Battlefield boundary modification.
Sec. 2843. Congressional notification with respect to oversight and
maintenance of base cemeteries following
closure of overseas military installations.
DIVISION C--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY AUTHORIZATIONS AND
OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE XXXI--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
Subtitle A--National Security Programs Authorizations
Sec. 3101. National Nuclear Security Administration.
Sec. 3102. Defense environmental cleanup.
Sec. 3103. Other defense activities.
Subtitle B--Program Authorizations, Restrictions, and Limitations
Sec. 3111. Replacement project for Chemistry and Metallurgy Research
Building, Los Alamos National Laboratory,
New Mexico.
Sec. 3112. Submittal to Congress of selected acquisition reports and
independent cost estimates on nuclear
weapon systems undergoing life extension.
Sec. 3113. Two-year extension of schedule for disposition of weapons-
usable plutonium at Savannah River Site,
Aiken, South Carolina.
Sec. 3114. Program on scientific engagement for nonproliferation.
Sec. 3115. Repeal of requirement for annual update of Department of
Energy defense nuclear facilities workforce
restructuring plan.
Sec. 3116. Quarterly reports to Congress on financial balances for
atomic energy defense activities.
Sec. 3117. Transparency in contractor performance evaluations by the
National Nuclear Security Administration
leading to award fees.
Sec. 3118. Expansion of authority to establish certain scientific,
engineering, and technical positions.
Sec. 3119. Modification and extension of authority on acceptance of
contributions for acceleration of removal
or security of fissile materials,
radiological materials, and related
equipment at vulnerable sites worldwide.
Sec. 3120. Cost containment for Y-12 Uranium Processing Facility, Y-12
National Security Complex, Oak Ridge,
Tennessee.
Sec. 3121. Authority to restore certain formerly Restricted Data to the
Restricted Data category.
Subtitle C--Reports
Sec. 3131. Report on actions required for transition of regulation of
non-nuclear activities of the National
Nuclear Security Administration to other
Federal agencies.
Sec. 3132. Report on consolidation of facilities of the National
Nuclear Security Administration.
Sec. 3133. Regional radiological security zones.
Sec. 3134. Report on legacy uranium mines.
Sec. 3135. Comptroller General of the United States review of projects
carried out by Office of Environmental
Management of the Department of Energy
pursuant to the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009.
TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD
Sec. 3201. Authorization.
TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION
Sec. 3501. Maritime administration.
DIVISION D--FUNDING TABLES
Sec. 4001. Authorization of amounts in funding tables.
TITLE XLI--PROCUREMENT
Sec. 4101. Procurement.
Sec. 4102. Procurement for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLII--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
Sec. 4201. Research, development, test, and evaluation.
Sec. 4202. Research, development, test, and evaluation for overseas
contingency operations.
TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Sec. 4301. Operation and maintenance.
Sec. 4302. Operation and maintenance for overseas contingency
operations.
TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL
Sec. 4401. Military personnel.
Sec. 4402. Military personnel for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
Sec. 4501. Other authorizations.
Sec. 4502. Other authorizations for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 4601. Military construction.
TITLE XLVII--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
Sec. 4701. Department of Energy national security authorizations.
SEC. 3. CONGRESSIONAL DEFENSE COMMITTEES.
For purposes of this Act, the term ``congressional defense
committees'' has the meaning given that term in section 101(a)(16) of
title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 4. SCORING OF BUDGETARY EFFECTS.
The budgetary effects of this Act, for the purpose of complying
with the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go-Act of 2010, shall be determined by
reference to the latest statement titled ``Budgetary Effects of PAYGO
Legislation'' for this Act, submitted for printing in the Congressional
Record by the Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, provided that
such statement has been submitted prior to the vote on passage.
DIVISION A--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE I--PROCUREMENT
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 101. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for procurement for the Army, the Navy and the Marine Corps, the Air
Force, and Defense-wide activities, as specified in the funding table
in section 4101.
Subtitle B--Army Programs
SEC. 111. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR ARMY CH-47F HELICOPTERS.
(a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 2306b
of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of the Army may enter
into a multiyear contract or contracts, beginning with the fiscal year
2013 program year, for the procurement of airframes for CH-47F
helicopters.
(b) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year
after fiscal year 2013 is subject to the availability of appropriations
for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
Subtitle C--Navy Programs
SEC. 121. REFUELING AND COMPLEX OVERHAUL OF THE U.S.S. ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
(a) Amount Authorized From SCN Account.--Of the amount authorized
to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013 by section 101 and available
for shipbuilding and conversion as specified in the funding table in
section 4101, $1,613,392,000 is authorized to be available for the
commencement of the nuclear refueling and complex overhaul of the
U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) during fiscal year 2013. The amount
authorized to be made available in the preceding sentence is the first
increment in the two-year sequence of incremental funding planned for
the nuclear refueling and complex overhaul of that vessel.
(b) Contract Authority.--The Secretary of the Navy may enter into a
contract during fiscal year 2013 for the nuclear refueling and complex
overhaul of the U.S.S. Abraham Lincoln.
(c) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered
into under subsection (b) shall provide that any obligation of the
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year
after fiscal year 2013 is subject to the availability of appropriations
for that purpose for that later fiscal year.
SEC. 122. FORD CLASS AIRCRAFT CARRIERS.
(a) Contract Authority for Construction of Aircraft Carriers
Designated CVN-78, CVN-79, and CVN-80.--In the fiscal year immediately
following the last fiscal year of the contract for advance procurement
for a CVN-21 class aircraft carrier designated CVN-78, CVN-79 or CVN-
80, the Secretary of the Navy may enter into a contract for the
construction of such aircraft carrier to be funded in the fiscal year
of such contract for construction and the succeeding four fiscal years,
in the case of the vessel designated CVN-78, and the succeeding five
fiscal years, in the case of the vessels designated CVN-79 and CVN-80.
(b) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the
United States to make a payment under the contract for any subsequent
fiscal year is subject to the availability of appropriations for that
purpose for such subsequent fiscal year.
(c) Repeal of Superseded Provision.--Section 121 of the John Warner
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law
109-364; 120 Stat. 2104) is repealed.
SEC. 123. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF AMOUNTS FOR SECOND FORD CLASS
AIRCRAFT CARRIER.
(a) Limitation.--Of the amount authorized to be appropriated for
fiscal year 2013 by section 101 and available for shipbuilding and
conversion for the second Ford class aircraft carrier as specified in
the funding table in section 4101, not more than 50 percent of such
amount may be obligated or expended until the Secretary of the Navy
submits to the congressional defense committees a report setting forth
a description of the program management and cost control measures that
will be employed in constructing the second Ford class aircraft
carrier.
(b) Elements.--The report described in subsection (a) shall include
a plan to do the following with respect to the Ford class aircraft
carriers:
(1) To maximize planned work in shops and early stages of
construction.
(2) To sequence construction of structural units to
maximize the effects of lessons learned.
(3) To incorporate design changes to improve producibility
for the Ford class aircraft carriers.
(4) To increase the size of erection units to eliminate
disruptive unit breaks and improve unit alignment and fairness.
(5) To increase outfitting levels for assembled units
before erection in the dry-dock.
(6) To increase overall ship completion levels at each key
construction event.
(7) To improve facilities in a manner that will lead to
improved productivity.
(8) To ensure the shipbuilder initiates plans that will
improve productivity through capital improvements that would
provide targeted return on investment, including--
(A) increasing the amount of temporary and
permanent covered work areas;
(B) adding ramps and service towers for improved
access to work sites and the dry-dock; and
(C) increasing lift capacity to enable construction
of larger, more fully outfitted super-lifts.
SEC. 124. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR VIRGINIA CLASS SUBMARINE
PROGRAM.
(a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 2306b
of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of the Navy may enter
into multiyear contracts, beginning with the fiscal year 2014 program
year, for procurement of Virginia class submarines and Government-
furnished equipment associated with the Virginia class submarine
program.
(b) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary may enter
into one or more contracts, beginning in fiscal year 2013, for advance
procurement associated with the vessels and equipment for which
authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is
provided under subsection (a).
(c) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year
after fiscal year 2013 is subject to the availability of appropriations
or funds for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
(d) Limitation on Termination Liability.--contract for construction
of vessels or equipment, entered into in accordance with subsection (a)
shall include a clause that limits the liability of the Government to
the contractor for any termination of the contract. The maximum
liability of the Government under the clause shall be the amount
appropriated for the vessels or equipment covered by the contract.
Additionally, in the event of cancellation, the maximum liability of
the Government shall include the amount of the unfunded cancellation
ceiling in the contract.
(e) Authority to Expand Multiyear Procurement.--The Secretary may
employ incremental funding for the procurement of Virginia class
submarines and Government-furnished equipment associated with the
Virginia class submarines to be procured during fiscal years 2013
through 2018 if the Secretary--
(1) determines that such an approach will permit the Navy
to procure an additional Virginia class submarine in fiscal
year 2014; and
(2) intends to use the funding for that purpose.
SEC. 125. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR ARLEIGH BURKE CLASS
DESTROYERS AND ASSOCIATED SYSTEMS.
(a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 2306b
of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of the Navy may enter
into multiyear contracts, beginning with the fiscal year 2013 program
year, for the procurement of up to 10 Arleigh Burke class Flight IIA
guided missile destroyers, as well as the AEGIS Weapon Systems, MK 41
Vertical Launching Systems, and Commercial Broadband Satellite Systems
associated with those vessels.
(b) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary may enter
into one or more contracts, beginning in fiscal year 2013, for advance
procurement associated with the vessels and systems for which
authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is
provided under subsection (a).
(c) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year
after fiscal year 2013 is subject to the availability of appropriations
or funds for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
SEC. 126. AUTHORITY FOR RELOCATION OF CERTAIN AEGIS WEAPON SYSTEM
ASSETS BETWEEN AND WITHIN THE DDG-51 CLASS DESTROYER AND
AEGIS ASHORE PROGRAMS IN ORDER TO MEET MISSION
REQUIREMENTS.
(a) Authority.--
(1) Transfer to aegis ashore system.--Notwithstanding any
other provision of law, the Secretary of the Navy may transfer
AEGIS Weapon System (AWS) equipment with ballistic missile
defense (BMD) capability to the Missile Defense Agency for use
in the AEGIS Ashore System of the Agency for installation in
the country designated as Host Nation #1 (HN-1) by transferring
to the Agency such equipment procured with amounts authorized
to be appropriated to the SCN account for fiscal years 2010 and
2011 for the DDG-51 Class Destroyer Program.
(2) Adjustments in equipment deliveries.--
(A) Use of fy12 funds for aws systems on destroyers
procured with fy11 funds.--Amounts authorized to be
appropriated to the SCN account for fiscal year 2012,
and any AEGIS Weapon System assets procured with such
amounts, may be used to deliver complete, mission-ready
AEGIS Weapon Systems with ballistic missile defense
capability to any DDG-51 class destroyer for which
amounts were authorized to be appropriated for the SCN
account for fiscal year 2011.
(B) Use of aws systems procured with rdte funds on
destroyers.--The Secretary may install on any DDG-
51class destroyer AEGIS weapon systems with ballistic
missile defense capability transferred pursuant to
paragraph (3).
(3) Transfer from aegis ashore system.--The Director of the
Missile Defense Agency shall transfer AEGIS Weapon System
equipment with ballistic missile defense capability procured
for installation in the AEGIS Ashore System to the Department
of the Navy for the DDG-51 Class Destroyer Program to replace
any equipment transferred to Agency under paragraph (1).
(4) Treatment of transfer in funding destroyer
construction.--Notwithstanding the source of funds for any
equipment transferred under paragraph (3), the Secretary shall
fund all work necessary to complete construction and outfitting
of any destroyer in which such equipment is installed in the
same manner as if such equipment had been acquired using
amounts in the SCN account.
(5) SCN account defined.--In this subsection, the term
``SCN account'' means the Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy
account.
(b) Relationship to Other Law.--Nothing in this section shall be
construed to repeal or otherwise modify in any way the limitation on
obligation or expenditure of funds for missile defense interceptors in
Europe as specified in section 223 of the Ike Skelton National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 Public Law 111-383; 124 Stat.
4168).
SEC. 127. DESIGNATION OF MISSION MODULES OF THE LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP AS
A MAJOR DEFENSE ACQUISITION PROGRAM.
(a) Designation Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall--
(1) designate the effort to develop and produce all
variants of the mission modules in support of the Littoral
Combat Ship program as a major defense acquisition program
under section 2430 of title 10, United States Code; and
(2) with respect to the development and production of each
variant, submit to the congressional defense committees a
report setting forth such cost, schedule, and performance
information as would be provided if such effort were a major
defense acquisition program, including Selected Acquisition
Reports, unit cost reports, and program baselines.
(b) Additional Quarterly Reports.--The Secretary shall submit to
the congressional defense committees on a quarterly basis a report on
the development and production of each variant of the mission modules
in support of the Littoral Combat Ship, including cost, schedule, and
performance, and identifying actual and potential problems with such
development or production and potential mitigation plans to address
such problems.
SEC. 128. TRANSFER OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2012 PROCUREMENT OF
AMMUNITION, NAVY AND MARINE CORPS FUNDS.
(a) In General.--To the extent provided in appropriations Acts, the
Secretary of the Navy may transfer from fiscal year 2012 Procurement of
Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps funds, $88,300,000 to other, higher
priority programs of the Navy and the Marine Corps.
(b) Covered Funds.--For purposes of this section, the term ``fiscal
year 2012 Procurement of Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps funds''
means amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2012 by
section 101 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1317) and available for Procurement
of Ammunition, Navy and Marine Corps as specified in the funding table
in section 4101 of that Act.
(c) Effect on Authorization Amounts.--A transfer made from one
account to another under the authority of this section shall be deemed
to increase the amount authorized for the account to which the amount
is transferred by an amount equal to the amount transferred.
(d) Construction of Authority.--The transfer authority in this
section is in addition to any other transfer authority provided in this
Act.
SEC. 129. TRANSFER OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2012 PROCUREMENT, MARINE
CORPS FUNDS FOR PROCUREMENT OF WEAPONS AND COMBAT
VEHICLES.
(a) In General.--To the extent provided in appropriations Acts, the
Secretary of the Navy may transfer from fiscal year 2012 Procurement,
Marine Corps funds for procurement of weapons and combat vehicles,
$135,200,000 to other, higher priority programs of the Navy and the
Marine Corps.
(b) Covered Funds.--For purposes of this section, the term ``fiscal
year 2012 Procurement, Marine Corps funds for procurement of weapons
and combat vehicles'' means amounts authorized to be appropriated for
fiscal year 2012 by section 101 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1317) and
available for Procurement, Marine Corps for the procurement of weapons
and combat vehicles as specified in the funding table in section 4101
of that Act.
(c) Effect on Authorization Amounts.--A transfer made from one
account to another under the authority of this section shall be deemed
to increase the amount authorized for the account to which the amount
is transferred by an amount equal to the amount transferred.
(d) Construction of Authority.--The transfer authority in this
section is in addition to any other transfer authority provided in this
Act.
SEC. 130. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON MARINE CORPS AMPHIBIOUS LIFT AND
PRESENCE REQUIREMENTS.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The United States Marine Corps is a combat force which
leverages maneuver from the sea as a force multiplier allowing
for a variety of operational tasks ranging from major combat
operations to humanitarian assistance.
(2) The United States Marine Corps is unique in that, while
embarked upon Naval vessels, they bring all the logistic
support necessary for the full range of military operations,
operating ``from the sea'' they require no third party host
nation permission to conduct military operations.
(3) The Department of the Navy has a requirement for 38
amphibious assault ships to meet this full range of military
operations.
(4) Due to fiscal constraints only, that requirement of 38
vessels was reduced to 33 vessels, which adds military risk to
future operations.
(5) The Department of the Navy has been unable to meet even
the minimal requirement of 30 operationally available vessels
and has submitted a shipbuilding and ship retirement plan to
Congress which will reduce the force to 28 vessels.
(6) Experience has shown that early engineering and design
of naval vessels has significantly reduced the acquisition
costs and life-cycle costs of those vessels.
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the Department of Defense should carefully evaluate the
maritime force structure necessary to execute demand for forces
by the commanders of the combatant commands;
(2) the Department of the Navy carefully evaluate
amphibious lift capabilities to meet current and projected
requirements;
(3) the Department of the Navy should consider
prioritization of investment in and procurement of the next
generation of amphibious assault ships, as a component of the
balanced battle force;
(4) the next generation amphibious assault ships should
maintain survivability protection;
(5) operation and maintenance requirements analysis, as
well as the potential to leverage a common hull form design,
should be considered to reduce total ownership cost and
acquisition cost; and
(6) maintaining a robust amphibious ship building
industrial base is vital for the future of the national
security of the United States.
SEC. 131. SENSE OF SENATE ON DEPARTMENT OF NAVY FISCAL YEAR 2014 BUDGET
REQUEST FOR TACTICAL AVIATION AIRCRAFT.
It is the sense of Senate that, if the budget request of the
Department of the Navy for fiscal year 2014 for F-18 aircraft includes
a request for funds for more than 13 new F-18 aircraft, the budget
request of the Department of the Navy for fiscal year 2014 for F-35
aircraft should include a request for funds for not fewer than 6 F-35B
aircraft and 4 F-35C aircraft, presuming that development, testing, and
production of the F-35 aircraft are proceeding according to current
plans.
Subtitle D--Air Force Programs
SEC. 141. REDUCTION IN NUMBER OF AIRCRAFT REQUIRED TO BE MAINTAINED IN
STRATEGIC AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT INVENTORY.
(a) Reduction in Inventory Requirement.--Section 8062(g)(1) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``Effective October 1, 2011, the'' and
inserting ``The''; and
(2) by striking ``301 aircraft'' and inserting ``275
aircraft''.
(b) Modification of Certification Requirement.--Section
137(d)(3)(B) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2221) is amended by striking ``316
strategic airlift aircraft'' and inserting ``275 strategic airlift
aircraft''.
(c) Preservation of Certain Retired C-5 Aircraft.--The Secretary of
the Air Force shall preserve each C-5 aircraft retired by the Secretary
after September 30, 2012, such that the aircraft--
(1) is stored in flyable condition;
(2) can be returned to service; and
(3) is not used to supply parts to other aircraft unless
specifically authorized by the Secretary of Defense upon a
request by the Secretary of the Air Force.
SEC. 142. TREATMENT OF CERTAIN PROGRAMS FOR THE F-22A RAPTOR AIRCRAFT
AS MAJOR DEFENSE ACQUISITION PROGRAMS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall treat the programs
referred to in subsection (b) for the F-22A Raptor aircraft as a major
defense acquisition program for which Selected Acquisition Reports
shall be submitted to Congress in accordance with the requirements of
section 2432 of title 10, United States Code.
(b) Covered Programs.--The programs referred to in this subsection
for the F-22A Raptor aircraft are the following:
(1) Any modernization program through Increment 3.2A.
(2) The Reliability and Maintainability Maturation Program
(RAMMP) and the Structural Repair Program (SRP II).
(3) The modernization Increment 3.2B and any future F-22A
Raptor aircraft modernization program that would otherwise, if
a standalone program, qualify for treatment as a major defense
acquisition program for purposes of chapter 144 of title 10,
United States Code.
SEC. 143. AVIONICS SYSTEMS FOR C-130 AIRCRAFT.
(a) Limitations.--
(1) Avionics modernization program.--The Secretary of the
Air Force shall take no action to cancel or modify the Avionics
Modernization Program (AMP) for the C-130 aircraft until 30
days after the date of the submittal to the congressional
defense committees of the report required by subsection (b).
(2) CNS/ATM program.--
(A) In general.--The Secretary shall take no action
described in subparagraph (B) until 30 days after the
date of the submittal to the congressional defense
committees of the report required by subsection (b).
(B) Covered actions.--An action described in this
subparagraph is an action to begin an alternative
communication, navigation, surveillance, and air
traffic management (CNS/ATM) program for the C-130
aircraft that is designed or intended--
(i) to meet international communication,
navigation, surveillance, and air traffic
management standards for the fleet of C-130
aircraft; or
(ii) to replace the current Avionics
Modernization Program for the C-130 aircraft.
(b) Report.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees report on the results of a study to be conducted by
the Office of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation of the Department
of Defense on the following:
(1) The costs and schedule to complete the current program
of record for the Avionics Modernization Program for the C-130
aircraft, as anticipated at the time of the last certification
on that program under section 2433a of title 10, United States
Code.
(2) The total cost and schedule, from start to completion,
of any proposed alternative communication, navigation,
surveillance, and air traffic management program for the C-130
aircraft.
(3) The projected manpower savings to be derived from the
current program of record for the Avionics Modernization
Program for the C-130 aircraft in comparison with the projected
manpower savings to be derived from any proposed alternative
communication, navigation, surveillance, and air traffic
management program for the C-130 aircraft.
SEC. 144. PROCUREMENT OF SPACE-BASED INFRARED SYSTEM SATELLITES.
(a) Contract Authority.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of the Air Force may procure
two space-based infrared system satellites by entering into a
fixed-price contract for such procurement.
(2) Cost reduction.--The Secretary may include in a
contract entered into under paragraph (1) the following:
(A) The procurement of material and equipment in
economic order quantities if the procurement of such
material and equipment in such quantities will result
in cost savings.
(B) Cost reduction initiatives.
(3) Use of incremental funding.--The Secretary may use
incremental funding for a contract entered into under paragraph
(1) for a period not to exceed six fiscal years.
(4) Liability.--A contract entered into under paragraph (1)
shall provide that--
(A) any obligation of the United States to make a
payment under the contract is subject to the
availability of appropriations for that purpose; and
(B) the total liability of the Federal Government
for the termination of the contract shall be limited to
the total amount of funding obligated at the time of
the termination of the contract.
(b) Limitation of Costs.--
(1) Limitation.--Except as provided in subsection (c), and
excluding amounts described in paragraph (2), the total amount
obligated or expended for the procurement of two space-based
infrared system satellites authorized by subsection (a) may not
exceed $3,900,000,000.
(2) Exclusion.--The amounts described in this paragraph are
amounts associated with the following:
(A) Plans.
(B) Technical data packages.
(C) Post-delivery and program-related support
costs.
(D) Technical support for obsolescence studies.
(c) Adjustment to Limitation Amount.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary may increase the limitation
set forth in subsection (b)(1) by the amount of an increase
described in paragraph (2) if the Secretary submits to the
congressional defense committees written notification of the
increase made to that limitation.
(2) Increase described.--An increase described in this
paragraph is one of the following:
(A) An increase in costs that is attributable to
economic inflation after September 30, 2012.
(B) An increase in costs that is attributable to
compliance with changes in Federal, State, or local
laws enacted after September 30, 2012.
(C) An increase in the cost of a space-based
infrared system satellite that is attributable to the
insertion of a new technology into the satellite that
was not built into such satellites procured before
fiscal year 2013, if the Secretary determines, and
certifies to the congressional defense committees, that
insertion of the new technology into the satellite is--
(i) expected to decrease the life-cycle
cost of the satellite; or
(ii) required to meet an emerging threat
that poses grave harm to the national security
of the United States.
(d) Reports.--
(1) Report on contracts.--Not later than 30 days after the
date on which the Secretary enters into a contract under
subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on the contract that includes the
following:
(A) The total cost savings resulting from the
authority provided by subsection (a).
(B) The type and duration of the contract.
(C) The total value of the contract.
(D) The funding profile under the contract by year.
(E) The terms of the contract regarding the
treatment of changes by the Federal Government to the
requirements of the contract, including how any such
changes may affect the success of the contract.
(2) Plan for using cost savings.--Not later than 90 days
after the date on which the Secretary enters into a contract
under subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a plan for using the cost
savings described in paragraph (1)(A) to improve the capability
of military infrared and early warning satellites that includes
a description of the following:
(A) The available funds, by year, resulting from
such cost savings.
(B) The specific activities or subprograms to be
funded using such cost savings and the funds, by year,
allocated to each such activity or subprogram.
(C) The objectives for each such activity or
subprogram.
(D) The criteria used by the Secretary to determine
which such activities or subprograms to fund.
(E) The method by which the Secretary will
determine which such activities or subprograms to fund,
including whether that determination will be on a
competitive basis.
(F) The plan for encouraging participation in such
activities and subprograms by small businesses.
(G) The process for determining how and when such
activities and subprograms would transition to an
existing program or be established as a new program of
record.
(e) Use of Funds Available for Space Vehicle Number 5 for Space
Vehicle Number 6.--The Secretary may obligate and expend amounts
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013 by section 101 for
procurement for the Air Force as specified in the funding table in
section 4101 and available for the advanced procurement of long-lead
parts and the replacement of obsolete parts for space-based infrared
system satellite space vehicle number 5 for the advanced procurement of
long-lead parts and the replacement of obsolete parts for space-based
infrared system space vehicle number 6.
(f) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the
Secretary should not enter into a fixed-price contract under subsection
(a) for the procurement of two space-based infrared system satellites
unless the Secretary determines that entering into such a contract will
save the Air Force not less than 20 percent over the cost of procuring
two such satellites separately.
SEC. 145. TRANSFER OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2011 AND 2012 FUNDS FOR
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT FOR THE AIR FORCE.
(a) In General.--To the extent provided in appropriations Acts, the
Secretary of the Air Force may transfer from fiscal year 2011 and 2012
Aircraft Procurement, Air Force funds, an aggregate of $920,748,000 to
other, higher priority programs of the Air Force.
(b) Covered Funds.--For purposes of this section, the term ``fiscal
year 2011 and 2012 Aircraft Procurement, Air Force funds'' means--
(1) amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year
2011 by section 103(1) of the Ike Skelton National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 124
Stat. 4152) for aircraft procurement for the Air Force; and
(2) amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year
2012 by section 101 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1317) and
available for Aircraft Procurement, Air Force as specified in
the funding table in section 4101 of that Act.
(c) Effect on Authorization Amounts.--A transfer made from one
account to another under the authority of this section shall be deemed
to increase the amount authorized for the account to which the amount
is transferred by an amount equal to the amount transferred.
(d) Construction of Authority.--The transfer authority in this
section is in addition to any other transfer authority provided in this
Act.
Subtitle E--Joint and Multiservice Matters
SEC. 151. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR V-22 JOINT AIRCRAFT
PROGRAM.
(a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 2306b
of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of the Navy may enter
into a multiyear contract or contracts, beginning with the fiscal year
2013 program year, for the procurement of V-22 aircraft for the
Department of the Navy, the Department of the Air Force, and the United
States Special Operations Command.
(b) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the
United States to make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year
after fiscal year 2013 is subject to the availability of appropriations
for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
SEC. 152. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR FULL-RATE PRODUCTION
OF HANDHELD, MANPACK, AND SMALL FORM/FIT RADIOS UNDER THE
JOINT TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEM PROGRAM.
Amounts available for the Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS)
program may not be obligated or expended for full-rate production of
the Handheld, Manpack, and Small Form/Fit (HMS) radios under that
program until the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology, and Logistics certifies to the congressional defense
committees that the acquisition strategy for such radios provides, to
the maximum extent practicable, for full and open competition in the
acquisition of such radios.
SEC. 153. SHALLOW WATER COMBAT SUBMERSIBLE PROGRAM.
(a) Initial Report.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Commander of the United States Special
Operations Command shall submit to the congressional defense committees
a report setting forth the following:
(1) A description of the efforts of the contractor under
the Shallow Water Combat Submersible (SWCS) program and the
United States Special Operations Command to improve the
accuracy of the tracking of the schedule and costs of the
program.
(2) The revised timeline for the initial and full
operational capability of the Shallow Water Combat Submersible.
(3) A current estimate of the cost to meet the basis of
issue requirement under the program.
(b) Subsequent Reports.--
(1) Quarterly reports required.--The Commander of the
United States Special Operations Command shall submit to the
congressional defense committees on a quarterly basis updates
on the metrics from the earned value management system with
which the Command is tracking the schedule and cost performance
of the contractor of the Shallow Water Combat Submersible
program.
(2) Sunset.--The requirement in paragraph (1) shall cease
on the date the Shallow Water Combat Submersible has completed
operational testing and has been found to be operationally
effective and operationally suitable.
TITLE II--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 201. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for the use of the Department of Defense for research, development,
test, and evaluation as specified in the funding table in section 4201.
Subtitle B--Program Requirements, Restrictions, and Limitations
SEC. 211. NEXT GENERATION FOUNDRY FOR THE DEFENSE MICROELECTRONICS
ACTIVITY.
Amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013 by
section 201 and available for research, development, test, and
evaluation for the Next Generation Foundry for the Defense
Microelectronics Activity (DMEA) (PE #603720S) as specified in the
funding table in section 4201 may not be obligated or expended for that
purpose until 60 days after the date on which the Assistant Secretary
of Defense for Research and Engineering--
(1) develops a microelectronics strategy as described in
the Senate report to accompany S. 1235 of the 112th Congress
(S. Rept. 112-26) and an estimate of the full life-cycle costs
for the upgrade of the Next Generation Foundry; and
(2) submits the strategy and cost estimate required by
paragraph (1) to the congressional defense committees.
SEC. 212. ADVANCED ROTORCRAFT INITIATIVE.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology, and Logistics shall, in consultation with the military
departments, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, and
industry (including the Vertical Lift Consortium (VLC)), submit to the
congressional defense committees a report setting forth a strategy for
the use of integrated platform design teams and agile prototyping
approaches for the development of advanced rotorcraft capabilities.
(b) Elements.--The strategy required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) Mechanisms for establishing agile prototyping practices
and programs, including rotorcraft X-planes, and an
identification of the resources required for such purposes.
(2) A restructuring of the Joint Multi-role (JMR)
development program of the Army to include more technology
demonstration platforms with challenge goals of significant
reductions in cost and time to flight.
(3) A restructuring of the X-Plane Rotorcraft program of
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to develop
performance objectives beyond the Joint Multi-role development
program, including at least two competing teams.
(4) Approaches, including competitive prize awards, to
encourage the development of advanced rotorcraft capabilities
to address challenge problems such as nap-of-earth automated
flight, urban operation near buildings, slope landings,
automated autorotation or power-off recovery, and automated
selection of landing areas.
SEC. 213. TRANSFER OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2012 NAVY RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION FUNDS.
(a) In General.--To the extent provided in appropriations Acts, the
Secretary of the Navy may transfer from fiscal year 2012 Navy research,
development, test, and evaluation funds, $8,832,000 to other, higher
priority programs of the Navy.
(b) Covered Funds.--For purposes of this section, the term ``fiscal
year 2012 Navy research, development, test, and evaluation funds''
means amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2012 by
section 201 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1329) and available for Research,
Development, Test, and Evaluation, Navy as specified in the funding
table in section 4201 of that Act.
(c) Effect on Authorization Amounts.--A transfer made from one
account to another under the authority of this section shall be deemed
to increase the amount authorized for the account to which the amount
is transferred by an amount equal to the amount transferred.
(d) Construction of Authority.--The transfer authority in this
section is in addition to any other transfer authority provided in this
Act.
SEC. 214. AUTHORITY FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE LABORATORIES TO ENTER
INTO EDUCATION PARTNERSHIPS WITH EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
IN UNITED STATES TERRITORIES AND POSSESSIONS.
(a) Authority.--Subsection (a) of section 2194 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting ``, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and any
possession of the United States'' after ``institutions of the United
States''.
(b) Technical Amendment.--Subsection (f)(2) of such section is
amended by inserting ``(20 U.S.C. 7801)'' before the period.
SEC. 215. TRANSFER OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2012 AIR FORCE RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION FUNDS.
(a) In General.--To the extent provided in appropriations Acts, the
Secretary of the Air Force may transfer from fiscal year 2012 Air Force
research, development, test, and evaluation funds, $78,426,000 to
other, higher priority programs of the Air Force.
(b) Covered Funds.--For purposes of this section, the term ``fiscal
year 2012 Air Force research, development, test, and evaluation funds''
means amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2012 by
section 201 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1329) and available for Research,
Development, Test, and Evaluation, Air Force as specified in the
funding table in section 4201 of that Act.
(c) Effect on Authorization Amounts.--A transfer made from one
account to another under the authority of this section shall be deemed
to increase the amount authorized for the account to which the amount
is transferred by an amount equal to the amount transferred.
(d) Construction of Authority.--The transfer authority in this
section is in addition to any other transfer authority provided in this
Act.
Subtitle C--Missile Defense Matters
SEC. 231. HOMELAND BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The Ballistic Missile Defense Review of February 2010
stated as its first policy priority that ``the United States
will continue to defend the homeland against the threat of
limited ballistic missile attack'' and that ``an essential
element of the United States' homeland ballistic missile
defense strategy is to hedge against future uncertainties,
including both the uncertainty of future threat capabilities
and the technical risks inherent to our own development
plans''.
(2) The United States currently has an operational Ground-
based Midcourse Defense (GMD) system with 30 Ground-Based
Interceptors (GBIs) deployed in Alaska and California,
protecting the United States against the potential future
threat of limited ballistic missile attack from countries such
as North Korea and Iran.
(3) As Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear
and Missile Defense Policy Bradley Roberts testified before the
Committee on Armed Services of the Senate on April 25, 2012,
``[w]ith 30 GBIs in place, the United States is in an
advantageous position vis-a-vis the threats from North Korea
and Iran,'' and ``neither has successfully tested an ICBM or
demonstrated an ICBM-class warhead''.
(4) Deputy Assistant Secretary Roberts testified that
maintaining this advantageous position ``requires continued
improvement to the GMD system, including enhanced performance
by the GBIs and the deployment of new sensors. It also requires
the development of the Precision Tracking Space System (PTSS)
to handle larger raid sizes and the Standard Missile-3 (SM-3)
Block IIB as the ICBM threat from states like Iran and North
Korea matures. These efforts will help to ensure that the
United States possesses the capability to counter the projected
threat for the foreseeable future''.
(5) As its highest priority, the Missile Defense Agency is
designing a correction to the problem that caused a December
2010 flight test failure of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense
system using the Capability Enhancement II (CE-II) model of
exo-atmospheric kill vehicle, and plans to demonstrate the
correction in two flight tests before resuming production or
assembly of additional Capability Enhancement II kill vehicles.
(6) The Department of Defense has a program to improve the
performance and reliability of the Ground-based Midcourse
Defense system, including a plan to test every component of the
Ground-Based Interceptors for reliability. According to
Department of Defense officials, the goal of the Ground-Based
Interceptor reliability program is to double the number of
threat Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) that our
current inventory of Ground-Based Interceptors could defeat,
thereby effectively doubling the capability of our current
Ground-based Midcourse Defense system.
(7) The Missile Defense Agency, working with the Director
of Operational Test and Evaluation and with United States
Strategic Command, has developed a comprehensive Integrated
Master Test Plan (IMTP) for missile defense, with flight tests
for the Ground-based Midcourse Defense system planned through
fiscal year 2022, including salvo testing, multiple
simultaneous engagement testing, and operational testing.
(8) The Director of Operational Test and Evaluation, who
must review, approve, and sign each semi-annual version of the
Integrated Master Test Plan, testified that the Test Plan is
``a robust and rigorous test plan''. He also testified that the
current pace of Ground-based Midcourse Defense system testing
of one flight test per year is the ``best that we've been able
to achieve over a decade''.
(9) The Director of the Missile Defense Agency testified
before the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate on April
25, 2012, that flight testing the Ground-based Midcourse
Defense system more often than once per year could cause
``greater risk of further failure and setbacks to developing
our homeland defense capability as rapidly as possible''.
(10) As part of its homeland defense hedging strategy, the
Department of Defense has already decided upon or implemented a
number of actions to improve the missile defense posture of the
United States in case the threat of Intercontinental Ballistic
Missiles from North Korea or Iran emerges sooner or in greater
numbers than anticipated. These include the following actions:
(A) The Missile Defense Agency has completed
construction of Missile Field-2 at Fort Greely, Alaska,
with eight extra silos available to deploy additional
operational Ground-Based Interceptors, if needed.
(B) With its request for 5 additional Ground-Based
Interceptors in the budget of the President for fiscal
year 2013, the Missile Defense Agency plans to have
enough test and spare Ground-Based Interceptors to
emplace in the 8 extra silos from 2014 through 2025,
and will keep the Ground-Based Interceptor production
line active for 5 additional years, thus allowing
additional Ground-Based Interceptor purchases in the
future, if needed.
(C) The Department has decided not to decommission
prototype Missile Field-1 at Fort Greely but, instead,
to keep it in a storage status that would permit it to
be refurbished and reactivated within a few years if
future threat developments make that necessary.
(D) The Missile Defense Agency plans to build an
in-flight interceptor communications terminal at Fort
Drum, New York, to enhance the performance of Ground-
Based Interceptors defending the eastern United States
against possible future missile threats from Iran.
(E) The Missile Defense Agency is continuing the
development and testing of the two-stage Ground-Based
Interceptor for possible deployment in the future, if
needed.
(F) The Missile Defense Agency is upgrading early
warning radars in Clear, Alaska, and Cape Cod,
Massachusetts, to enhance the ability to defend against
potential multiple future Intercontinental Ballistic
Missile threats from North Korea and Iran.
(G) The Missile Defense Agency is pursuing
development of the Standard Missile-3 Block IIB
interceptor for Phase 4 of the European Phased Adaptive
Approach. It is intended to augment the Ground-based
Midcourse Defense system as a cost-effective first
layer of defense of the homeland against a possible
future Intercontinental Ballistic Missile threat from
Iran.
(H) The Missile Defense Agency is pursuing
development of the Precision Tracking Space System, a
satellite sensor system to provide persistent tracking
of large numbers of missiles in flight, and fire-
control quality targeting data to various missile
defense interceptor systems. According to the Director
of the Missile Defense Agency, ``the greatest future
enhancement for both homeland and regional defense in
the next ten years is the development of the Precision
Tracking Space System satellites''.
(11) As part of its homeland defense hedging strategy
review, the Department of Defense is considering other options
to enhance the future United States posture to defend the
homeland, including the feasibility, advisability and
affordability of deploying additional Ground-Based
Interceptors, either in Alaska or at a missile defense site on
the East Coast of the United States.
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) it is a national priority to defend the homeland
against the potential future threat of limited ballistic
missile attack from countries such as North Korea and Iran;
(2) the currently deployed Ground-based Midcourse Defense
system, with 30 Ground-Based Interceptors deployed in Alaska
and California, provides protection of the United States
homeland against the potential future threat of limited
ballistic missile attack from North Korea and Iran;
(3) it is essential for the Ground-based Midcourse Defense
system to achieve the levels of reliability, availability,
sustainability, and operational performance that will allow it
to continue providing protection of the United States homeland
against limited ballistic missile attack;
(4) the Missile Defense Agency should, as its highest
priority, correct the problem that caused the December 2010
Ground-based Midcourse Defense system flight test failure and
demonstrate the correction in flight tests before resuming
production of the Capability Enhancement-II kill vehicle, in
order to provide confidence that the system will work as
intended;
(5) the Department of Defense should continue to enhance
the performance and reliability of the Ground-based Midcourse
Defense system, and enhance the capability of the Ballistic
Missile Defense System, to provide improved capability to
defend the homeland against possible increased future missile
threats from North Korea and Iran;
(6) the Missile Defense Agency should continue its robust,
rigorous, and realistic testing of the Ground-based Midcourse
Defense system at a pace of one flight test per year, as
described in the Integrated Master Test Plan, including salvo
testing, multiple simultaneous engagement testing, and
operational testing;
(7) if successfully developed, the Standard Missile-3 Block
IIB interceptor would provide an essential first layer of
defense of the homeland against an emerging Intercontinental
Ballistic Missile threat from Iran, using a cost-effective
forward-based early intercept system that could permit holding
Ground-Based Interceptors in reserve, and if such interceptor
could be deployed on ships, it would also provide a significant
enhancement to defense against possible future threats from
North Korea;
(8) the Precision Tracking Space System has the potential
to improve dramatically the capability of homeland and regional
missile defense systems against large numbers of missiles
launched simultaneously, and should remain a high priority for
development;
(9) the Department of Defense has taken a number of
prudent, affordable, cost-effective, and operationally
significant steps to hedge against the possibility of future
growth in the missile threat to the homeland from North Korea
and Iran; and
(10) the Department of Defense should continue to evaluate
the evolution of the long-range missile threat from North Korea
and Iran and consider other possibilities for prudent,
affordable, cost-effective, and operationally significant steps
to improve the posture of the United States to defend the
homeland against possible future growth in the threat.
(c) Report.--
(1) Report required.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on the status of efforts to improve the homeland ballistic
missile defense capability of the United States.
(2) Elements of report.--The report required by paragraph
(1)) shall include the following:
(A) A detailed description of the actions taken or
planned to improve the reliability, availability, and
capability of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense
system.
(B) A description of any improvements achieved as a
result of the actions described in subparagraph (A).
(C) A description of the results of the two planned
flight tests of the Ground-based Midcourse Defense
system (Control Test Vehicle flight test-1, and GMD
Flight Test-06b) intended to demonstrate the success of
the correction of the problem that caused the flight
test failure of December 2010, and the status of any
decision to resume production of the Capability
Enhancement-II kill vehicle.
(D) A detailed description of actions taken or
planned to improve the homeland defense posture of the
United States to hedge against potential future
Intercontinental Ballistic Missile threat growth from
North Korea and Iran.
(E) Any other matters the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(3) Form of report.--The report shall be submitted in
unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
SEC. 232. REGIONAL BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) In the introduction to the Ballistic Missile Defense
Review of February 2010, Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
states that ``I have made defending against near-term regional
threats a top priority of our missile defense plans, programs
and capabilities''.
(2) In describing the threat of regional ballistic
missiles, the report of the Ballistic Missile Defense Review
states that ``there is no uncertainty about the existence of
regional threats. They are clear and present. The threat from
short-range, medium-range, and intermediate-range ballistic
missiles (SRBMs, MRBMs, and IRBMs) in regions where the United
States deploys forces and maintains security relationships is
growing at a particularly rapid pace''.
(3) In testimony before the Committee on Armed Services of
the Senate on April 25, 2012, Dr. Bradley Roberts, Deputy
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear and Missile Defense
Policy stated, with respect to regional missile defense, that
``the need arises from the rapidly emerging threats to our
armed forces in Europe, the Middle East, and East Asia from
regional missile proliferators and the basic challenge such
proliferation poses to the safety and security of our forces
and allies and to our power projection strategy''.
(4) Iran has the largest inventory of regional ballistic
missiles in the Middle East, with hundreds of missiles that can
reach southeastern Europe and all of the Middle East, including
Israel. Iran is improving its existing missiles and developing
new and longer-range missiles.
(5) North Korea has a large and growing inventory of short-
range and medium-range ballistic missiles that can reach United
States forces and allies in South Korea and Japan. North Korea
is improving its existing missiles and developing new and
longer-range missiles.
(6) In September 2009, President Barack Obama announced
that he had accepted the unanimous recommendation of the
Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff to establish
a European Phased Adaptive Approach to missile defense,
designed to protect deployed United States forces and allies
and partners in Europe against the large and growing threat of
ballistic missiles from Iran.
(7) In November 2010, at the Lisbon Summit, the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) decided to adopt the core
mission of missile defense of its population, territory and
forces. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization agreed to
enhance its missile defense command and control system, the
Active Layered Theater Ballistic Missile Defense, to provide a
North Atlantic Treaty Organization command and control
capability. This is in addition to contributions of missile
defense capability from individual nations.
(8) During 2011, the United States successfully implemented
Phase 1 of the European Phased Adaptive Approach, including
deployment of an AN/TPY-2 radar in Turkey, deployment of an
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense ship in the eastern
Mediterranean Sea with Standard Missile-3 Block IA
interceptors, and establishment of a missile defense command
and control system in Germany.
(9) During 2011, the United States successfully negotiated
all the international agreements with North Atlantic Treaty
Organization allies needed to permit future phases of the
European Phased Adaptive Approach, including agreements with
Romania and Poland to permit the deployment of Aegis Ashore
missile defense systems on their territory, an agreement with
Turkey to permit deployment of an AN/TPY-2 radar on its
territory, and an agreement with Spain to permit the forward
stationing of four Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense ships at
Rota.
(10) Phase 2 of the European Phased Adaptive Approach is
planned for deployment in 2015, and is planned to include the
deployment of Standard Missile-3 Block IB interceptors on Aegis
Ballistic Missile Defense ships and at an Aegis Ashore site in
Romania.
(11) Phase 3 of the European Phased Adaptive Approach is
planned for deployment in 2018, and is planned to include the
deployment of Standard Missile-3 Block IIA interceptors on
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense ships and at an Aegis Ashore
site in Poland.
(12) Phase 4 of the European Phased Adaptive Approach is
planned for deployment in 2020, and is planned to include the
deployment of Standard Missile-3 Block IIB interceptors at
Aegis Ashore sites. This interceptor is intended to protect
both Europe and the United States against potential future
long-range ballistic missiles from Iran.
(13) At the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Summit in
Chicago in 2012, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization plans
to announce it has achieved an ``interim capability'' for the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization missile defense system,
including initial capability of its Active Layered Theater
Ballistic Missile Defense system at a command and control
facility in Germany.
(14) The United States has a robust program of missile
defense cooperation with Israel, including joint development of
the Arrow Weapon System and the new Arrow-3 upper tier
interceptor, designed to defend Israel against ballistic
missiles from Iran. These jointly developed missile defense
systems are designed to be interoperable with United States
ballistic missile defenses, and these interoperable systems are
tested in large military exercises. The United States has
deployed an AN/TPY-2 radar in Israel to enhance missile defense
against missiles from Iran.
(15) The United States is working with the nations of the
Gulf Cooperation Council on enhanced national and regional
missile defense capabilities against growing missile threats
from Iran. As part of this effort, the United Arab Emirates
plans to purchase two batteries of the Terminal High Altitude
Air Defense (THAAD) system, as well as other equipment.
(16) The United States has a strong program of missile
defense cooperation with Japan, including the co-development of
the Standard Missile-3 (SM-3) Block IIA interceptor for the
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense system, intended to be deployed
by Japan and in Phase 3 of the European Phased Adaptive
Approach, Japan's fleet of Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense
ships using the SM-3 Block IA interceptors, and the United
States deployment of an AN/TPY-2 radar in Japan.
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the threat from regional ballistic missiles,
particularly from Iran and North Korea, is serious and growing,
and puts at risk forward-deployed United States forces and
allies and partners in Europe, the Middle East, and the Asia-
Pacific region;
(2) the Department of Defense has an obligation to provide
force protection of forward-deployed United States forces,
assets, and facilities from regional ballistic missile attack;
(3) the United States has an obligation to meet its
security commitments to its allies, including ballistic missile
defense commitments;
(4) the Department of Defense has a balanced program of
investment and capabilities to provide for both homeland
defense and regional defense against ballistic missiles,
consistent with the Ballistic Missile Defense Review and with
the prioritized and integrated needs of the commanders of the
combatant commands;
(5) the European Phased Adaptive Approach to missile
defense is an appropriate and necessary response to the
existing and growing ballistic missile threat from Iran to
forward deployed United States forces and allies and partners
in Europe;
(6) the Department of Defense--
(A) should, as a high priority, continue to
develop, test, and plan to deploy all four phases of
the European Phased Adaptive Approach, including all
variants of the Standard Missile-3 interceptor; and
(B) should also continue with its other phased and
adaptive regional missile defense efforts tailored to
the Middle East and the Asia-Pacific region;
(7) European members of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization are making valuable contributions to missile
defense in Europe, by hosting elements of United States missile
defense systems on their territories, through individual
national contributions to missile defense capability, and by
collective funding and development of the Active Layered
Theater Ballistic Missile Defense system; and
(8) the Department of Defense should continue with the
development of the key enablers of enhanced regional missile
defense, including the Precision Tracking Space System.
(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report describing the
status and progress of regional missile defense programs and
efforts.
(2) Elements of report.--The report required by paragraph
(1) shall include the following:
(A) An assessment of the adequacy of the existing
and planned European Phased Adaptive Approach to
provide force protection for forward deployed United
States forces in Europe against ballistic missile
threats from Iran, and an assessment whether adequate
force protection would be available absent the European
Phased Adaptive Approach.
(B) An assessment whether the European Phased
Adaptive Approach and other planned regional missile
defense approaches of the United States meet the
integrated priorities of the commanders of the regional
combatant commands in an affordable and balanced
manner.
(C) A description of the progress made in the
development and testing of elements of systems intended
for deployment in Phases 2 through 4 of the European
Phased Adaptive Approach, including the Standard
Missile-3 Block IB interceptor and the Aegis Ashore
system.
(D) A description of the manner in which elements
of regional missile defense architectures, such as
forward-based X-band radars in Turkey and Japan,
contribute to the enhancement of homeland defense of
the United States.
(E) A description of the current and planned
contributions of North Atlantic Treaty Organization
allies, both collectively and individually, to missile
defense in Europe.
(3) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 233. MISSILE DEFENSE COOPERATION WITH RUSSIA.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) For more than a decade, the United States and Russia
have discussed a variety of options for cooperation on shared
early warning and ballistic missile defense. For example, on
May 1, 2001, President George W. Bush spoke of a ``new
cooperative relationship'' with Russia and said ``it should be
premised on openness, mutual confidence and real opportunities
for cooperation, including the area of missile defense. It
should allow us to share information so that each nation can
improve its early warning capability, and its capability to
defend its people and territory. And perhaps one day, we can
even cooperate in a joint defense''.
(2) Section 1231 of the Floyd D. Spence National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (as enacted into law by
Public Law 106-398; 1654A-329) authorized the Department of
Defense to establish in Russia a ``joint center for the
exchange of data from systems to provide early warning of
launches of ballistic missiles and for notification of launches
of such missiles'', also known as the Joint Data Exchange
Center (JDEC).
(3) On March 31, 2008, Deputy Secretary of Defense Gordon
England stated that ``we have offered Russia a wide-ranging
proposal to cooperate on missile defense--everything from
modeling and simulation, to data sharing, to joint development
of a regional missile defense architecture--all designed to
defend the United States, Europe, and Russia from the growing
threat of Iranian ballistic missiles. An extraordinary series
of transparency measures have also been offered to reassure
Russia. Despite some Russian reluctance to sign up to these
cooperative missile defense activities, we continue to work
toward this goal''.
(4) On July 6, 2009, President Barack Obama and Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev issued a joint statement on missile
defense issues, which stated that ``Russia and the United
States plan to continue the discussion concerning the
establishment of cooperation in responding to the challenge of
ballistic missile proliferation. . . We have instructed our
experts to work together to analyze the ballistic missile
challenges of the 21st century and to prepare appropriate
recommendations''.
(5) The February 2010 report of the Ballistic Missile
Defense Review established as one of its central policy pillars
that increased international missile defense cooperation is in
the national security interest of the United States and, with
regard to cooperation with Russia, the United States ``is
pursuing a broad agenda focused on shared early warning of
missile launches, possible technical cooperation, and even
operational cooperation''.
(6) at the November 2010 Lisbon Summit, the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO) decided to develop a missile defense
system to ``protect NATO European populations, territory and
forces'' and also to seek cooperation with Russia on missile
defense. In its Lisbon Summit Declaration, the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization reaffirmed its readiness to ``invite Russia
to explore jointly the potential for linking current and
planned missile defence systems at an appropriate time in
mutually beneficial ways''. The new NATO Strategic Concept
adopted at the Lisbon Summit states that ``we will actively
seek cooperation on missile defense with Russia'', that ``NATO-
Russia cooperation is of strategic importance'', and that ``the
security of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and Russia
is intertwined''.
(7) In a December 18, 2010, letter to the leadership of the
Senate, President Obama wrote that the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization ``invited Russia to cooperate on missile defense,
which could lead to adding Russian capabilities to those
deployed by NATO to enhance our common security against common
threats. The Lisbon Summit thus demonstrated that the
Alliance's missile defenses can be strengthened by improving
NATO-Russian relations. This comes even as we have made clear
that the system we intend to pursue with Russia will not be a
joint system, and it will not in any way limit United States'
or NATO's missile defense capabilities. Effective cooperation
with Russia could enhance the overall efficiency of our
combined territorial missile defenses, and at the same time
provide Russia with greater security''.
(8) Section 221(a)(3) of the Ike Skelton National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 124
Stat. 4167) states that it is the sense of Congress ``to
support the efforts of the United States Government and the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization to pursue cooperation with
the Russian Federation on ballistic missile defense relative to
Iranian missile threats''.
(9) In a speech in Russia on March 21, 2011, Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates cited ``the NATO-Russian decision to
cooperate on defense against ballistic missiles. We've
disagreed before, and Russia still has uncertainties about the
European Phased Adaptive Approach, a limited system that poses
no challenges to the large Russian nuclear arsenal. However,
we've mutually committed to resolving these difficulties in
order to develop a roadmap toward truly effective anti-
ballistic missile collaboration. This collaboration may include
exchanging launch information, setting up a joint data fusion
center, allowing greater transparency with respect to our
missile defense plans and exercises, and conducting a joint
analysis to determine areas of future cooperation''.
(10) In testimony to the Committee on Armed Services of the
Senate on April 13, 2011, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense
for Nuclear and Missile Defense Policy Bradley H. Roberts
stated that the United States has been pursuing a Defense
Technology Cooperation Agreement with Russia since 2004, and
that such an agreement is necessary ``for the safeguarding of
sensitive information in support of cooperation'' on missile
defense, and to ``provide the legal framework for undertaking
cooperative efforts''. Further, Dr. Roberts stated that the
United States would not provide any classified information to
Russia without first conducting a National Disclosure Policy
review. He also stated that the United States is not
considering sharing ``hit-to-kill'' technology with Russia.
(11) In a March 2012 answer to a question from the
Committee on Armed Services of the Senate on missile defense
cooperation with Russia, Acting Under Secretary of Defense for
Policy Jim Miller wrote that ``I support U.S.-Russian
cooperation on missile defenses first and foremost because it
could improve the effectiveness of U.S. and NATO missile
defenses, thereby improving the protection of the United
States, our forces overseas, and our Allies. Missile defense
cooperation with Russia is in the security interests of the
United States, NATO, and Russia, first and foremost because it
could strengthen capabilities across Europe to intercept
Iranian missiles''. He also wrote that ``[t]he United States
has pursued missile defense cooperation with Russia with the
clear understanding that we would not accept constraints on
missile defense, and that we would undertake necessary
qualitative and quantitative improvements to meet U.S. Security
needs''.
(12) In February 2012, an international group of
independent experts known as the Euro-Atlantic Security
Initiative issued a report proposing missile defense
cooperation between the United States (with its North Atlantic
Treaty Organization allies) and Russia. The group, whose
leaders included Stephen Hadley, the National Security Advisor
to President George W. Bush, proposed that the nations share
satellite and radar early warning data at joint cooperation
centers in order to improve their ability to detect, track, and
defeat medium-range and intermediate-range ballistic missiles
from the Middle East.
(13) In a letter dated April 13, 2012, Robert Nabors,
Assistant to the President and Director of the Office of
Legislative Affairs, wrote that ``it is Administration policy
that we will only provide information to Russia that will
enhance the effectiveness of our missile defenses. The
Administration will not provide Russia with sensitive
information that would in any way compromise our national
security, including hit-to-kill technology and interceptor
telemetry''.
(14) The United States and Russia already engage in
substantial cooperation on a number of international security
efforts, including nuclear nonproliferation, anti-piracy,
counter-narcotics, nuclear security, counter-terrorism, and
logistics resupply through Russia of coalition forces in
Afghanistan. These areas of cooperation require each side to
share and protect sensitive information, which they have both
done successfully.
(15) The United States currently has shared early warning
agreements and programs of cooperation with eight nations in
addition to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The United
States has developed procedures and mechanisms for sharing
early warning information with partner nations while ensuring
the protection of sensitive United States information.
(16) Russia and the United States each have missile launch
early warning and detection and tracking sensors that could
contribute to and enhance each others' ability to detect,
track, an defend against ballistic missile threats from Iran.
(17) The Obama Administration has provided regular
briefings to Congress on its discussions with Russia on
possible missile defense cooperation.
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) it is in the national security interest of the United
States to pursue efforts at missile defense cooperation with
Russia that would enhance the security of the United States,
its North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies, and Russia,
particularly against missile threats from Iran;
(2) the United States should pursue ballistic missile
defense cooperation with Russia on both a bilateral basis and a
multilateral basis with its North Atlantic Treaty Organization
allies, particularly through the NATO-Russia Council;
(3) missile defense cooperation with Russia should not ``in
any way limit United States' or NATO's missile defense
capabilities'', as acknowledged in the December 18, 2010,
letter from President Obama to the leadership of the Senate,
and should be mutually beneficial and reciprocal in nature;
(4) the United States should not provide Russia with
sensitive missile defense information that would in any way
compromise United States national security, including ``hit-to-
kill'' technology and interceptor telemetry; and
(5) the United States should pursue missile defense
cooperation with Russia in a manner that ensures that--
(A) United States classified information is
appropriately safeguarded and protected from
unauthorized disclosure;
(B) prior to sharing classified information with
Russia, the United States conducts a National
Disclosure Policy review and determines the types and
levels of information that may be shared and whether
any additional procedures are necessary to protect such
information;
(C) prior to entering into missile defense
technology cooperation projects, the United States
enters into a Defense Technology Cooperation Agreement
with Russia that establishes the legal framework for a
broad spectrum of potential cooperative defense
projects; and
(D) such cooperation does not limit the missile
defense capabilities of the United States or its North
Atlantic Treaty Organization allies.
SEC. 234. NEXT GENERATION EXO-ATMOSPHERIC KILL VEHICLE.
(a) Plan for Next Generation Kill Vehicle.--The Director of the
Missile Defense Agency shall develop a long-term plan for the Exo-
atmospheric Kill Vehicle (EKV) that addresses both modifications and
enhancements to the current Exo-atmospheric Kill Vehicle and options
for the competitive development of a next generation Exo-atmospheric
Kill Vehicle for the Ground-Based Interceptor (GBI) of the Ground-based
Midcourse Defense (GMD) system and any other interceptor that might be
developed for the defense of the United States against long-range
ballistic missiles.
(b) Definition of Parameters and Capabilities.--
(1) Assessment required.--The Director shall define the
desired technical parameters and performance capabilities for a
next generation Exo-atmospheric Kill Vehicle using an
assessment conducted by the Director for that purpose that is
designed to ensure that a next generation Exo-atmospheric Kill
Vehicle design--
(A) enables ease of manufacturing, high tolerances
to production processes and supply chain variability,
and inherent reliability;
(B) will be optimized to take advantage of the
Ballistic Missile Defense System architecture and
sensor system capabilities;
(C) leverages all relevant kill vehicle development
activities and technologies, including from the current
Standard Missile-3 Block IIB (SM-3 IIB) program and the
previous Multiple Kill Vehicle technology development
program;
(D) seeks to maximize, to the greatest extent
practicable, commonality between subsystems of a next
generation Exo-atmospheric Kill Vehicle and other exo-
atmospheric kill vehicle programs; and
(E) meets Department of Defense criteria, as
established in the February 2010 Ballistic Missile
Defense Review, for affordability, reliability,
suitability, and operational effectiveness to defend
against limited attacks from evolving and future
threats from long-range missiles.
(2) Evaluation of payloads.--The assessment required by
paragraph (1) shall include an evaluation of the potential
benefits and drawbacks of options for both unitary and multiple
Exo-atmospheric Kill Vehicle payloads.
(3) Standard missile-3 block iib interceptor.--As part of
the assessment required by paragraph (1), the Director shall
evaluate whether there are potential options and opportunities
arising from the Standard Missile-3 Block IIB interceptor
development program for development of an exo-atmospheric kill
vehicle, or kill vehicle technologies or components, that could
be used for potential upgrades to the Ground-Based Interceptor
or for a next generation Exo-atmospheric Kill Vehicle.
(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Director shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report setting forth the
plan developed under subsection (a), including the results of
the assessment under subsection (b), and an estimate of the
cost and schedule of implementing the plan.
(2) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 235. MODERNIZATION OF THE PATRIOT AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM.
(a) Plan for Modernization.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a prioritized plan for support of
the long-term requirements in connection with the modernization of the
Patriot air and missile defense system.
(b) Additional Elements.--The report required by subsection (a)
shall also set forth the following:
(1) An assessment of the integrated air and missile defense
capabilities required to meet the demands of evolving and
emerging threats.
(2) A plan for the introduction of changes to the Patriot
air and missile defense system program to achieve reductions in
the life-cycle cost of the Patriot air and missile defense
system.
SEC. 236. MEDIUM EXTENDED AIR DEFENSE SYSTEM.
None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2013 for the Department of
Defense may be obligated or expended for the Medium Extended Air
Defense System (MEADS).
SEC. 237. AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR IRON DOME SHORT-RANGE ROCKET
DEFENSE PROGRAM.
Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
by section 201 for research, development, test, and evaluation,
Defense-wide, and available for the Missile Defense Agency,
$210,000,000 may be provided to the Government of Israel for the Iron
Dome short-range rocket defense program as specified in the funding
table in section 4201.
Subtitle D--Reports
SEC. 251. MISSION PACKAGES FOR THE LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than March 1, 2013, the Secretary
of the Navy shall, in consultation with the Director of Operational
Test and Evaluation, submit to the congressional defense committees a
report on the mine countermeasures warfare (MCM), antisubmarine warfare
(ASW), and surface warfare (SUW) Mission Packages for the Littoral
Combat Ship.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall set
forth the following:
(1) A plan for the Mission Packages demonstrating that
Preliminary Design Review for every capability increment
precedes Milestone B or equivalent approval for that increment.
(2) A plan for demonstrating that the capability increment
for each Mission Package, combined with a Littoral Combat Ship,
on the basis of a Preliminary Design Review and post-
Preliminary Design Review assessment, will achieve the
capability specified for that increment.
(3) A plan for demonstrating the survivability and
lethality of the Littoral Combat Ship with its Mission Packages
sufficiently early in the development phase of the system to
minimize costs of concurrency.
SEC. 252. COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES ANNUAL REPORTS ON
THE ACQUISITION PROGRAM FOR THE AMPHIBIOUS COMBAT
VEHICLE.
(a) Annual GAO Review.--The Comptroller General of the United
States shall conduct on an annual basis a review of the acquisition
program for the Amphibious Combat Vehicle (ACV).
(b) Annual Reports.--
(1) In general.--Not later than March 1 of each year
beginning in 2013, the Comptroller General shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the review of the
acquisition program for the Amphibious Combat Vehicle conducted
under subsection (a).
(2) Matters to be included.--Each report on the review of
the acquisition program for the Amphibious Combat Vehicle shall
include, to the extent appropriate and feasible, the following:
(A) An assessment of the extent to which the
program is meeting development and procurement cost,
schedule, performance, and risk mitigation goals.
(B) With respect to meeting the desired initial
operational capability and full operational capability
dates for the Amphibious Combat Vehicle, an assessment
of the progress and results of--
(i) developmental and operational testing
of the vehicle; and
(ii) plans for correcting deficiencies in
vehicle performance, operational effectiveness,
reliability, suitability, and safety.
(C) An assessment of procurement plans, production
results, and efforts to improve manufacturing
efficiency and supplier performance in connection with
the Amphibious Combat Vehicle.
(D) An assessment of the acquisition strategy for
the Amphibious Combat Vehicle, including whether the
strategy complies with acquisition management best-
practices and the acquisition policy and regulations of
the Department of Defense.
(E) A risk assessment of the integrated master
schedule and the test and evaluation master plan of the
Amphibious Combat Vehicle as it relates to--
(i) the probability of success;
(ii) the funding required for the vehicle
in comparison with the funding programmed for
the vehicle; and
(iii) development and production
concurrency.
(3) Additional information in first report.--In submitting
to the congressional defense committees the first report under
paragraph (1), the Comptroller General shall include, with
respect to the Amphibious Combat Vehicle program, an assessment
of the sufficiency and objectivity of the following documents:
(A) The analysis of alternatives.
(B) The initial capabilities document.
(C) The capability development document.
(4) Information in subsequent reports.--
(A) Certain information required only following
significant changes.--A report under this subsection
after the first report under paragraph (1) shall
address the matters identified in subparagraphs (C),
(D), and (E) of paragraph (2) only to the extent that
the Comptroller General determines that there have been
significant changes to the applicable plans,
strategies, or schedules since the last report under
this subsection addressing such matters.
(B) Additional information after approval or change
of documents.--If any document specified in paragraph
(3) is approved or changed after the first report under
paragraph (1), the Comptroller General shall provide an
assessment of the sufficiency and objectivity of that
document in the report to the congressional defense
committees under paragraph (1) submitted immediately
following such approval or change.
(5) Termination.--No report is required under this
subsection after the first report following the award of a
contract for full rate production of the Amphibious Combat
Vehicle.
SEC. 253. CONDITIONAL REQUIREMENT FOR REPORT ON AMPHIBIOUS ASSAULT
VEHICLES FOR THE MARINE CORPS.
(a) In General.--If the ongoing Marine Corps ground combat vehicle
fleet mix study recommends the acquisition of a separate Marine
Personnel Carrier, the Secretary of the Navy and the Commandant of the
Marine Corps shall jointly submit to the congressional defense
committees a report that includes the following:
(1) A detailed description of the capability gaps that
Marine Personnel Carriers are intended to mitigate and the
capabilities that the Marine Personnel Carrier will be required
to have to mitigate such gaps, and an assessment whether, and
to what extent, Amphibious Combat Vehicles could mitigate such
gaps.
(2) A detailed explanation of the role of the Marine
Personnel Carriers in fulfilling the forcible entry requirement
for the two Marine Expeditionary Brigades (MEBs) that make up
the assault echelons of the three Marine Expeditionary Brigade
force required to meet applicable war plans of the combatant
commands.
(3) A description of the fraction of the assault echelon of
the brigades referred to in paragraph (2) that would be
comprised of Marine Personnel Carriers.
(4) An assessment of the direct operational risk associated
with using ship-to-shore connectors to deliver Marine Personnel
Carriers to shore in an amphibious assault.
(5) An assessment of the indirect operational risk
associated with using ship-to-shore connectors to deliver
Marine Personnel Carriers rather than tanks and artillery and
other tactical vehicles.
(6) A comparative estimate of the acquisition and life-
cycle costs of a split fleet of Amphibious Combat Vehicles and
Marine Personnel Carriers with the acquisition and life-cycle
costs of a pure fleet of Amphibious Combat Vehicles.
(b) Submittal Date.--If required, the report under subsection (a)
shall be submitted not later than the later of--
(1) the date that is 60 days after the date of the
completion of the study referred to in subsection (a); or
(2) February 1, 2013.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
SEC. 271. TRANSFER OF ADMINISTRATION OF OCEAN RESEARCH AND RESOURCES
ADVISORY PANEL FROM DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY TO NATIONAL
OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 7903 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1)--
(A) by inserting ``, through the Administrator of
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,''
after ``The Council'';
(B) by inserting ``and Resources'' after ``Ocean
Research'';
(C) by striking ``Panel consisting'' and inserting
``Panel. The Panel shall consist''; and
(D) by striking ``chairman'' and inserting
``Administrator, on behalf of the Council'';
(2) in paragraph (1), by striking ``National Academy of
Science'' and inserting ``National Academies of Science'';
(3) by striking paragraphs (2) and (3); and
(4) by redesignating paragraphs (4) and (5) as paragraphs
(2) and (3), respectively.
(b) Responsibilities of Panel.--Subsection (b) of such section is
amended--
(1) by inserting ``, through the Administrator of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,'' after ``The
Council'';
(2) by striking paragraph (2);
(3) by redesignating paragraphs (3) and (4) as paragraphs
(4) and (5), respectively; and
(4) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new
paragraphs (2) and (3):
``(2) To advise the Council on the determination of
scientific priorities and needs.
``(3) To provide the Council strategic advice regarding
national ocean program execution and collaboration.''.
(c) Funding to Support Activities of Panel.--Subsection (c) of such
section is amended by striking ``Secretary of the Navy'' and inserting
``Secretary of Commerce''.
(d) Conforming Amendment.--Section 7902(e)(1) of such title is
amended by striking ``Ocean Research Advisory Panel'' and inserting
``Ocean Research and Resources Advisory Panel''.
(e) Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of section 7903 of such
title is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 7903. Ocean Research and Resources Advisory Panel''.
(2) Table of sections.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 665 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 7903 and inserting the following
new item:
``7903. Ocean Research and Resources Advisory Panel.''.
(f) References.--Any reference to the Ocean Research Advisory Panel
in any law, regulation, map, document, record, or other paper of the
United States shall be deemed to be a reference to the Ocean Research
and Resources Advisory Panel.
TITLE III--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FUNDING.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for the use of the Armed Forces and other activities and agencies of
the Department of Defense for expenses, not otherwise provided for, for
operation and maintenance, as specified in the funding table in section
4301.
Subtitle B--Energy and Environmental Provisions
SEC. 311. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE GUIDANCE ON ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURES AT
MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.
(a) Guidance.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue to the
appropriate military departments and other defense agencies written
guidance on environmental exposures at military installations. The
guidance shall--
(1) set forth criteria for when and under what
circumstances public health assessments by the Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry shall be requested in
connection with environmental contamination at military
installations, including past incidents of environmental
contamination;
(2) establish procedures for tracking and documenting the
status and nature of responses to the findings and
recommendations of the public health assessments of the Agency
of Toxic Substances and Disease Registry that involve
contamination at military installations; and
(3) prescribe appropriate actions with respect to the
identification of military and civilian individuals who may
have been exposed to contamination while living or working on
military installations.
(b) Report.--Not later than 30 days after issuing the guidance
required under subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall transmit
a copy of the guidance to the congressional defense committees.
SEC. 312. FUNDING OF AGREEMENTS UNDER THE SIKES ACT.
Section 103a of the Sikes Act (16 U.S.C. 670c-1) is amended--
(1) in subsection (b)--
(A) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``Funds''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(2) In the case of a cooperative agreement under subsection
(a)(2), such funds--
``(A) may be paid in a lump sum and include an amount
intended to cover the future costs of the natural resource
maintenance and improvement activities provided for under the
agreement; and
``(B) may be placed by the recipient in an interest-bearing
account, and any interest shall be applied for the same
purposes as the principal.''; and
(2) by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
``(c) Availability of Funds; Agreement Under Other Laws.--(1)
Cooperative agreements and interagency agreements entered into under
this section shall be subject to the availability of funds.
``(2) Notwithstanding chapter 63 of title 31, a cooperative
agreement under this section may be used to acquire property or
services for the direct benefit or use of the United States
Government.''.
SEC. 313. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR PROCUREMENT OF
ALTERNATIVE FUEL.
(a) Limitation.--Except as provided in subsection (b), none of the
funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made
available during fiscal year 2013 for the Department of Defense may be
obligated or expended for the production or sole purchase of an
alternative fuel if the cost of producing or purchasing the alternative
fuel exceeds the cost of producing or purchasing a traditional fossil
fuel that would be used for the same purpose as the alternative fuel.
(b) Exception.--Notwithstanding subsection (a), the Secretary of
Defense may purchase such limited quantities of alternative fuels as
are necessary to complete engine or fleet certification for 50/50
blends. In such instances, the Secretary shall purchase such
alternative fuel using amounts authorized for research, development,
test, and evaluation using competitive procedures and shall ensure the
best purchase price for the fuel.
Subtitle C--Logistics and Sustainment
SEC. 321. REPEAL OF CERTAIN PROVISIONS RELATING TO DEPOT-LEVEL
MAINTENANCE.
(a) Repeal.--
(1) Section 2460 of title 10, United States Code (as
amended by section 321 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81)), is repealed.
(2) Section 2464 of title 10, United States Code (as
amended by section 327 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2012), is repealed.
(b) Revival of Superseded Provisions.--
(1) The provisions of section 2460 of title 10, United
States Code, as in effect on December 30, 2011 (the day before
the date of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2012), are hereby revived.
(2)(A) The provisions of section 2464 of 10, United States
Code, as in effect on that date, are hereby revived.
(B) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 146
of such title is amended by striking the item relating to
section 2464 and inserting the following new item:
``2464. Core logistics capabilities.''.
(c) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Section 2366a of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking ``core depot-level maintenance and repair
capabilities'' each place it appears and inserting ``core
logistics capabilities''.
(2) Section 2366b(A)(3)(F) of title 10, United States Code,
is amended by striking ``core depot-level maintenance and
repair capabilities, as well as the associated logistics
capabilities'' and inserting ``core logistics capabilities''.
(3) Section 801(c) of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (125 Stat. 1483; 10 U.S.C. 2366a note)
is amended by striking ``core depot-level maintenance and
repair capabilities, as well as the associated logistics
capabilities'' and inserting ``core logistics capabilities''.
(d) Effective Date.--This section and the amendments made by this
section shall take effect on December 31, 2011, the date of the
enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2012, immediately after the enactment of that Act.
Subtitle D--Reports
SEC. 331. ANNUAL REPORT ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE LONG-TERM CORROSION
STRATEGY.
Section 2228(e) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``, including
available validated data on return on investment for
completed corrosion projects and activities'' after
``the strategy'';
(B) in subparagraph (E), by striking ``For the
fiscal year covered by the report and the preceding
fiscal year'' and inserting ``For the preceding fiscal
year covered by the report''; and
(C) by inserting at the end the following new
subparagraph:
``(F) For the preceding fiscal year covered by the report,
a breakdown of the amount of funds used for military corrosion
projects, the Technical Corrosion Collaboration pilot program,
and other corrosion-related activities.'';
(2) by striking paragraph (2); and
(3) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (2).
SEC. 332. MODIFIED DEADLINE FOR COMPTROLLER GENERAL REVIEW OF ANNUAL
REPORT ON PREPOSITIONED MATERIEL AND EQUIPMENT.
Section 2229a(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``By not later than 120 days after the date on which a report
is submitted under subsection (a), the Comptroller General shall review
the report'' and inserting ``The Comptroller General shall review the
report submitted under subsection (a)''.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
SEC. 341. SAVINGS TO BE ACHIEVED IN CIVILIAN WORKFORCE AND CONTRACTOR
EMPLOYEE WORKFORCE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Required Savings.--Commencing not later than 90 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall begin
the implementation of an efficiencies plan for the civilian workforce
and the service contractor workforce of the Department of Defense which
shall achieve savings in the funding for each such workforce over the
period from fiscal year 2012 through fiscal year 2017 that are not
less, as a percentage of such funding, than the savings in funding for
military personnel achieved by the planned reduction in military end
strengths over the same period of time.
(b) Exclusions.--The funding reduction required by subsection (a)
shall not include funding for the following:
(1) Civilian personnel expenses for personnel as follows:
(A) Personnel in Mission Critical Occupations, as
defined by the Civilian Human Capital Strategic Plan of
the Department of Defense and the Acquisition Workforce
Plan of the Department of Defense.
(B) Personnel employed at facilities providing core
logistics capabilities pursuant to section 2464 of
title 10, United States Code.
(C) Personnel in the Offices of the Inspectors
General of the Department of Defense.
(2) Service contractor expenses for personnel as follows:
(A) Personnel performing maintenance and repair of
military equipment.
(B) Personnel providing medical services.
(C) Personnel performing financial audit services.
(3) Personnel expenses for personnel in the civilian
personnel or service contractor workforce performing such other
critical functions as may be identified by the Secretary as
requiring exemption in the interest of the national defense.
(c) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than 120 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report including a
comprehensive description of the plan required by subsection
(a).
(2) Status reports.--Not later than 60 days after the end
of each fiscal year from fiscal year 2013 through fiscal year
2017, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report describing the implementation of the plan
during the prior fiscal year. Each such report shall include a
direct comparison of the savings achieved under the plan to the
savings achieved in the same fiscal year through reductions in
military end strengths. In any case in which savings fall short
of the annual target, the report shall include an explanation
of the reasons for such shortfall.
(3) Exemptions.--Each report under paragraphs (1) and (2)
shall specifically identify any exemption granted by the
Secretary under subsection (b)(3) in the period of time covered
by the report.
(d) Limitation on Transfers of Functions.--The Secretary shall
ensure that the savings required by this section are not achieved
through unjustified transfers of functions between or among the
military, civilian, and service contractor workforces of the Department
of Defense.
(e) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that an amount
equal to 30 percent of the amount of the reductions in appropriated
funds attributable to reduced budgets for the civilian and service
contractor workforces of the Department by reason of the plan required
by subsection (a) should be made available for costs of assisting
military personnel separated from the Armed Forces in the transition
from military service.
(f) Service Contractor Workforce Defined.--In this section, the
term ``service contractor workforce'' means contractor employees
performing contract services, as defined in section 2330(c)(2) of title
10, United States Code, other than contract services that are funded
out of amounts available for overseas contingency operations.
SEC. 342. NATO SPECIAL OPERATIONS HEADQUARTERS.
(a) In General.--Chapter 138 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2350n. NATO Special Operations Headquarters
``(a) Authorization.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal year 2013 and for subsequent fiscal years for the Department
of Defense for operation and maintenance, up to $50,000,000 may be used
for a fiscal year for the purposes set forth in subsection (b) for
support of operations of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Special Operations Headquarters.
``(b) Purposes.--The Secretary of Defense may provide funds for the
NATO Special Operations Headquarters--
``(1) to improve coordination and cooperation between the
special operations forces of NATO member countries;
``(2) to facilitate joint operations by special operations
forces of NATO member countries;
``(3) to support command, control, and communications
capabilities peculiar to special operations forces of NATO
member countries;
``(4) to promote special operations forces intelligence and
informational requirements within the NATO structure; and
``(5) to promote interoperability through the development
of common equipment standards, tactics, techniques, and
procedures, and through execution of multinational education
and training programs.
``(c) Annual Report.--Not later than April 1 of each year, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report regarding Department of Defense support for the
NATO Special Operations Headquarters. Each report shall include the
following:
``(1) The total amount of funding provided to the NATO
Special Operations Headquarters.
``(2) A summary of the activities funded with such support.
``(3) Other contributions, financial or in kind, provided
in support of the NATO Special Operations Headquarters by other
NATO member countries.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such chapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to section
2350m the following new item:
``2350n. NATO Special Operations Headquarters.''.
SEC. 343. REPEAL OF REDUNDANT AUTHORITY TO ENSURE INTEROPERABILITY OF
LAW ENFORCEMENT AND EMERGENCY RESPONDER TRAINING.
Section 372 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``(a) In General.--''; and
(2) by striking subsection (b).
TITLE IV--MILITARY PERSONNEL AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Active Forces
SEC. 401. END STRENGTHS FOR ACTIVE FORCES.
The Armed Forces are authorized strengths for active duty personnel
as of September 30, 2013, as follows:
(1) The Army, 552,100.
(2) The Navy, 322,700.
(3) The Marine Corps, 197,300.
(4) The Air Force, 329,597.
Subtitle B--Reserve Forces
SEC. 411. END STRENGTHS FOR SELECTED RESERVE.
(a) In General.--The Armed Forces are authorized strengths for
Selected Reserve personnel of the reserve components as of September
30, 2013, as follows:
(1) The Army National Guard of the United States, 358,200.
(2) The Army Reserve, 205,000.
(3) The Navy Reserve, 62,500.
(4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 39,600.
(5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 106,435.
(6) The Air Force Reserve, 72,428.
(7) The Coast Guard Reserve, 9,000.
(b) End Strength Reductions.--The end strengths prescribed by
subsection (a) for the Selected Reserve of any reserve component shall
be proportionately reduced by--
(1) the total authorized strength of units organized to
serve as units of the Selected Reserve of such component which
are on active duty (other than for training) at the end of the
fiscal year; and
(2) the total number of individual members not in units
organized to serve as units of the Selected Reserve of such
component who are on active duty (other than for training or
for unsatisfactory participation in training) without their
consent at the end of the fiscal year.
(c) End Strength Increases.--Whenever units or individual members
of the Selected Reserve of any reserve component are released from
active duty during any fiscal year, the end strength prescribed for
such fiscal year for the Selected Reserve of such reserve component
shall be increased proportionately by the total authorized strengths of
such units and by the total number of such individual members.
SEC. 412. END STRENGTHS FOR RESERVES ON ACTIVE DUTY IN SUPPORT OF THE
RESERVES.
Within the end strengths prescribed in section 411(a), the reserve
components of the Armed Forces are authorized, as of September 30,
2013, the following number of Reserves to be serving on full-time
active duty or full-time duty, in the case of members of the National
Guard, for the purpose of organizing, administering, recruiting,
instructing, or training the reserve components:
(1) The Army National Guard of the United States, 32,060.
(2) The Army Reserve, 16,277.
(3) The Navy Reserve, 10,114.
(4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 2,261.
(5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 14,871.
(6) The Air Force Reserve, 2,888.
SEC. 413. END STRENGTHS FOR MILITARY TECHNICIANS (DUAL STATUS).
The minimum number of military technicians (dual status) as of the
last day of fiscal year 2013 for the reserve components of the Army and
the Air Force (notwithstanding section 129 of title 10, United States
Code) shall be the following:
(1) For the Army Reserve, 8,445.
(2) For the Army National Guard of the United States,
28,380.
(3) For the Air Force Reserve, 10,716.
(4) For the Air National Guard of the United States,
22,313.
SEC. 414. FISCAL YEAR 2013 LIMITATION ON NUMBER OF NON-DUAL STATUS
TECHNICIANS.
(a) Limitations.--
(1) National guard.--Within the limitation provided in
section 10217(c)(2) of title 10, United States Code, the number
of non-dual status technicians employed by the National Guard
as of September 30, 2013, may not exceed the following:
(A) For the Army National Guard of the United
States, 1,600.
(B) For the Air National Guard of the United
States, 350.
(2) Army reserve.--The number of non-dual status
technicians employed by the Army Reserve as of September 30,
2013, may not exceed 595.
(3) Air force reserve.--The number of non-dual status
technicians employed by the Air Force Reserve as of September
30, 2013, may not exceed 90.
(b) Non-dual Status Technicians Defined.--In this section, the term
``non-dual status technician'' has the meaning given that term in
section 10217(a) of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 415. MAXIMUM NUMBER OF RESERVE PERSONNEL AUTHORIZED TO BE ON
ACTIVE DUTY FOR OPERATIONAL SUPPORT.
During fiscal year 2013, the maximum number of members of the
reserve components of the Armed Forces who may be serving at any time
on full-time operational support duty under section 115(b) of title 10,
United States Code, is the following:
(1) The Army National Guard of the United States, 17,000.
(2) The Army Reserve, 13,000.
(3) The Navy Reserve, 6,200.
(4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 3,000.
(5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 16,000.
(6) The Air Force Reserve, 14,000.
Subtitle C--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 421. MILITARY PERSONNEL.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized
to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013 for the use of the Armed Forces
and other activities and agencies of the Department of Defense for
expenses, not otherwise provided for, for military personnel, as
specified in the funding table in section 4401.
(b) Construction of Authorization.--The authorization of
appropriations in subsection (a) supersedes any other authorization of
appropriations (definite or indefinite) for such purpose for fiscal
year 2013.
TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY
Subtitle A--Officer Policy
SEC. 501. EXTENSION OF RELAXATION OF LIMITATION ON SELECTIVE EARLY
DISCHARGES.
Section 638a(d)(2) of title 10 United States Code, is amended in
subparagraphs (A) and (B) by striking ``except that during the period
beginning on October 1, 2006, and ending on December 31, 2012,'' and
inserting ``except that through December 31, 2018,''.
SEC. 502. EXCEPTION TO 30-YEAR RETIREMENT FOR REGULAR NAVY WARRANT
OFFICERS IN THE GRADE OF CHIEF WARRANT OFFICER, W-5.
(a) Exception to Statutory 30-year Retirement.--Paragraph (1) of
section 1305(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``or a regular Navy warrant officer in the
grade of chief warrant officer, W-5, exempted under paragraph
(3)'' after ``Army warrant officer''; and
(2) by striking ``he'' and inserting ``the officer''.
(b) Modification of Statutory Retirement From 30 to 33 Years.--Such
section is further amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(3) In the case of a regular Navy warrant officer in the grade of
chief warrant officer, W-5, the officer shall be retired 60 days after
the date on which the officer completes 33 years of total active
service.''.
SEC. 503. MODIFICATION OF DEFINITION OF JOINT DUTY ASSIGNMENT TO
INCLUDE ALL INSTRUCTOR ASSIGNMENTS FOR JOINT TRAINING AND
EDUCATION.
Section 668(b)(1)(B) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``assignments for joint'' and all that follows through ``Phase
II'' and inserting ``student assignments for joint training and
education''.
SEC. 504. SENSE OF SENATE ON INCLUSION OF ASSIGNMENTS AS ACADEMIC
INSTRUCTOR AT THE MILITARY SERVICE ACADEMIES AS JOINT
DUTY ASSIGNMENTS.
It is the sense of the Senate that the Secretary of Defense should
include assignments in which military officers are assigned as
instructors responsible for preparing and presenting academic courses
on the faculty of the United States Military Academy, the United States
Naval Academy, or the United States Air Force Academy as joint duty
assignments.
Subtitle B--Reserve Component Management
SEC. 511. AUTHORITY FOR APPOINTMENT OF PERSONS WHO ARE LAWFUL PERMANENT
RESIDENTS AS OFFICERS OF THE NATIONAL GUARD.
Section 313(b)(1) of title 32, United States Code, is amended by
inserting ``or an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence (as
that term is defined in section 101(a)(20) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.1101(a)(20))'' before the semicolon.
SEC. 512. RESERVE COMPONENT SUICIDE PREVENTION AND RESILIENCE PROGRAM.
(a) Codification, Transfer of Responsibility, and Extension.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 1007 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 10219. Suicide prevention and resilience program
``(a) Program Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry
out a program to provide members of the National Guard and Reserves and
their families with training in suicide prevention, resilience, and
community healing and response to suicide.
``(b) Suicide Prevention Training.--Under the program, the
Secretary shall provide members of the National Guard and Reserves with
training in suicide prevention. Such training may include--
``(1) describing the warning signs for suicide and teaching
effective strategies for prevention and intervention;
``(2) examining the influence of military culture on risk
and protective factors for suicide; and
``(3) engaging in interactive case scenarios and role plays
to practice effective intervention strategies.
``(c) Community Response Training.--Under the program, the
Secretary shall provide the families and communities of members of the
National Guard and Reserves with training in responses to suicide that
promote individual and community healing. Such training may include--
``(1) enhancing collaboration among community members and
local service providers to create an integrated, coordinated
community response to suicide;
``(2) communicating best practices for preventing suicide,
including safe messaging, appropriate memorial services, and
media guidelines;
``(3) addressing the impact of suicide on the military and
the larger community, and the increased risk that can result;
and
``(4) managing resources to assist key community and
military service providers in helping the families, friends,
and fellow servicemembers of a suicide victim through the
processes of grieving and healing.
``(d) Community Training Assistance.--The program shall include the
provision of assistance with such training to the local communities of
those servicemembers and families, to be provided in coordination with
local community programs.
``(e) Collaboration.--In carrying out the program, the Secretary
shall collect and analyze `lessons learned' and suggestions from State
National Guard and Reserve organizations with existing or developing
suicide prevention and community response programs.
``(f) Termination.--The program under this section shall terminate
on October 1, 2015.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 1007 of such title is amended by adding at
the end the following new item:
``10219. Suicide prevention and resilience program.''.
(b) Repeal of Superseded Provision.--Subsection (i) of section 582
of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (10
U.S.C. 10101 note) is repealed.
Subtitle C--General Service Authorities
SEC. 521. DIVERSITY IN THE ARMED FORCES AND RELATED REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS.
(a) Plan To Achieve Diversity in the Armed Forces.--The Secretary
of Defense shall develop and implement a plan to accurately measure the
efforts of the Department of Defense to achieve the goal of having a
dynamic and sustainable 20-30 year pipeline that yields a diverse
officer and enlisted corps for the Armed Forces that reflects the
population of the United States eligible to serve in the Armed Forces
across all the Armed Forces, and all grades of each Armed Force, that
is able to prevail in its wars, prevent and deter conflicts, defeat
adversaries and succeed in a wide-range of contingencies, and preserve
and enhance the all volunteer force. Any metric established pursuant to
this subsection may not be used in a manner that undermines the merit-
based processes of the Department of Defense, including such processes
for accession, retention, and promotion. Such metrics may not be
combined with the identification of specific quotas based upon
diversity characteristics. The Secretary shall continue to account for
diversified language and cultural skills among the total force of the
military.
(b) Metrics To Measure Progress in Developing and Implementing
Plan.--In developing and implementing the plan under subsection (a),
the Secretary of Defense shall develop a standard set of metrics and
collection procedures that are uniform across the armed forces. The
metrics required by this subsection shall be designed--
(1) to accurately capture the inclusion and capability
aspects of the armed forces broader diversity plans, including
race, ethnic, and gender specific groups, functional expertise,
and diversified cultural and language skills so as to leverage
and improve readiness; and
(2) to be verifiable and systematically linked to strategic
plans that will drive improvements.
(c) Definition of Diversity.--In developing and implementing the
plan under subsection (a), each Secretary of a military department
shall, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, develop a
definition of diversity that is reflective of the culture, mission, and
core values of each Armed Force under the jurisdiction of such
Secretary.
(d) Consultation.--Not less than annually, the Secretary of Defense
shall meet with the Secretaries of the military departments, the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, and senior enlisted members of the Armed Forces to
discuss the progress being made toward developing and implementing the
plan established under subsection (a).
(e) Reports on Implementation of Plan.--Not later than July 1,
2013, and biennially thereafter through July 1, 2017, the Secretary of
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on the following:
(1) The progress made in implementing the plan required by
subsection (a) to accurately measure the efforts of the
Department of Defense to achieve its diversity goals.
(2) The number of members of the Armed Forces, including
reserve components, listed by sex and race or ethnicity for
each grade under each military department.
(3) The number of members of the Armed Forces, including
reserve components, who were promoted during the years covered
by the report, listed by sex and race or ethnicity for each
grade under each military department.
(4) The number of members of the Armed Forces, including
reserve components, who reenlisted or otherwise extended the
commitment to military service during the years covered by the
report, listed by sex and race or ethnicity for each grade
under each military department.
(5) The available pool of qualified candidates for the
general officer grades of general and lieutenant general and
the flag officer grades of admiral and vice admiral.
SEC. 522. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CONDUCT PROGRAMS ON CAREER
FLEXIBILITY TO ENHANCE RETENTION OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED
FORCES.
(a) Extension of Programs to Certain Active Guard and Reserve
Personnel.--Section 533 of Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (10 U.S.C. prec. 701 note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)(1), by inserting ``and members on
active Guard and Reserve duty'' after ``officers and enlisted
members of the regular components'';
(2) by redesignating subsection (l) as subsection (m); and
(3) by inserting after subsection (k) the following new
subsection (l)
``(l) Definition.--In this section, the term `active Guard and
Reserve duty' has the meaning given that term in section 101(d)(6) of
title 10, United States Code.''.
(b) Authority To Carry Forward Unused Accrued Leave.--Subsection
(h) of such section is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(5) Leave.--A member who participates in a pilot program
is entitled to carry forward the existing leave balance
accumulated in accordance with section 701 of title 10, United
States Code, but not to exceed 60 days.''.
(c) Authority for Disability Processing.--Subsection (j) of such
section is amended--
(1) by striking ``for purposes of the entitlement'' and
inserting ``for purposes of--
``(1) the entitlement'';
(2) by striking the period at the end and inserting ``;
and''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) retirement or separation for physical disability
under the provisions of chapters 55 and 61 of title 10, United
States Code.''.
SEC. 523. AUTHORITY FOR ADDITIONAL BEHAVIORAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS TO
CONDUCT PRE-SEPARATION MEDICAL EXAMINATIONS FOR POST-
TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER.
Section 1177(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``or psychiatrist'' and
inserting ``psychiatrist, licensed clinical social worker, or
psychiatric nurse practitioner''; and
(2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``or psychiatrist'' and
inserting ``, psychiatrist, licensed clinical social worker, or
psychiatric nurse practitioner''.
SEC. 524. QUARTERLY REPORTS ON INVOLUNTARY SEPARATION OF MEMBERS OF THE
ARMED FORCES.
(a) Quarterly Reports Required.--Not later than 30 days after the
end of each calendar year quarter in 2013 and 2014, each Secretary of a
military department shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of
the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the number of
members of the regular components of the Armed Forces under the
jurisdiction of such Secretary who were involuntarily separated from
active duty in the Armed Forces during such calendar year quarter.
(b) Elements.--Each report on an Armed Force for a calendar year
quarter under subsection (a) shall set forth the following:
(1) The total number members involuntarily separated.
(2) The number of members separated set forth by grade.
(3) The number of members separated set forth by total
years of service in the Armed Forces at the time of separation.
(4) The number of members separated set forth by military
occupational specialty or rating, or competitive category for
officers.
(5) The number of members separated who received
involuntary separation pay, or who are authorized to receive
temporary retired pay, in connection with separation.
(6) The number of members who completed transition
assistance programs relating to future employment.
(7) The average number of months deployed to overseas
contingency operations set forth by grade.
SEC. 525. REVIEW OF ELIGIBILITY OF VICTIMS OF DOMESTIC TERRORISM FOR
AWARD OF THE PURPLE HEART AND THE DEFENSE MEDAL OF
FREEDOM.
(a) Report.--Not later than March 1, 2013, the Secretary of Defense
shall, in coordination with the Secretaries of the military
departments, submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate
and the House of Representatives a report on--
(1) the advisability of modifying the criteria for the
award of the Purple Heart to provide for the award of the
Purple Heart to members of the Armed Forces who are killed or
wounded in a terrorist attack within the United States that is
determined to be inspired by ideological, political, or
religious beliefs that give rise to terrorism; and
(2) the advisability of modifying the criteria for the
award of the Defense Medal of Freedom to provide for the award
of the Defense Medal of Freedom to civilian employees of the
United States who are killed or wounded in a terrorist attack
within the United States that is determined to be inspired by
ideological, political, or religious beliefs that give rise to
terrorism.
(b) Determination.--As part of the review undertaken to prepare the
report required by subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall
conduct a review of each death or wounding of a member of the Armed
Forces or civilian employee of the United States Government that
occurred within the United States since September 11, 2001, that could
meet the criteria as being the result of a terrorist attack within the
United States in order to determine whether such death or wounding
qualifies or potentially would qualify for the award of the Purple
Heart or the Defense Medal of Freedom.
(c) Considerations.--In conducting the review to prepare the report
required by subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall take into
consideration the following:
(1) The views of veterans service organizations, including
the Military Order of the Purple Heart.
(2) The importance that has been assigned to determining
all available facts before a decision is made to award the
Purple Heart.
(3) Potential effects of an award on the ability to
prosecute perpetrators of terrorist acts in military or
civilian courts.
(4) The views of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Subtitle D--Military Justice and Legal Matters Generally
SEC. 531. CLARIFICATION AND ENHANCEMENT OF THE ROLE OF THE STAFF JUDGE
ADVOCATE TO THE COMMANDANT OF THE MARINE CORPS.
(a) Appointment by the President and Permanent Appointment to Grade
of Major General.--Subsection (a) of section 5046 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in the first sentence, by striking ``detailed'' and
inserting ``appointed by the President, by and with the advice
and consent of the Senate,''; and
(2) in the second sentence--
(A) by striking ``The'' and inserting ``If an
officer appointed as the''; and
(B) by striking ``, while so serving, has the
grade'' and inserting ``holds a lower grade, the
officer shall be appointed in the grade''.
(b) Duties, Authority, and Accountability.--Such section is further
amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsection (c):
``(c) The Staff Judge Advocate to the Commandant of the Marine
Corps, under the direction of the Commandant of the Marine Corps and
the Secretary of the Navy, shall--
``(1) perform duties relating to legal matters arising in
the Marine Corps as may be assigned to the Staff Judge
Advocate;
``(2) perform the functions and duties and exercise the
powers prescribed for the Staff Judge Advocate to the
Commandant of the Marine Corps in chapter 47 of this title (the
Uniform Code of Military Justice) and chapter 53 of this title;
and
``(3) perform such other duties as may be assigned to the
Staff Judge Advocate.''.
(c) Composition of Headquarters, Marine Corps.--Section 5041(b) of
such title is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (4) and (5) as paragraphs
(5) and (6), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following new
paragraph (4):
``(4) The Staff Judge Advocate to the Commandant of the
Marine Corps.''.
(d) Supervision of Certain Legal Services.--
(1) Administration of military justice.--Section 806(a) of
such title (article 6(a) of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice) is amended in the third sentence by striking ``The
Judge Advocate General'' and all that follows through ``shall''
and inserting ``The Judge Advocates General, and within the
Marine Corps the Staff Judge Advocate to the Commandant of the
Marine Corps, or senior members of their staffs, shall''.
(2) Delivery of legal assistance.--Section 1044(b) of such
title is amended by inserting ``and within the Marine Corps the
Staff Judge Advocate to the Commandant of the Marine Corps''
after ``title)''.
SEC. 532. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION IN REPORTS ON ANNUAL SURVEYS OF THE
COMMITTEE ON THE UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE.
Subsection (c)(2) of section 946 of title 10, United States Code
(article 146 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended--
(1) by redesignating subparagraph (B) as subparagraph (C);
and
(2) by inserting after subparagraph (A) the following new
subparagraph (B):
``(B) Information from the Judge Advocates General and the
Staff Judge Advocate to the Commandant of the Marine Corps on
the following:
``(i) The appellate review process, including--
``(I) information on compliance with
processing time goals;
``(II) discussions of the circumstances
surrounding cases in which general court-
martial or special court-martial convictions
are reversed as a result of command influence
or denial of the right to a speedy review or
otherwise remitted due to loss of records of
trial or other administrative deficiencies; and
``(III) discussions of cases in which a
provision of this chapter is held
unconstitutional.
``(ii) Developments in appellate case law relating
to courts-martial involving allegations of sexual
misconduct under this chapter.
``(iii) Issues associated with implementing recent,
legislatively directed changes to this chapter or the
Manual for Courts-Martial.
``(iv) Measures implemented by each armed force to
ensure the ability of judge advocates to competently
participate as trial and defense counsel in, and
preside as military judges over, capital cases,
national security cases, sexual assault cases, and
proceedings of military commissions.
``(v) The independent views of the Judge Advocates
General and the Staff Judge Advocate to the Commandant
of the Marine Corps on the sufficiency of resources
available within their respective armed forces,
including manpower, funding, training, and officer and
enlisted grade structure, to capably perform military
justice functions.''.
Subtitle E--Sexual Assault, Hazing, and Related Matters
SEC. 541. AUTHORITY TO RETAIN OR RECALL TO ACTIVE DUTY RESERVE
COMPONENT MEMBERS WHO ARE VICTIMS OF SEXUAL ASSAULT WHILE
ON ACTIVE DUTY.
(a) In General.--Chapter 1209 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 12323. Active duty for response to sexual assault
``(a) Continuation on Active Duty.--In the case of a member of a
reserve component who is the alleged victim of sexual assault committed
while on active duty and who is expected to be released from active
duty before the determination of whether the member was assaulted while
in the line of duty, the Secretary concerned may, upon the request of
the member, order the member to be retained on active duty until the
line of duty determination. A member eligible for continuation on
active duty under this subsection shall be informed as soon as
practicable after the alleged assault of the option to request
continuation on active duty under this subsection.
``(b) Return to Active Duty.--In the case of a member of a reserve
component not on active duty who is the alleged victim of a sexual
assault that occurred while the member was on active duty and when the
determination whether the member was in the line of duty is not
completed, the Secretary concerned may, upon the request of the member,
order the member to active duty for such time as necessary to complete
the line of duty determination.
``(c) Regulations.--The Secretaries of the military departments
shall prescribe regulations to carry out this section, subject to
guidelines prescribed by the Secretary of Defense. The guidelines of
the Secretary of Defense shall provide that--
``(1) a request submitted by a member described in
subsection (a) or (b) to continue on active duty, or to be
ordered to active duty, respectively, must be decided within 30
days from the date of the request; and
``(2) if the request is denied, the member may appeal to
the first general officer or flag officer in the chain of
command of the member, and in the case of such an appeal a
decision on the appeal must be made within 15 days from the
date of the appeal.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 1209 of such title is amended adding at the end the following
new item:
``12323. Active duty for response to sexual assault.''.
SEC. 542. ADDITIONAL ELEMENTS IN COMPREHENSIVE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
POLICY ON SEXUAL ASSAULT PREVENTION AND RESPONSE.
(a) Additional Elements.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall modify the
revised comprehensive policy for the Department of Defense sexual
assault prevention and response program required by section 1602 of the
Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011
(Public Law 111-383; 124 Stat. 4430; 10 U.S.C. 1561 note) to include in
the policy the following:
(1) A requirement to establish within each military
department, under regulations prescribed by the Secretary of
Defense, an enhanced capability for the investigation,
prosecution, and defense of special victim offenses under
chapter 47 of title 10, United States Code (the Uniform Code of
Military Justice).
(2) A requirement that each military department initiate
and retain for a period prescribed by the Secretary of Defense
a record on the disposition of allegations of sexual assault
using forms and procedures prescribed by the Secretary.
(3) A requirement that all commanders and commanding
officers receive training on sexual assault prevention,
response, and policies before, or shortly after, assuming
command.
(4) A requirement that all new members of the Armed Forces
(whether in the regular or reserve components) receive training
on the Department of Defense policy on sexual assault
prevention and response program during initial entry training.
(5) A requirement for military commands and units specified
by the Secretary of Defense for purposes of the policy to
conduct periodic climate assessments of such commands and units
for purposes of preventing and responding to sexual assaults.
(6) A requirement to post and widely disseminate
information about resources available to report and respond to
sexual assaults, including hotline phone numbers and Internet
websites available to all members of the Armed Forces.
(7) A requirement to assign responsibility to receive and
investigate complaints against members of the Armed Forces and
civilian personnel of the Department of Defense for the
violation or failure to provide the rights of a crime victim
established by section 3771 of title 18, United States Code, as
applicable to such members and personnel in accordance with
Department of Defense Directive 1030.1, or a successor
directive, and Department of Defense Instruction 1030.2, or a
successor instruction.
(b) Special Victim Offenses Defined.--In this section, the term
``special victim offenses'' means offenses involving allegations of any
of the following:
(1) Child abuse.
(2) Rape, sexual assault, or forcible sodomy.
(3) Domestic violence involving aggravated assault.
SEC. 543. HAZING IN THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, each Secretary of a military department shall,
in consultation with the Chief of Staff of each Armed Force under the
jurisdiction of such Secretary, submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on
hazing in such Armed Force.
(b) Elements.--Each report on an Armed Force required by subsection
(a) shall include the following:
(1) A discussion of the policies of the Armed Force for
preventing and responding to incidents of hazing.
(2) A description of the methods implemented to track and
report, including report anonymously, incidents of hazing in
the Armed Force.
(3) An assessment by the Secretary submitting such report
of the following:
(A) The scope of the problem of hazing in the Armed
Force.
(B) The training on recognizing and preventing
hazing provided members of the Armed Force.
(C) The actions taken to prevent and respond to
hazing incidents in the Armed Force.
(4) A description of the additional actions, if any, the
Secretary submitting such report and the Chief of Staff of the
Armed Force propose to take to further address the incidence of
hazing in the Armed Force.
Subtitle F--Education and Training
SEC. 551. INCLUSION OF THE SCHOOL OF ADVANCED MILITARY STUDIES SENIOR
LEVEL COURSE AS A SENIOR LEVEL SERVICE SCHOOL.
Section 2151(b)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(E) The Senior Level Course of the School of
Advanced Military Studies of the United States Army
Command and General Staff College.''.
SEC. 552. MODIFICATION OF ELIGIBILITY FOR ASSOCIATE DEGREE PROGRAMS
UNDER THE COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF THE AIR FORCE.
Section 9315(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) Enlisted members of the armed forces other than the
Air Force who are participating in joint-service medical
training and education or serving as instructors in joint-
service medical training and education.''.
SEC. 553. SUPPORT OF NAVAL ACADEMY ATHLETIC PROGRAMS.
(a) In General.--Chapter 603 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 6981. Support of athletic and physical fitness programs
``(a) Authority.--
``(1) Contracts and cooperative agreements.--The Secretary
of the Navy may enter into contracts and cooperative agreements
with the Association for the purpose of supporting the athletic
and physical fitness programs of the Naval Academy.
Notwithstanding section 2304(k) of this title, the Secretary
may enter such contracts or cooperative agreements on a sole
source basis pursuant to section 2304(c)(5) of this title.
Notwithstanding chapter 63 of title 31, a cooperative agreement
under this section may be used to acquire property or services
for the direct benefit or use of the Naval Academy.
``(2) Leases.--The Secretary may enter into leases, in
accordance with section 2667 of this title, or licenses with
the Association for the purpose of supporting the athletic and
physical fitness programs of the Naval Academy. Any such lease
or license shall be deemed to satisfy the conditions of section
2667(h)(2) of this title.
``(b) Use of Navy Personal Property by the Association.--The
Secretary may allow the Association to use, at no cost, personal
property of the Department of the Navy to assist the Association in
supporting the athletic and physical fitness programs of the Naval
Academy.
``(c) Acceptance of Support.--
``(1) Support received from the association.--
Notwithstanding section 1342 of title 31, the Secretary may
accept from the Association funds, supplies, and services for
the support of the athletic and physical fitness programs of
the Naval Academy. For purposes of this section, employees or
personnel of the Association may not be considered to be
employees of the United States.
``(2) Funds received from ncaa.--The Secretary may accept
funds from the National Collegiate Athletic Association to
support the athletic and physical fitness programs of the Naval
Academy.
``(3) Limitation.--The Secretary shall ensure that
contributions under this subsection do not reflect unfavorably
on the ability of the Department of the Navy, any of its
employees, or any member of the armed forces to carry out any
responsibility or duty in a fair and objective manner, or
compromise the integrity or appearance of integrity of any
program of the Department of the Navy, or any individual
involved in such a program.
``(d) Retention and Use of Funds.--Notwithstanding section 2260(d)
of this title, funds received under this section may be retained for
use in support of the Naval Academy athletic program and shall remain
available until expended.
``(e) Trademarks and Service Marks.--
``(1) Licensing, marketing, and sponsorship agreements.--An
agreement under subsection (a)(1) may, consistent with sections
2260 (other than subsection (d)) and 5022(b)(3) of this title,
authorize the Association to enter into licensing, marketing,
and sponsorship agreements relating to trademarks and service
marks identifying the Naval Academy, subject to the approval of
the Department of the Navy.
``(2) Limitations.--No such licensing, marketing, or
sponsorship agreement may be entered into if it would reflect
unfavorably on the ability of the Department of the Navy, any
of its employees, or any member of the armed forces to carry
out any responsibility or duty in a fair and objective manner,
or if the Secretary determines that the use of the trademark or
service mark would compromise the integrity or appearance of
integrity of any program of the Department of the Navy, or any
individual involved in such a program.
``(f) Service on Association Board of Control.--The Association is
a designated entity for which authorization under sections 1033(a) and
1589(a) of this title may be provided.
``(g) Conditions.--The authority provided in this section with
respect to the Association is available only so long as the Association
continues to--
``(1) qualify as a nonprofit organization under section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and operates in
accordance with this section, the laws of the State of
Maryland, and the constitution and bylaws of the Association;
and
``(2) operate exclusively to support the athletic and
physical fitness programs of the Naval Academy.
``(h) Association Defined.--In this section, the term `Association'
means the Naval Academy Athletic Association.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 603 of such title is amended by adding at the end the following
new item:
``6981. Support of athletic and physical fitness programs.''.
SEC. 554. GRADE OF COMMISSIONED OFFICERS IN UNIFORMED MEDICAL ACCESSION
PROGRAMS.
(a) Medical Students of USUHS.--Section 2114(b) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking the second sentence and
inserting the following new sentences: ``Each medical student
shall be appointed as a regular officer in the grade of second
lieutenant or ensign. An officer so appointed may, upon meeting
such criteria for promotion as may be prescribed by the
Secretary concerned, be appointed in the regular grade of first
lieutenant or lieutenant (junior grade). Medical students
commissioned under this section shall serve on active duty in
their respective grades.''; and
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``grade of second
lieutenant or ensign'' and inserting ``grade in which the
member is serving under paragraph (1)''.
(b) Participants in Health Professions Scholarship and Financial
Assistance Program.--Section 2121(c) of such title is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking the second sentence and
inserting the following new sentences: ``Each person so
commissioned shall be appointed as a reserve officer in the
grade of second lieutenant or ensign. An officer so appointed
may, upon meeting such criteria for promotion as may be
prescribed by the Secretary concerned, be appointed in the
reserve grade of first lieutenant or lieutenant (junior grade).
Medical students commissioned under this section shall serve on
active duty in their respective grades for a period of 45 days
during each year of participation in the program.''; and
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``grade of second
lieutenant or ensign'' and inserting ``grade in which the
member is serving under paragraph (1)''.
(c) Officers Detailed as Students at Medical Schools.--Subsection
(e) of section 2004a of such title is amended--
(1) in the subsection heading, by striking ``Appointment
and Treatment of Prior Active Service'' and inserting ``Service
on Active Duty''; and
(2) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following
new paragraph (1):
``(1) A commissioned officer detailed under subsection (a) shall
serve on active duty, subject to the limitations on grade specified in
section 2114(b)(1) of this title and with the entitlement to basic pay
as specified in section 2114(b)(2) of this title.''.
SEC. 555. AUTHORITY FOR SERVICE COMMITMENT FOR RESERVISTS WHO ACCEPT
FELLOWSHIPS, SCHOLARSHIPS, OR GRANTS TO BE PERFORMED IN
THE SELECTED RESERVE.
(a) In General.--Subsection (b) of section 2603 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by striking ``on active duty'' and all that
follows and inserting the following: ``as follows:
``(1) On active duty for a period at least three times the
length of the period of the education or training.
``(2) In the case of a member of the Selected Reserve--
``(A) on active duty in accordance with paragraph
(1); or
``(B) in the Selected Reserve for a period at least
five times the length of the period of the education or
training.''.
(b) Technical Amendments.--Such section is further amended by
striking ``Armed Forces'' each place it appears and inserting ``armed
forces''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall
apply to agreements entered into under section 2603(b) of title 10,
United States Code, after the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 556. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT FOR ELIGIBILITY FOR IN-STATE TUITION OF
AT LEAST 50 PERCENT OF PARTICIPANTS IN SENIOR RESERVE
OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS PROGRAM.
Section 2107(c)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking the third sentence.
SEC. 557. MODIFICATION OF REQUIREMENTS ON PLAN TO INCREASE THE NUMBER
OF UNITS OF THE JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS.
(a) Number of Units Covered by Plan.--Subsection (a) of section 548
of the Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2009 (Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4466) is amended by striking ``not
less than 3,700 units'' and inserting ``not less than 3,000, and not
more than 3,700, units''.
(b) Additional Exception.--Subsection (b) of such section is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``or'' at the end;
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking the period at the end and
inserting ``; or''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) if the Secretaries of the military departments
determine that the level of support of all kinds (including,
but not limited to, appropriated funds) provided to youth
development programs within the Armed Forces is consistent with
funding limitations and the achievement of the objectives of
such programs.''.
(c) Submittal of Reports.--Subsection (e) of such section is
amended by striking ``not later than'' and all that follows and
inserting ``annually through 2012, and thereafter not later than March
31 of each of 2015, 2018, and 2020.''.
SEC. 558. CONSOLIDATION OF MILITARY DEPARTMENT AUTHORITY TO ISSUE ARMS,
TENTAGE, AND EQUIPMENT TO EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS NOT
MAINTAINING UNITS OF THE JUNIOR ROTC.
(a) Consolidation of Authority.--Chapter 152 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2552 the following
new section:
``Sec. 2552a. Arms, tentage, and equipment: educational institutions
not maintaining units of Junior Reserve Officers'
Training Corps
``The Secretary of a military department may issue arms, tentage,
and equipment to an educational institution at which no unit of the
Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps is maintained if the
educational institution--
``(1) offers a course in military instruction prescribed by
that Secretary; and
``(2) has a student body of at least 50 students who are in
a grade above the eighth grade.''.
(b) Conforming Repeals.--Sections 4651, 7911, and 9651 of such
title are repealed.
(c) Clerical Amendments.--
(1) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 152
of such title is amended by inserting after the item relating
to section 2552 the following new item:
``2552a. Arms, tentage, and equipment: educational institutions not
maintaining units of Junior Reserve
Officers' Training Corps''.
(2) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 441
of such title is amended by striking the item relating to
section 4651.
(3) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 667
of such title is amended by striking the item relating to
section 7911.
(4) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 941
of such title is amended by striking the item relating to
section 9651.
SEC. 559. MODIFICATION OF REQUIREMENT FOR REPORTS IN FEDERAL REGISTER
ON INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATION INELIGIBLE FOR
CONTRACTS AND GRANTS FOR DENIAL OF ROTC OR MILITARY
RECRUITER ACCESS TO CAMPUS.
Section 983 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking
subsection (f).
SEC. 560. COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES REPORT ON THE
RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General of the United States
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report setting
forth the assessment of the Comptroller General regarding the
following:
(1) Whether the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC)
programs of the Departments of the Army, the Navy, and the Air
Force are effectively meeting, and structured to meet, current
and projected requirements for newly commissioned officers in
the Armed Forces.
(2) The cost-effectiveness and unit productivity of the
current Reserve Officers' Training Corps programs.
(3) The adequacy of current oversight and criteria for unit
closure for the Reserve Officers' Training Corps programs.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include,
at a minimum, the following:
(1) A list of the units of the Reserve Officers' Training
Corps programs by Armed Force, and by college or university,
and the number of cadets and midshipman currently enrolled by
class or year group.
(2) The number of officers commissioned in 2012 from the
Reserve Officers' Training Corps programs, and the number
projected to be commissioned over the period of the current
future-years defense program under section 221 of title 10,
United States Code, from each unit listed under paragraph (1)
(3) An assessment of the requirements of each Armed Force
for newly commissioned officers in 2012 and the strategic
planning regarding such requirements over the period of the
current future-years defense program.
(4) The number of military and civilian personnel of the
Department of Defense assigned to lead and manage Reserve
Officers' Training Corps program units, and the grades of the
military personnel so assigned.
(5) An assessment of Department of Defense-wide and Armed-
Force specific standards regarding the productivity of Reserve
Officers' Training Corps program units, and an assessment of
compliance with such standards.
(6) An assessment of the projected use by the Armed Forces
of the procedures available to the Armed Forces to respond to
overages in the number of cadets and midshipmen in the Reserve
Officers' Training Corps programs.
(7) A description of the plans of the Armed Forces to
retain or disestablish Reserve Officers' Training Corps program
units that do not meet productivity standards.
Subtitle G--Defense Dependents' Education and Military Family Readiness
Matters
SEC. 571. IMPACT AID FOR CHILDREN WITH SEVERE DISABILITIES.
Of the amount authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
pursuant to section 301 and available for operation and maintenance for
Defense-wide activities as specified in the funding table in section
4301, $5,000,000 shall be available for payments under section 363 of
the Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2001 (as enacted into law by Public Law 106-398; 114 Stat. 1654A-77; 20
U.S.C. 7703a).
SEC. 572. CONTINUATION OF AUTHORITY TO ASSIST LOCAL EDUCATIONAL
AGENCIES THAT BENEFIT DEPENDENTS OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED
FORCES AND DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES.
(a) Assistance to Schools With Significant Numbers of Military
Dependent Students.--Of the amount authorized to be appropriated for
fiscal year 2013 by section 301 and available for operation and
maintenance for Defense-wide activities as specified in the funding
table in section 4301, $25,000,000 shall be available only for the
purpose of providing assistance to local educational agencies under
subsection (a) of section 572 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2006 (Public Law 109-163; 20 U.S.C. 7703b).
(b) Local Educational Agency Defined.--In this section, the term
``local educational agency'' has the meaning given that term in section
8013(9) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20
U.S.C. 7713(9)).
SEC. 573. AMENDMENTS TO THE IMPACT AID PROGRAM.
(a) Short Title.--This section may be cited as the ``Impact Aid
Improvement Act of 2012''.
(b) Amendments to the Impact Aid Program.--Title VIII of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.)
is amended--
(1) in section 8002 (20 U.S.C. 7702)--
(A) in subsection (b)--
(i) in paragraph (2), by striking
``aggregate assessed'' and inserting
``estimated taxable''; and
(ii) by striking paragraph (3) and
inserting the following:
``(3) Determination of taxable value for eligible federal
property.--
``(A) In general.--In determining the estimated
taxable value of such acquired Federal property for
fiscal year 2010 and each succeeding fiscal year, the
Secretary shall--
``(i) first determine the total taxable
value for the purpose of levying property tax
for school purposes for current expenditures of
real property located within the boundaries of
such local educational agency;
``(ii) then determine the total taxable
value of the eligible Federal property by
dividing the total taxable value as determined
in clause (i) by the difference between the
total acres located within the boundaries of
the local educational agency and the number of
Federal acres eligible under this section; and
``(iii) multiply the per acre value as
calculated under clause (ii) by the number of
Federal acres eligible under this section.
``(B) Special rule.--In the case of Federal
property eligible under this section that is within the
boundaries of 2 or more local educational agencies,
such a local educational agency may ask the Secretary
to calculate the per acre value of each such local
educational agency as provided under subparagraph (A)
and apply the average of these per acre values to the
acres of the Federal property in such agency.'';
(B) in subsection (h)--
(i) in paragraph (1)--
(I) in the paragraph heading, by
striking ``FOR pre-1995 recipients'';
(II) in subparagraph (A), by
striking ``is eligible'' and all that
follows through the period at the end
and inserting ``was eligible to receive
a payment under this section for fiscal
year 2010.''; and
(III) in subparagraph (B), by
striking ``38 percent'' and all that
follows through the period at the end
and inserting ``90 percent of the
average payment the local educational
agency received in 2006, 2007, 2008,
and 2009.''; and
(ii) by striking paragraphs (2) through (4)
and inserting the following:
``(2) Foundation payments for local educational agencies
determined eligible after fiscal year 2010.--
``(A) First year.--From any amounts remaining after
making payments under paragraph (1) and subsection
(i)(1) for the fiscal year involved, the Secretary
shall make a payment, in an amount determined in
accordance with subparagraph (C), to each local
educational agency that the Secretary determines
eligible for a payment under this section for a fiscal
year after fiscal year 2010, for the fiscal year for
which such agency was determined eligible for such
payment.
``(B) Second and succeeding years.--For any
succeeding fiscal year after the first fiscal year that
a local educational agency receives a foundation
payment under subparagraph (A), the amount of the local
educational agency's foundation payment under this
paragraph for such succeeding fiscal year shall be
equal to the local educational agency's foundation
payment under this paragraph for the first fiscal year.
``(C) Amounts.--The amount of a payment under
subparagraph (A) for a local educational agency shall
be determined as follows:
``(i) Calculate the local educational
agency's maximum payment under subsection (b).
``(ii) Calculate the percentage that the
amount appropriated under section 8014(a) for
the most recent fiscal year for which the
Secretary has completed making payments under
this section is of the total maximum payments
for such fiscal year for all local educational
agencies eligible for a payment under
subsection (b) and multiply the agency's
maximum payment by such percentage.
``(iii) Multiply the amount determined
under clause (ii) by 90 percent.
``(3) Remaining funds.--From any funds remaining after
making payments under paragraphs (1) and (2) for the fiscal
year involved, the Secretary shall make a payment to each local
educational agency that received a foundation payment under
paragraph (1) or (2) or subsection (i)(1), for the fiscal year
involved in an amount that bears the same relation to the
remainder as a percentage share determined for the local
educational agency (by dividing the maximum amount that the
agency is eligible to receive under subsection (b) by the total
of the maximum amounts for all such agencies) bears to the
percentage share determined (in the same manner) for all local
educational agencies eligible to receive a payment under this
section for the fiscal year involved, except that, for the
purpose of calculating a local educational agency's maximum
amount under subsection (b), data from the most current fiscal
year shall be used.''; and
(C) in subsection (i)(1), by striking ``the
Secretary shall use the remainder described in
subsection (h)(3) for the fiscal year involved'' and
inserting ``the Secretary shall use amounts remaining
after making payments under subsection (h)(1) for the
fiscal year involved'';
(2) in section 8003(a)(4) (20 U.S.C. 7703(a)(4))--
(A) in the paragraph heading, by striking
``renovation or rebuilding'' and inserting
``renovation, rebuilding, or authorized for
demolition'';
(B) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``renovation
or rebuilding'' both places the term appears and
inserting ``renovation, rebuilding, or authorized for
demolition'';
(C) in subparagraph (B)--
(i) by striking ``renovation or
rebuilding'' each place the term appears and
inserting ``renovation, rebuilding, or
authorized for demolition''; and
(ii) in clause (i)(I), by striking ``3
fiscal years'' and inserting ``4 fiscal years
(which are not required to run
consecutively)''; and
(iii) in clause (ii)(I), by striking ``3
fiscal years'' and inserting ``4 fiscal years
(which are not required to run
consecutively)''; and
(D) by adding at the end the following:
``(C) Eligible housing.--Renovation, rebuilding, or
authorized for demolition shall be defined as projects
considered as recapitalization, modernization, or
restoration as defined by the Secretary of Defense or
the Secretary of the Interior (as the case may be) and
are projects that last more than 30 days, but do not
include `sustainment projects' such as painting,
carpeting, or minor repairs.''; and
(3) in section 8010 (20 U.S.C. 7710)--
(A) in subsection (c)--
(i) in paragraph (1), by striking
``paragraph (3) of this subsection'' both
places the term appears and inserting
``paragraph (2)''; and
(ii) in paragraph (2)(E), by striking
``under section 8003(b)'' and all that follows
through the period at the end and inserting
``under this title.''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following:
``(d) Timely Payments.--
``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), the Secretary
shall pay a local educational agency the full amount that the
agency is eligible to receive under this title for a fiscal
year not later than September 30 of the second fiscal year
following the fiscal year for which such amount has been
appropriated if, not later than 1 calendar year following the
fiscal year in which such amount has been appropriated, such
local educational agency submits to the Secretary all the data
and information necessary for the Secretary to pay the full
amount that the agency is eligible to receive under this title
for such fiscal year.
``(2) Payments with respect of fiscal years in which
insufficient funds are appropriated.--For a fiscal year in
which the amount appropriated under section 8014 is
insufficient to pay the full amount a local educational agency
is eligible to receive under this title, paragraph (1) shall be
applied by substituting `is available to pay the agency' for
`the agency is eligible to receive' both places the term
appears.''.
(c) Effective Date.--Notwithstanding section 8005(d) of the
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7705(d)),
subsection (b)(1), and the amendments made by subsection (b)(1), shall
take effect with respect to applications submitted under section 8002
of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7702)
for fiscal year 2010.
SEC. 574. MILITARY SPOUSES.
(a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 33 of title 5, United
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 3330d. Appointment of certain military spouses
``(a) Definitions.--In this section--
``(1) the term `active duty'--
``(A) has the meaning given that term in section
101(d)(1) of title 10;
``(B) includes full-time National Guard duty (as
defined in section 101(d)(5) of title 10); and
``(C) for a member of a reserve component (as
described in section 10101 of title 10), does not
include training duties or attendance at a service
school;
``(2) the term `agency'--
``(A) has the meaning given the term `Executive
agency' in section 105; and
``(B) does not include the Government
Accountability Office;
``(3) the term `geographic area of the permanent duty
station' means the area from which individuals reasonably can
be expected to travel daily to and from work at the location of
a member's permanent duty station;
``(4) the term `permanent change of station' means the
assignment, detail, or transfer of a member of the Armed Forces
who is on active duty and serving at a permanent duty station
under a competent authorization or order that does not--
``(A) specify the duty as temporary;
``(B) provide for assignment, detail, or transfer,
after that different permanent duty station, to a
further different permanent duty station; or
``(C) direct return to the initial permanent duty
station;
``(5) the term `relocating spouse of a member of the Armed
Forces' means an individual who--
``(A) is married to a member of the Armed Forces
(without regard to whether the individual married the
member before a permanent change of station of the
member) who is ordered to active duty for a period of
more than 180 consecutive days;
``(B) relocates to the member's permanent duty
station; and
``(C) before relocating as described in
subparagraph (B), resided outside the geographic area
of the permanent duty station; and
``(6) the term `spouse of a disabled or deceased member of
the Armed Forces' means an individual--
``(A) who is married to a member of the Armed
Forces who--
``(i) is retired, released, or discharged
from the Armed Forces; and
``(ii) on the date on which the member
retires, is released, or is discharged, has a
disability rating of 100 percent under the
standard schedule of rating disabilities in use
by the Department of Veterans Affairs; or
``(B) who--
``(i) was married to a member of the Armed
Forces on the date on which the member dies
while on active duty in the Armed Forces; and
``(ii) has not remarried.
``(b) Authority.--The head of an agency may appoint
noncompetitively a relocating spouse of a member of the Armed Forces or
a spouse of a disabled or deceased member of the Armed Forces.
``(c) Relocating Spouses.--
``(1) In general.--An appointment of a relocating spouse of
a member of the Armed Forces under this section may only be to
a position the duty station for which is within the geographic
area of the permanent duty station of the member of the Armed
Forces, unless there is no agency with a position with a duty
station within the geographic area of the permanent duty
station of the member of the Armed Forces.
``(2) Single appointment per duty station.--A relocating
spouse of a member of the Armed Forces may not receive more
than 1 appointment under this section for each time the spouse
relocates as described in subparagraphs (B) and (C) of
subsection (a)(5).''.
(b) Regulations.--Not later than 180 after the date of enactment of
this Act, the Director of the Office of Personnel Management shall
amend section 315.612 of title 5, Code of Federal Regulations (relating
to noncompetitive appointment of certain military spouses) in
accordance with the amendment made by subsection (a) and promulgate or
amend any other regulations necessary to carry out the amendment made
by subsection (a).
(c) Technical and Conforming Amendment.--The table of sections for
chapter 33 of title 5, United States Code, is amended by inserting
after the item relating to section 3330c the following:
``3330d. Appointment of certain military spouses.''.
SEC. 575. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO ALLOW DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
DOMESTIC DEPENDENT ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOLS TO
ENROLL CERTAIN STUDENTS.
Section 2164 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding
at the end the following new subsections:
``(k) Tuition-free Enrollment in Domestic Dependent Schools for
Certain Overseas Dependents.--Tuition-free enrollment in the domestic
dependent elementary and secondary schools is authorized for dependents
who are currently enrolled in the defense dependents' education school
system pursuant to the Defense Dependents' Education Act of 1978 (20
U.S.C. 921 et seq.) if--
``(1) such dependents departed their overseas location due
to an authorized departure or evacuation order;
``(2) the designated safe haven of such dependents is
located within commuting distance of a school operated by the
domestic dependent elementary and secondary schools; and
``(3) the school concerned already possesses the capacity
and resources for such dependents to attend the school.
``(l) Tuition-paying Enrollment in Virtual Elementary and Secondary
Education Program for Certain Dependents Transitioning From Overseas.--
Under regulations prescribed by the Secretary, tuition-paying
enrollment in the virtual elementary and secondary education program of
the Department for dependents of members of the armed forces on active
duty is authorized when such dependents--
``(1) transition from an overseas defense dependents'
education system school into a school operated by a local
educational agency or another accredited educational program in
the United States, and
``(2) are not otherwise eligible to enroll in a domestic
dependent elementary or secondary school pursuant to subsection
(a).''.
SEC. 576. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING SUPPORT FOR YELLOW RIBBON DAY.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The hopes and prayers of the people of the United
States for the safe return of members of the Armed Forces of
the United States serving overseas are often demonstrated
through the proud display of yellow ribbons.
(2) The designation of a ``Yellow Ribbon Day'' would serve
as an additional reminder for all people of the United States
of the continued sacrifice of members of the Armed Forces.
(3) Yellow Ribbon Day would also recognize the history and
meaning of the yellow ribbon as the symbol of support for
members of the Armed Forces and other individuals of the United
States who are serving in combat or crisis situations overseas.
(b) Sense of Congress.--Congress supports the goals and ideals of
Yellow Ribbon Day in honor of members of the Armed Forces of the United
States who are serving overseas apart from their families and loved
ones.
Subtitle H--Other Matters
SEC. 581. FAMILY BRIEFINGS CONCERNING ACCOUNTINGS FOR MEMBERS OF THE
ARMED FORCES AND DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES
LISTED AS MISSING.
Section 1501(a)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(2) in subparagraph (C), by striking the period at the end
and inserting ``; and''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(D) coordination of periodic briefing of families of
missing persons about the efforts of the Department of Defense
to account for those persons.''.
SEC. 582. ENHANCEMENT OF AUTHORITY TO ACCEPT GIFTS AND SERVICES.
(a) Activities Benefitting Education as Services Subject to
Acceptance.--Section 2601(i)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by inserting ``education,'' before ``morale,''.
(b) Acceptance of Voluntary Services in Connection With Accounting
for Missing Persons.--Section 1588(a) of such title is amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(9) Voluntary services to facilitate accounting for
missing persons.''.
(c) Authority for Cooperative Agreements for Acceptance by Military
Museums and Education Programs of Nonprofit Support.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 155 of such title is amended by
adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2615. Military museums and military education programs:
cooperative agreements for receipt of support from
nonprofit entities
``The Secretary concerned may enter into a cooperative agreement
(as described in section 6305 of title 31) with a nonprofit entity for
purposes related to support of a military educational institution
program or military museum program if a cooperative agreement is the
appropriate mechanism to obtain such support under the provisions of
section 6305 of title 31.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 155 of such title is amended by adding at
the end the following new item:
``2615. Military museums and military education programs: cooperative
agreements for receipt of support from
nonprofit entities.''.
SEC. 583. CLARIFICATION OF AUTHORIZED FISHER HOUSE RESIDENTS AT THE
FISHER HOUSE FOR THE FAMILIES OF THE FALLEN AND
MEDITATION PAVILION AT DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, DELAWARE.
(a) Treatment of Fisher House for the Families of the Fallen and
Meditation Pavilion.--Subsection (a) of section 2493 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``by
patients'' and all that follows through ``such
patients;'' and inserting ``by authorized Fisher House
residents;''; and
(B) by adding after subparagraph (C) the following
new flush sentence:
``The term includes the Fisher House for the Families of the
Fallen and Meditation Pavilion at Dover Air Force Base,
Delaware, so long as such facility is available for residential
use on a temporary basis by authorized Fisher House
residents.''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) The term `authorized Fisher House residents' means
the following:
``(A) With respect to a facility described in the
first sentence of paragraph (1) that is located in
proximity to a health care facility of the Army, the
Air Force, or the Navy, the following persons:
``(i) Patients of that health care
facility.
``(ii) Members of the families of such
patients.
``(iii) Others providing the equivalent of
familial support for such patients.
``(B) With respect to the Fisher House for Families
of the Fallen and Meditation Pavilion at Dover Air
Force Base, Delaware, the following persons:
``(i) The primary next of kin of a member
of the armed forces who dies while located or
serving overseas.
``(ii) Other family members of the deceased
member who are eligible for transportation
under section 411f(e) of title 37.
``(iii) An escort of a family member
described in clause (i) or (ii).''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--Subsections (b), (e), (f), and (g) of
such section are amended by striking ``health care'' each place it
appears.
(c) Repeal of Superseded Authority.--Section 643 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125
Stat. 1466) is repealed.
SEC. 584. REPORT ON ACCURACY OF DATA IN THE DEFENSE ENROLLMENT
ELIGIBILITY REPORTING SYSTEM.
Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a plan to
improve the completeness and accuracy of the data contained in the
Defense Enrollment Eligibility Reporting System (DEERS) in order to
ensure that those issued military identification cards and receiving
benefits based on such data are actually eligible for such cards and
benefits.
TITLE VI--COMPENSATION AND OTHER PERSONNEL BENEFITS
Subtitle A--Pay and Allowances
SEC. 601. RATES OF BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING FOR ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
AND AIR NATIONAL GUARD MEMBERS ON FULL-TIME NATIONAL
GUARD DUTY.
Section 403(g) of title 37, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(6)(A) The rate of basic allowance for housing to be paid to a
member of the Army National Guard of the United States or the Air
National Guard of the United States on full-time National Guard duty
shall be based on the member's duty location.
``(B)(i) The rate of basic allowance for housing to be paid a
member described in subparagraph (A) may not be modified upon the
transition of the member from active duty to full-time National Guard
duty, or from full-time National Guard duty to active duty, when the
transition occurs without a break in active service.
``(ii) For purposes of this subparagraph, a break in active service
occurs when one or more calendar days between active service periods do
not qualify as active service.''.
Subtitle B--Bonuses and Special and Incentive Pays
SEC. 611. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF CERTAIN BONUS AND SPECIAL PAY
AUTHORITIES FOR RESERVE FORCES.
The following sections of title 37, United States Code, are amended
by striking ``December 31, 2012'' and inserting ``December 31, 2013'':
(1) Section 308b(g), relating to Selected Reserve
reenlistment bonus.
(2) Section 308c(i), relating to Selected Reserve
affiliation or enlistment bonus.
(3) Section 308d(c), relating to special pay for enlisted
members assigned to certain high-priority units.
(4) Section 308g(f)(2), relating to Ready Reserve
enlistment bonus for persons without prior service.
(5) Section 308h(e), relating to Ready Reserve enlistment
and reenlistment bonus for persons with prior service.
(6) Section 308i(f), relating to Selected Reserve
enlistment and reenlistment bonus for persons with prior
service.
(7) Section 910(g), relating to income replacement payments
for reserve component members experiencing extended and
frequent mobilization for active duty service.
SEC. 612. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF CERTAIN BONUS AND SPECIAL PAY
AUTHORITIES FOR HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS.
(a) Title 10 Authorities.--The following sections of title 10,
United States Code, are amended by striking ``December 31, 2012'' and
inserting ``December 31, 2013'':
(1) Section 2130a(a)(1), relating to nurse officer
candidate accession program.
(2) Section 16302(d), relating to repayment of education
loans for certain health professionals who serve in the
Selected Reserve.
(b) Title 37 Authorities.--The following sections of title 37,
United States Code, are amended by striking ``December 31, 2012'' and
inserting ``December 31, 2013'':
(1) Section 302c-1(f), relating to accession and retention
bonuses for psychologists.
(2) Section 302d(a)(1), relating to accession bonus for
registered nurses.
(3) Section 302e(a)(1), relating to incentive special pay
for nurse anesthetists.
(4) Section 302g(e), relating to special pay for Selected
Reserve health professionals in critically short wartime
specialties.
(5) Section 302h(a)(1), relating to accession bonus for
dental officers.
(6) Section 302j(a), relating to accession bonus for
pharmacy officers.
(7) Section 302k(f), relating to accession bonus for
medical officers in critically short wartime specialties.
(8) Section 302l(g), relating to accession bonus for dental
specialist officers in critically short wartime specialties.
SEC. 613. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF SPECIAL PAY AND BONUS AUTHORITIES FOR
NUCLEAR OFFICERS.
The following sections of title 37, United States Code, are amended
by striking ``December 31, 2012'' and inserting ``December 31, 2013'':
(1) Section 312(f), relating to special pay for nuclear-
qualified officers extending period of active service.
(2) Section 312b(c), relating to nuclear career accession
bonus.
(3) Section 312c(d), relating to nuclear career annual
incentive bonus.
SEC. 614. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF AUTHORITIES RELATING TO TITLE 37
CONSOLIDATED SPECIAL PAY, INCENTIVE PAY, AND BONUS
AUTHORITIES.
The following sections of title 37, United States Code, are amended
by striking ``December 31, 2012'' and inserting ``December 31, 2013'':
(1) Section 331(h), relating to general bonus authority for
enlisted members.
(2) Section 332(g), relating to general bonus authority for
officers.
(3) Section 333(i), relating to special bonus and incentive
pay authorities for nuclear officers.
(4) Section 334(i), relating to special aviation incentive
pay and bonus authorities for officers.
(5) Section 335(k), relating to special bonus and incentive
pay authorities for officers in health professions.
(6) Section 351(h), relating to hazardous duty pay.
(7) Section 352(g), relating to assignment pay or special
duty pay.
(8) Section 353(i), relating to skill incentive pay or
proficiency bonus.
(9) Section 355(h), relating to retention incentives for
members qualified in critical military skills or assigned to
high priority units.
SEC. 615. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF AUTHORITIES RELATING TO PAYMENT OF
OTHER TITLE 37 BONUSES AND SPECIAL PAYS.
The following sections of title 37, United States Code, are amended
by striking ``December 31, 2012'' and inserting ``December 31, 2013'':
(1) Section 301b(a), relating to aviation officer retention
bonus.
(2) Section 307a(g), relating to assignment incentive pay.
(3) Section 308(g), relating to reenlistment bonus for
active members.
(4) Section 309(e), relating to enlistment bonus.
(5) Section 324(g), relating to accession bonus for new
officers in critical skills.
(6) Section 326(g), relating to incentive bonus for
conversion to military occupational specialty to ease personnel
shortage.
(7) Section 327(h), relating to incentive bonus for
transfer between armed forces.
(8) Section 330(f), relating to accession bonus for officer
candidates.
SEC. 616. INCREASE IN AMOUNT OF OFFICER AFFILIATION BONUS FOR OFFICERS
IN THE SELECTED RESERVE.
Section 308j(d) of title 37, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``$10,000'' and inserting ``$20,000''.
SEC. 617. INCREASE IN MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF INCENTIVE BONUS FOR RESERVE
COMPONENT MEMBERS WHO CONVERT MILITARY OCCUPATIONAL
SPECIALTY TO EASE PERSONNEL SHORTAGES.
Section 326(c)(1) of title 37, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``, in the case of'' the first place it appears and all that
follows through ``reserve component of the armed forces''.
Subtitle C--Travel and Transportation Allowances
SEC. 631. PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION ALLOWANCES FOR MEMBERS OF
SELECTED RESERVE UNITS FILLING A VACANCY IN ANOTHER UNIT
AFTER BEING INVOLUNTARILY SEPARATED.
(a) Travel and Transportation Allowances Generally.--Section 474 of
title 37, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) in paragraph (4), by striking ``and'' at the
end;
(B) in paragraph (5), by striking the period at the
end and inserting ``; and''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(6) upon filling a vacancy in a Selected Reserve unit at
a duty station that is more than 150 miles from the member's
residence if--
``(A) during the preceding three years the member
was involuntarily separated under other than adverse
conditions (as characterized by the Secretary
concerned) while assigned to a unit of the Selected
Reserve certified by the Secretary concerned as having
been adversely affected by force structure reductions
during the period beginning on October 1, 2012, and
ending on December 31, 2018;
``(B) the involuntary separation occurred during
the period beginning on October 1, 2012, and ending on
December 31, 2018; and
``(C) the member is--
``(i) qualified in a skill designated as
critically short by the Secretary concerned; or
``(ii) filling a vacancy in a Selected
Reserve unit with a critical manpower shortage,
or in a pay grade with a critical manpower
shortage in such unit.'';
(2) in subsection (f), by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
``(4)(A) A member may be provided travel and transportation
allowances under subsection (a)(6) only with respect to the filling of
a vacancy in a Selected Reserve unit one time.
``(B) Regulations under this section shall provide that whenever
travel and transportation allowances are paid under subsection (a)(6),
the cost shall be borne by the unit filling the vacancy.''; and
(3) in subsection (j), by striking ``In this'' and
inserting ``Other than in subsection (a)(6), in this''.
(b) Travel and Transportation Allowances for Dependents and
Household Effects.--Section 476 of such title is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (l), (m), and (n) as
subsections (m), (n), and (o); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (k) the following new
subsection (l)
``(l)(1) A member described in paragraph (2) is entitled to the
travel and transportation allowances, including allowances with respect
to dependents, authorized by this section upon filling a vacancy as
described in that paragraph as if the member were undergoing a
permanent change of station under orders in filling such vacancy.
``(2) A member described in this paragraph is a member who is
filling a vacancy in a Selected Reserve unit at a duty station that is
more than 150 miles from the member's residence if--
``(A) during the three years preceding filling the vacancy,
the member was involuntarily separated under other than adverse
conditions (as characterized by the Secretary concerned) while
assigned to a unit of the Selected Reserve certified by the
Secretary concerned as having been adversely affected by force
structure reductions during the period beginning on October 1,
2012, and ending on December 31, 2018;
``(B) the involuntary separation occurred during the period
beginning on October 1, 2012, and ending on December 31, 2018;
and
``(C) the member is--
``(i) qualified in a skill designated as critically
short by the Secretary concerned; or
``(ii) filling a vacancy in a Selected Reserve unit
with a critical manpower shortage, or in a pay grade
with a critical manpower shortage in such unit.
``(3) Any allowances authorized by this section that are payable
under this subsection may be payable in advance if payable in advance
to a member undergoing a permanent change of station under orders under
the applicable provision of this section.''.
SEC. 632. AUTHORITY FOR COMPREHENSIVE PROGRAM FOR SPACE-AVAILABLE
TRAVEL ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AIRCRAFT.
(a) In General.--Chapter 157 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by inserting after section 2641b the following new section:
``Sec. 2641c. Space-available travel on Department of Defense aircraft
``(a) Authority To Establish Program.--(1) The Secretary of Defense
may establish a program to provide transportation on Department of
Defense aircraft on a space-available basis.
``(2) The program shall be conducted pursuant to regulations
prescribed by the Secretary for purposes of this section. Such
regulations shall be prescribed by not later than January 1, 2014, and
shall take effect on that date or such earlier date as the Secretary
shall specify in such regulations.
``(3) The program shall be conducted in a budget neutral manner. No
additional funds may be used, or flight hours performed, for the
provision of transportation under the program.
``(b) Benefit.--If the Secretary establishes a program authorized
by subsection (a), the Secretary shall, subject to section (c), provide
the benefit under the program to the following categories of
individuals:
``(1) Members of the armed forces on active duty.
``(2) Members of the Selected Reserve who hold a valid
Uniformed Services Identification and Privilege Card.
``(3) Retired members of a regular or reserve component of
the armed forces, including retired members of reserve
components, who, but for being under the eligibility age
applicable under section 12731 of this title, would be eligible
for retired pay under chapter 1223 of this title.
``(4) Such categories of dependents of individuals
described in paragraphs (1) through (3) as the Secretary shall
specify in the regulations under subsection (a), under such
conditions and circumstances as the Secretary shall specify in
such regulations.
``(5) Such other categories of individuals as the
Secretary, in the discretion of the Secretary, considers
appropriate.
``(c) Administration.--In carrying out a program under this
section, the Secretary shall--
``(1) in the sole discretion of the Secretary, establish an
order of priority for transportation under the program for
categories of individuals under subsection (b) that is based on
considerations of military necessity, humanitarian concerns,
and enhancement of morale;
``(2) give priority in consideration of transportation
under the program to the demands of members of the armed forces
in the regular components and in the reserve components on
active duty and to the need to provide such members, and their
dependents, a means of respite from such demands; and
``(3) implement policies aimed at ensuring cost control and
the safety, security, and efficient processing of travelers,
including limiting the benefit under the program to one or more
categories of individuals set forth in subsection (b) if
considered necessary by the Secretary.
``(d) Construction.--The authority to provide transportation under
this section is in addition to any other authority under law to provide
transportation on Department of Defense aircraft on a space-available
basis.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 157 of such title is amended by inserting after the item
relating to section 2641b the following new item:
``2641c. Space-available travel on Department of Defense aircraft.''.
Subtitle D--Disability, Retired Pay, and Survivor Benefits
SEC. 641. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT FOR PAYMENT OF SURVIVOR BENEFIT PLAN
PREMIUMS WHEN PARTICIPANT WAIVES RETIRED PAY TO PROVIDE A
SURVIVOR ANNUITY UNDER FEDERAL EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT
SYSTEM AND TERMINATION OF PAYMENT OF SURVIVOR BENEFIT
PLAN ANNUITY.
(a) Deposits Not Required.--Section 1452(e) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in the subsection heading, by inserting ``and FERS''
after ``CSRS'';
(2) by inserting ``or for the purposes of chapter 84 of
title 5,'' after ``chapter 83 of title 5,'';
(3) by inserting ``or 8416(a)'' after ``8339(j)''; and
(4) by inserting ``or 8442(a)'' after ``8341(b)''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 1450(d) of such title is
amended--
(1) by inserting ``or for the purposes of chapter 84 of
title 5,'' after ``chapter 83 of title 5,'';
(2) by inserting ``or 8146(a)'' after ``8339(j)''; and
(3) by inserting ``or 8442(a)'' after ``8341(b).''
(c) Applicability.--The amendments made by this section shall apply
with respect to any participant electing a annuity for survivors under
chapter 84 of title 5, United States Code, on or after the date of the
enactment of this Act.
SEC. 642. REPEAL OF AUTOMATIC ENROLLMENT IN FAMILY SERVICEMEMBERS'
GROUP LIFE INSURANCE FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES
MARRIED TO OTHER MEMBERS.
Section 1967(a)(1) of title 38, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A)(ii), by inserting after ``insurable
dependent of the member'' the following: ``(other than a
dependent who is also a member of a uniformed service and,
because of such membership, automatically insured under this
paragraph)''; and
(2) in subparagraph (C)(ii), by inserting after ``insurable
dependent of the member'' the following: ``(other than a
dependent who is also a member of a uniformed service and,
because of such membership, automatically insured under this
paragraph)''.
Subtitle E--Military Lending Matters
SEC. 651. ENHANCEMENT OF PROTECTIONS ON CONSUMER CREDIT FOR MEMBERS OF
THE ARMED FORCES AND THEIR DEPENDENTS.
(a) Consumer Credit.--Paragraph (6) of section 987(i) of title 10,
United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(6) Consumer credit.--
``(A) In general.--The term `consumer credit' shall
be defined by the Secretary of Defense in regulations
prescribed under this section, and shall include, in
addition to any other meaning provided for in such
regulations, the following:
``(i) A vehicle title loan for any
duration, whether open end or closed end.
``(ii) A payday loan for any duration,
whether open end or closed end.
``(iii) A tax refund anticipation loan.
``(B) Exclusions.--The term `consumer credit' does
not include the following:
``(i) A residential mortgage.
``(ii) A loan procured in the course of
purchasing a car or other personal property,
when that loan is offered for the express
purpose of financing the purchase and is
secured by the car or personal property
procured.''.
(b) Policy on Predatory Extension of Credit Through Installment
Loans Targeting Members of the Armed Forces and Dependents.--
(1) Policy required.--The Secretary of Defense shall, in
consultation with the officials and entities specified in
section 987(h)(3) of title 10, United States Code, prescribe a
policy on the predatory extension of credit through installment
loans targeting members of the Armed Forces and their
dependents.
(2) Objectives.--The objectives of the policy required by
paragraph (1) shall be as follows:
(A) To enhance protections afforded members of the
Armed Forces and their dependents under section 987 of
title 10, United States Code, by curbing continuing
predatory lending practices targeting members of the
Armed Forces and their dependents that are not
currently regulated under that section.
(B) To improve the financial literacy of members of
the Armed Forces and their dependents with respect to
installment loans and other forms of credit not
currently regulated under section 987 of title 10,
United States Code.
(C) To make members of the Armed Forces and their
dependents aware of other, more beneficial sources of
financial aid and credit services (such as those
available through military relief societies) than
installment loans.
(D) If considered appropriate by the Secretary of
Defense, to provide, by regulation, for the coverage
under section 987 of title 10, United States Code, of
installment loans extended to members of the Armed
Forces and dependents protected by that section.
(c) Effective Date.--
(1) Modification of regulations.--The Secretary of Defense
shall modify the regulations prescribed under section 987 of
title 10, United States Code, to take into account the
amendment made by subsection (a).
(2) Effective date of modification and policy.--The
amendment made by subsection (a), and the policy required by
subsection (b), shall take effect on--
(A) the date that is one year after the date of the
enactment of this Act; or
(B) such earlier date as the Secretary shall
specify.
(3) Publication of earlier date.--If pursuant to paragraph
(2)(B) the Secretary specifies an earlier effective date for
the amendment made by subsection (a) and the policy required by
subsection (b), the Secretary shall publish notice of such
earlier effective date in the Federal Register not later than
90 days before such earlier effective date.
SEC. 652. ADDITIONAL ENHANCEMENTS OF PROTECTIONS ON CONSUMER CREDIT FOR
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES AND THEIR DEPENDENTS.
(a) Protections Against Differential Treatment on Consumer Credit
Under State Law.--Subsection (d)(2) of section 987 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ``any consumer credit
or'' before ``loans''; and
(2) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``covering consumer
credit'' after ``State consumer lending protections''.
(b) Regular Consultations on Protections.--Subsection (h)(3) of
such section is amended--
(1) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A)--
(A) by inserting ``and not less often than once
every two years thereafter,'' after ``under this
subsection,''; and
(B) by inserting ``appropriate Federal agencies,
including'' before ``the following'';
(2) by striking subparagraph (E); and
(3) by redesignating subparagraphs (F) and (G) as
subparagraphs (E) and (F), respectively.
(c) Effective Date.--
(1) Modification of regulations.--The Secretary of Defense
shall modify the regulations prescribed under section 987 of
title 10, United States Code, to take into account the
amendments made by subsection (a).
(2) Effective date.--The amendments made by subsection (a)
shall take effect on--
(A) the date that is one year after the date of the
enactment of this Act; or
(B) such earlier date as the Secretary shall
specify in the modification of regulations required by
paragraph (1).
(3) Publication of earlier date.--If the Secretary
specifies an earlier effective date for the amendments made by
subsection (a) pursuant to paragraph (2)(B), the Secretary
shall publish notice of such earlier effective date in the
Federal Register not later than 90 days before such earlier
effective date.
SEC. 653. RELIEF IN CIVIL ACTIONS FOR VIOLATIONS OF PROTECTIONS ON
CONSUMER CREDIT EXTENDED TO MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES
AND THEIR DEPENDENTS.
(a) In General.--Section 987(f) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(5) Civil liability.--
``(A) In general.--A person who violates this
section with respect to any person is civilly liable to
such person for--
``(i) any actual damage sustained as a
result, but not less than $500 for each
violation;
``(ii) appropriate punitive damages;
``(iii) appropriate equitable or
declaratory relief;
``(iv) any other relief provided by law;
``(v) in any successful action to enforce
the foregoing liability, the costs of the
action, together with reasonable attorney fees
as determined by the court; and
``(vi) in any successful action by a
defendant under this section, if the court
finds the action was brought in bad faith and
for the purpose of harassment, attorney fees of
the defendant as determined by the court to be
reasonable in relation to the work expended and
costs incurred.
``(B) Defenses.--A person may not be held liable
for civil liability under this paragraph if the person
shows by a preponderance of evidence that the violation
was not intentional and resulted from a bona fide error
notwithstanding the maintenance of procedures
reasonably adapted to avoid any such error. Examples of
a bona fide error include clerical, calculation,
computer malfunction and programming, and printing
errors, except that an error of legal judgment with
respect to a person's obligations under this section is
not a bona fide error.
``(C) Jurisdiction and venue; limitation.--An
action for civil liability under this paragraph may be
brought in any appropriate United States district
court, without regard to the amount in controversy, or
in any other court of competent jurisdiction, not later
than the earlier or--
``(i) two years after the date of discovery
by the plaintiff of the violation that is the
basis for such liability; or
``(ii) five years after the date on which
the violation that is the basis for such
liability occurs.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section and shall
take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and shall apply
with respect to consumer credit extended on or after that date.
SEC. 654. MODIFICATION OF DEFINITION OF DEPENDENT FOR PURPOSES OF
LIMITATIONS ON TERMS OF CONSUMER CREDIT EXTENDED TO
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES AND THEIR DEPENDENTS.
Paragraph (2) of section 987(i) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:
``(2) Dependent.--The term `dependent', with respect to a
covered member, has the meaning given that term in section
401(a) of title 37.''.
Subtitle F--Other Matters
SEC. 661. TRANSITIONAL COMPENSATION FOR DEPENDENT CHILDREN WHO ARE
CARRIED DURING PREGNANCY AT TIME OF DEPENDENT-ABUSE
OFFENSE.
(a) In General.--Section 1059 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in subsection (f), by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
``(4) Payment to a child under this section shall not be paid for
any period before the birth of the child.''; and
(2) in subsection (l), by striking ``at the time of the
dependent-abuse offense resulting in the separation of the
former member'' and inserting ``or eligible spouse at the time
of the dependent-abuse offense resulting in the separation of
the former member or who was carried during pregnancy at the
time of the dependent-abuse offense resulting in the separation
of the former member and was subsequently born alive to the
eligible spouse or former spouse''.
(b) Prospective Applicability.--No benefits shall accrue by reason
of the amendments made by this section for any month that begins before
the date of the enactment of this Act.
TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--TRICARE Program
SEC. 701. EXTENSION OF TRICARE STANDARD COVERAGE AND TRICARE DENTAL
PROGRAM FOR MEMBERS OF THE SELECTED RESERVE WHO ARE
INVOLUNTARILY SEPARATED.
(a) Extension of TRICARE Standard Coverage.--Section 1076d(b) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``Eligibility'' and inserting ``(1) Except
as provided in paragraph (2), eligibility''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) Eligibility for a member under this section who is
involuntarily separated from the Selected Reserve under other than
adverse conditions, as characterized by the Secretary concerned, shall
terminate 180 days after the date on which the member is separated.''.
(b) Extension of TRICARE Dental Program Coverage.--Section
1076a(a)(1) of such title is amended by adding at the end the following
new sentence: ``Such plan shall provide that coverage for a member of
the Selected Reserve who is involuntarily separated from the Selected
Reserve under other than adverse conditions, as characterized by the
Secretary concerned, shall terminate not earlier than 180 days after
the date on which the member is separated.''.
SEC. 702. INCLUSION OF CERTAIN OVER-THE-COUNTER DRUGS IN TRICARE
UNIFORM FORMULARY.
(a) Inclusion.--Subsection (a)(2) of section 1074g of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (D), by striking ``No pharmaceutical
agent may be excluded'' and inserting ``Except as provided in
subparagraph (F), no pharmaceutical agent may be excluded'';
and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(F)(i) The Secretary may implement procedures to place selected
over-the-counter drugs on the uniform formulary and to make such drugs
available to eligible covered beneficiaries. An over-the-counter drug
may be included on the uniform formulary only if the Pharmacy and
Therapeutics Committee established under subsection (b) finds that the
over-the-counter drug is cost-effective and clinically effective. If
the Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee recommends an over-the-counter
drug for inclusion on the uniform formulary, the drug shall be
considered to be in the same therapeutic class of pharmaceutical
agents, as determined by the Committee, as similar prescription drugs.
``(ii) Regulations prescribed by the Secretary to carry out clause
(i) shall include the following with respect to over-the-counter drugs
included on the uniform formulary:
``(I) A determination of the means and conditions under
paragraphs (5) and (6) of this subsection through which over-
the-counter drugs will be available to eligible covered
beneficiaries and the amount of cost sharing that such
beneficiaries will be required to pay for over-the-counter
drugs, except that no such cost sharing may be required for a
member of a uniformed service on active duty.
``(II) Any terms and conditions for the dispensing of over-
the-counter drugs to eligible covered beneficiaries.''.
(b) Definitions.--Subsection (g) of such section is amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(3) The term `over-the-counter drug' means a drug that is
not subject to section 503(b) of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 353(b)).
``(4) The term `prescription drug' means a drug that is
subject to section 503(b) of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 353(b)).''.
(c) Technical Amendments.--
(1) Cross-reference amendments.--Subsections (a)(6)(A) and
(b)(1) of such section are amended by striking ``subsection
(g)'' and inserting ``subsection (h)''.
(2) Repeal of obsolete provisions.--
(A) Subsection (a)(2)(D) of such section is amended
by striking the last sentence.
(B) Subsection (b)(2) of such section is amended by
striking ``Not later than'' and all the follows through
``such 90-day period, the committee'' and inserting
``The committee''.
(C) Subsection (d)(2) of such section is amended--
(i) by striking ``Effective not later than
April 5, 2000, the Secretary'' and inserting
``The Secretary''; and
(ii) by striking ``the current managed care
support contracts'' and inserting ``the managed
care support contracts current as of October 5,
1999,''.
SEC. 703. EXPANSION OF EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF THE TRICARE
PROGRAM.
Section 717(a)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 1996 (Public Law 106-104; 110 Stat. 376; 10 U.S.C. 1073
note) is amended by striking ``military retirees'' and inserting
``members of the Armed Forces (whether in the regular or reserve
components) and their dependents, military retirees and their
dependents, dependent children under the age of 21, and dependents of
members on active duty with severe disabilities and chronic health care
needs''.
Subtitle B--Other Health Care Benefits
SEC. 711. USE OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FUNDS FOR ABORTIONS IN CASES OF
RAPE AND INCEST.
Section 1093(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
inserting before the period at the end the following: ``or in a case in
which the pregnancy is the result of an act of rape or incest''.
SEC. 712. AVAILABILITY OF CERTAIN FERTILITY PRESERVATION TREATMENTS FOR
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES ON ACTIVE DUTY.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 1074d of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(3)(A) Members of the armed forces entitled to medical care under
section 1074(a) of this title who have been diagnosed with a condition
for which the recommended course of treatment is recognized by a
licensed physician and surgeon or other appropriate medical
practitioner as a cause of iatrogenic infertility shall also be
entitled to fertility preservation treatment as a part of such medical
care.
``(B) If the fertility preservation treatment to which a member is
entitled under this paragraph is not available through a facility of
the uniformed services accessible to the member, such treatment shall
be provided to the member through another appropriate mechanism under
this chapter, including through the TRICARE program.''.
(b) Definitions Relating to Fertility Preservation Treatment.--Such
section is further amended--
(1) in subsection (b), by striking the subsection heading
and inserting ``Definition Relating to Primary and Preventive
Health Care Services for Women''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(c) Definitions Relating to Fertility Preservation Treatment.--In
this section:
``(1) The term `fertility preservation treatment'
includes--
``(A) procedures consistent with established
medical practices in the prevention or treatment of
iatrogenic infertility by licensed physicians and
surgeons or other appropriate medical practitioners,
including diagnosis, diagnostic tests, medication, or
surgery; and
``(B) any other procedure identified by the
Secretary of Defense that is intended to promote the
future fertility of an individual who has been
diagnosed with a condition for which the recommended
course of treatment is recognized by a licensed
physician and surgeon or other appropriate medical
practitioner as a cause of iatrogenic infertility.
``(2) The term `iatrogenic infertility' means the current
or future diminished ability, or the inability of an individual
to conceive or contribute to conception as a consequence of
medical treatment.''.
SEC. 713. MODIFICATION OF REQUIREMENTS ON MENTAL HEALTH ASSESSMENTS FOR
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES DEPLOYED IN CONNECTION WITH A
CONTINGENCY OPERATION.
(a) Timing of Mental Health Assessments.--Paragraph (1)(C)(i) of
section 1074m(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``one year'' and inserting ``18 months''.
(b) Exclusion of Certain Members.--Paragraph (2) of such section is
amended--
(1) by striking ``subparagraph (B) and (C) of''; and
(2) by striking ``determines that--'' and all that follows
and inserting ``determines--
``(A) in the case of an assessment otherwise required under
subparagraph (A) of that paragraph, that the member will not be
subjected or exposed to operational risk factors during
deployment in the contingency operation concerned;
``(B) in the case of an assessment otherwise required under
subparagraph (B) or (C) of that paragraph, that the member was
not subjected or exposed to operational risk factors during
deployment in the contingency operation concerned; or
``(C) in the case of any assessment otherwise required
under that paragraph, that providing such assessment to the
member during the otherwise applicable time period under such
paragraph would remove the member from forward deployment or
would put members or operational objectives at risk.''.
Subtitle C--Health Care Administration
SEC. 721. CLARIFICATION OF APPLICABILITY OF CERTAIN AUTHORITY AND
REQUIREMENTS TO SUBCONTRACTORS EMPLOYED TO PROVIDE HEALTH
CARE SERVICES TO THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Applicability of Federal Tort Claims Act to Subcontractors.--
Section 1089(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended in the last
sentence--
(1) by striking ``if the physician, dentist, nurse,
pharmacist, or paramedical'' and inserting ``to such a
physician, dentist, nurse, pharmacist, or paramedical'';
(2) by striking ``involved is''; and
(3) by inserting before the period at the end the
following: ``or a subcontract at any tier under such a contract
that is authorized in accordance with the requirements of such
section 1091''.
(b) Applicability of Personal Services Contracting Authority to
Subcontractors.--Section 1091(c) of such title is amended by adding at
the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) The procedures established under paragraph (1) may provide
for a contracting officer to authorize a contractor to enter into a
subcontract for personal services on behalf of the agency upon a
determination that the subcontract is--
``(A) consistent with the requirements of this section and
the procedures established under paragraph (1); and
``(B) in the best interests of the agency.''.
SEC. 722. RESEARCH PROGRAM TO ENHANCE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EFFORTS ON
MENTAL HEALTH IN THE NATIONAL GUARD AND RESERVES THROUGH
COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS.
(a) Research Program Authorized.--The Secretary of Defense may
carry out a research program to assess the feasibility and advisability
of enhancing the efforts of the Department of Defense in research,
treatment, education, and outreach on mental health and substance use
disorders and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) in members of the National
Guard and Reserves, their family members, and their caregivers.
(b) Agreements With Community Partners.--In carrying out the
research program authorized by subsection (a), the Secretary may enter
into partnership agreements with community partners described in
subsection (c) using a competitive and merit-based award process.
(c) Community Partners Described.--A community partner described in
this subsection is a private nonprofit organization or institution (or
multiple organizations and institutions) that--
(1) engages in the research activities described in
subsection (d); and
(2) meets such qualifications for treatment as a community
partner as the Secretary shall establish for purposes of the
research program.
(d) Activities.--Partnerships entered into under the research
program shall be used to engage in research on the causes, development,
and innovative treatment of mental health and substance use disorders
and Traumatic Brain Injury in members of the National Guard and
Reserves, their family members, and their caregivers.
(e) Report.--Not later than five years after the commencement of
the research program, the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on
Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report
on the research program, including a description of the research
program, the community partners participating in the research program,
the activities carried out, the number of members of the National Guard
and Reserves, family members, and caregivers supported by community
partners, and a description and assessment of the effectiveness and
achievements of the research program.
Subtitle D--Reports and Other Matters
SEC. 731. REPORTS ON PERFORMANCE DATA ON WARRIORS IN TRANSITION
PROGRAMS.
(a) Reports.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, and every 180 days thereafter, each Secretary of
a military department shall submit to Congress a report on data on the
performance of the military department in addressing the care,
management and transition needs of members of the Armed Forces under
the jurisdiction of such Secretary who participate in a Warriors in
Transition program under the jurisdiction of such Secretary with
respect to the following:
(1) Physical health.
(2) Mental and behavioral health.
(3) Educational and vocational aptitude and capabilities.
(4) Such other matters as such Secretary considers
appropriate.
(b) Common Methodology.--The Secretaries shall report not fewer
than five outcome measures for each of the areas set forth in
subsection (a) using a common methodology developed by the Secretaries
and approved by the Secretary of Defense for purposes of this section.
(c) Longitudinal Data.--The occasions for collecting data on a
member participating in a Warriors in Transition program for purposes
of reports under subsection (a) shall be as follows:
(1) When the member commences participation in the program.
(2) At least once each year the member participates in the
program.
(3) When the member ceases participation in the program
(whether for return to military duty or to civilian life).
(4) With the consent of the member, one year after the
member ceases participation in the program as described in
paragraph (3).
(d) Elements.--Each report under subsection (a) shall include an
assessment by the Secretary of the military department concerned of the
following with respect to the Warriors in Transition programs covered
by such report:
(1) The progress of members participating in the Warriors
in Transition programs in the areas specified in subsection
(a).
(2) The efficacy of the Warriors in Transition programs in
facilitating the transition of members to military duty or
civilian life, as applicable.
(3) The differences in outcomes in the Warriors in
Transition programs, by location, type, Armed Force, component,
and types of wounds, injuries, or conditions of program
participants.
(4) The percentage of members participating in the Warriors
in Transition programs who receive care under such programs
from assigned providers, including medical care case managers,
non-medical service providers (including non-medical case
managers, legal support personnel, and, as applicable, Physical
Evaluation Board Liaison Officers), mental health care
providers, and medical evaluation (MEB) physicians whose
caseload exceeds the caseload ratio that has been designated as
adequate by the Secretary of Defense.
(5) The percentage of members participating in the Warriors
in Transition programs for whom the intervals between various
phases in the transition process exceeds the average length of
such intervals, including intervals relating to appointment
times for specialists and for treatment for Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder (PTSD).
(6) Such other measurements of outcomes or progress of
members through the Warriors in Transition programs as such
Secretary considers appropriate.
(e) Personally Identifiable Information.--Data collected under this
section shall be treated in compliance with the provisions of section
552a of title 5, United States Code (commonly referred to as the
``Privacy Act'').
(f) Sunset.--No report is required under this section after
September 30, 2017.
(g) Warriors in Transition Program Defined.--In this section, the
term ``Warriors in Transition program'' means any major support program
of the Armed Forces for members of the Armed Forces with severe wounds,
illnesses, or injuries that is intended to provide such members with
non-medical case management service and care coordination services, and
includes the programs as follows:
(1) Warrior Transition Units and the Wounded Warrior
Program of the Army.
(2) The Safe Harbor program of the Navy.
(3) The Wounded Warrior Regiment of the Marine Corps.
(4) The Recovery Care Program and the Wounded Warrior
programs of the Air Force.
(5) The Care Coalition of the United States Special
Operations Command.
SEC. 732. REPORT ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE SUPPORT OF MEMBERS OF THE
ARMED FORCES WHO EXPERIENCE TRAUMATIC INJURY AS A RESULT
OF VACCINATIONS REQUIRED BY THE DEPARTMENT.
(a) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in consultation
with the Secretaries of the military departments, submit to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report setting forth the results of a comprehensive
review (conducted for purposes of the report) of the adequacy and
effectiveness of the policies, procedures, and systems of the
Department of Defense in providing support to members of the Armed
Forces who experience traumatic injury as a result of a vaccination
required by the Department.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
the following:
(1) The number and nature of traumatic injuries incurred by
members of the Armed Forces as a result of a vaccination
required by the Department of Defense each year since January
1, 2001, set forth by aggregate in each year and by military
department in each year.
(2) Such recommendations as the Secretary of Defense
considers appropriate for improvements to the policies,
procedures, and systems (including tracking systems) of the
Department to identify members of the Armed Forces who
experience traumatic injury as a result of a vaccination
required by the Department.
(3) Such recommendations as the Secretary of Defense
considers appropriate for improvements to the policies,
procedures, and systems of the Department to support members of
the Armed Forces who experience traumatic injury as a result of
a vaccination required by the Department.
SEC. 733. PLAN TO ELIMINATE GAPS AND REDUNDANCIES IN PROGRAMS OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ON PSYCHOLOGICAL HEALTH AND
TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY AMONG MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Plan Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
the House of Representatives a plan to streamline the programs
of the Department of Defense that address psychological health
and traumatic brain injury among members of the Armed Forces.
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) A complete list of the programs described in
paragraph (1), including a detailed description of the
intended function of each such program.
(B) An identification of any gaps in services and
treatments in the programs listed under subparagraph
(A)
(C) An identification of any redundancies in the
programs listed under subparagraph (A).
(D) A plan for mitigating the gaps identified under
subparagraph (B) and for eliminating the redundancies
identified under subparagraph (C).
(E) An identification of the individual in the
Department who will be responsible for leading
implementation of the plan required by paragraph (1).
(F) A schedule for the implementation of the plan.
(b) Status Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on
Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report
on the status of the implementation of the plan required by subsection
(a).
SEC. 734. REPORT ON IMPLEMENTATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE
COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES ON PREVENTION OF
HEARING LOSS AMONG MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the
implementation of the recommendations of the Comptroller General of the
United States in the January 2011 report of the Comptroller General
entitled ``Hearing Loss Prevention: Improvements to DOD Hearing
Conservation Programs Could Lead to Better Outcomes'' that address
prevention of hearing loss, abatement of hearing loss, data collection
regarding hearing loss, and the need for a new interagency data sharing
system so that sufficient information is available to address and track
hearing injuries and loss.
TITLE VIII--ACQUISITION POLICY, ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT, AND RELATED
MATTERS
Subtitle A--Provisions Relating to Major Defense Acquisition Programs
SEC. 801. LIMITATION ON USE OF COST-TYPE CONTRACTS.
(a) Prohibition With Respect to Production of Major Defense
Acquisition Programs.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall modify the
acquisition regulations of the Department of Defense to prohibit the
Department from entering into cost-type contracts for the production of
major defense acquisition programs (MDAPs).
(b) Exception.--
(1) In general.--The prohibition under subsection (a) shall
not apply in the case of a particular cost-type contract if the
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and
Logistics, after consultation with the Director of Cost
Assessment and Program Evaluation--
(A) certifies, in writing, with reasons, that a
cost-type contract is needed to provide a required
capability in a timely and cost-effective manner; and
(B) provides the certification to the congressional
defense committees not later than 30 business days
before issuing a solicitation for the contract.
(2) Scope of exception.--In any case when the Under
Secretary grants an exception under paragraph (1), the Under
Secretary shall take affirmative steps to make sure that the
use of cost-type pricing is limited to only those line items or
portions of the contract where such pricing is needed to
achieve the purposes of the exception. A written certification
under paragraph (1) shall be accompanied by an explanation of
the steps taken under this paragraph.
(c) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Major defense acquisition program.--The term ``major
defense acquisition program'' has the meaning given the term in
section 2430(a) of title 10, United States Code.
(2) Production of a major defense acquisition program.--The
term ``production of a major defense acquisition program''
means the production, either on a low-rate initial production
or full-rate production basis, and deployment of a major system
that is intended to achieve an operational capability that
satisfies mission needs, or any activity otherwise defined as
Milestone C under Department of Defense Instruction 5000.02 or
related authorities.
(3) Contract for the production of a major defense
acquisition program.--The term ``contract for the production of
a major defense acquisition program''--
(A) means a prime contract for the production of a
major defense acquisition program; and
(B) does not include individual line items for
segregable efforts or contracts for the incremental
improvement of systems that are already in production
(other than contracts for major upgrades that are
themselves major defense acquisition programs).
(d) Applicability.--The requirements of this section shall apply to
contracts for the production of major defense acquisition programs
entered into on or after October 1, 2014.
SEC. 802. ACQUISITION STRATEGIES FOR MAJOR SUBSYSTEMS AND SUBASSEMBLIES
ON MAJOR DEFENSE ACQUISITION PROGRAMS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the
acquisition strategy for each major defense acquisition program--
(1) provides, where appropriate, for breaking out a major
subsystem or subassembly, conducting a separate competition or
negotiating a separate price for the subsystem or subassembly,
and providing the subsystem or subassembly to the prime
contractor as government-furnished equipment; and
(2) in any case where it is not practical or appropriate to
break out a major subsystem or subassembly and provide it to
the prime contractor as government-furnished equipment,
includes measures to prevent excessive pass-through charges by
the prime contractor.
(b) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) The term ``excessive pass-through charges'' means pass-
through charges that are not reasonable in relation to the cost
of direct labor provided by employees of the contractor, any
other costs directly attributable to the management of the
subcontract by employees of the contractor, and the level of
risk and responsibility, if any, assumed by the prime
contractor for the performance of the subcontract.
(2) The term ``major defense acquisition program'' has the
meaning given the term in section 2430(a) of title 10, United
States Code.
(3) The term ``pass-through charges'' means prime
contractor charges for overhead (including general and
administrative costs) or profit on a subsystem or subassembly
that is produced by an entity or entities other than the prime
contractor.
(c) Conforming Amendments.--Section 202(c) of the Weapon Systems
Acquisition Reform Act of 2009 (Public Law 111-23; 123 Stat. 1720; 10
U.S.C. 2430 note) is amended--
(1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by striking
``fair and objective `make-buy' decisions by prime
contractors'' and inserting ``competition or the option of
competition at the subcontract level'';
(2) by redesignating paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) as
paragraphs (2), (3), and (4), respectively; and
(3) by inserting before paragraph (2), as redesignated by
paragraph (2) of this subsection, the following new paragraph
(1):
``(1) where appropriate, breaking out a major subsystem,
conducting a separate competition for the subsystem, and
providing the subsystem to the prime contractor as government-
furnished equipment;''.
SEC. 803. MANAGEMENT STRUCTURE FOR DEVELOPMENTAL TEST AND EVALUATION.
(a) Duties of DASD for Developmental Test and Evaluation.--
Subsection (a)(5) of section 139b of title 10, United States Code is
amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A)(i), by striking ``in the Department
of Defense'' and inserting ``of the military departments and
other elements of the Department of Defense''; and
(2) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``programs'' and
inserting ``programs (including the activities of chief
developmental testers and lead developmental test evaluation
organizations designated in accordance with subsection (c))''.
(b) Duties of Chief Developmental Tester and Lead Developmental
Test and Evaluation Organization.--Subsection (c) of such section is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``shall be responsible
for'' and inserting ``, consistent with policies and guidance
issued pursuant to subsection (a)(5)(A), shall be responsible
for'';
(2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``shall be responsible
for'' and inserting ``, consistent with policies and guidance
issued pursuant to subsection (a)(5)(A), shall be responsible
for''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) Transmittal of records and data.--The chief
developmental tester and the lead developmental test and
evaluation organization for a major defense acquisition program
shall promptly transmit to the Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Developmental Test and Evaluation any records or data relating
to the program that are requested by the Deputy Assistant
Secretary, as provided in subsection (a)(6).''.
SEC. 804. ASSESSMENTS OF POTENTIAL TERMINATION LIABILITY OF CONTRACTS
FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OR PRODUCTION OF MAJOR DEFENSE
ACQUISITION PROGRAMS.
(a) Report on Assessment Required.--Not later than 30 days before
entering into a covered contract, the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the potential termination
liability of the Department of Defense under the contract, including--
(1) an estimate of the maximum potential termination
liability certification for the contract; and
(2) an assessment how such termination liability is likely
to increase or decrease over the period of performance of the
contract.
(b) Covered Contracts.--For purposes of this section, a covered
contract is a contract for the development or production of a major
defense acquisition program for which the Under Secretary of Defense
for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics is the Milestone Decision
Authority if the contract has a potential termination liability of the
Department of Defense that could reasonably be expected to exceed
$100,000,000.
(c) Major Defense Acquisition Program Defined.--In this section,
the term ``major defense acquisition program'' has the meaning given
that term in section 2430 of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 805. TECHNICAL CHANGE REGARDING PROGRAMS EXPERIENCING CRITICAL
COST GROWTH DUE TO CHANGE IN QUANTITY PURCHASED.
Section 2433a(c)(3)(A) of title 10, United States Code, is amended
by striking ``subparagraphs (B) and (C)'' and inserting ``subparagraphs
(B), (C), and (E)''.
SEC. 806. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT TO REVIEW ONGOING PROGRAMS INITIATED
BEFORE ENACTMENT OF MILESTONE B CERTIFICATION AND
APPROVAL PROCESS.
Subsection (b) of section 205 of the Weapon Systems Acquisition
Reform Act of 2009 (Public Law 111-23; 123 Stat. 1725; 10 U.S.C. 2366b
note) is repealed.
Subtitle B--Acquisition Policy and Management
SEC. 821. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF TEMPORARY LIMITATION ON AGGREGATE
ANNUAL AMOUNT AVAILABLE FOR CONTRACT SERVICES.
Section 808 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1489) is amended--
(1) by striking ``fiscal year 2012 or 2103'' each place it
appears and inserting ``fiscal year 2012, 2013, or 2014''; and
(2) by striking ``fiscal years 2012 and 2013'' each place
it appears and inserting ``fiscal years 2012, 2103, and 2014''.
SEC. 822. PROHIBITION OF EXCESSIVE PASS-THROUGH CONTRACTS AND CHARGES
IN THE ACQUISITION OF SERVICES.
(a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall revise the
Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition Regulation
to--
(1) prohibit the award of a covered contract or task order
unless the contractor agrees that at least 50 percent of the
direct labor cost of services to be performed under the
contract or task order will be expended for employees of the
contractor or of a subcontractor that is specifically
identified and authorized to perform such work in the contract
or task order;
(2) provide that the contracting officer for a covered
contract or task order may authorize reliance upon a
subcontractor or subcontractors to meet the requirement in
paragraph (1) only upon a written determination that such
reliance is in the best interest of the Department of Defense,
after taking into account the added cost for overhead
(including general and administrative costs) and profit that
may be incurred as a result of the pass-through;
(3) require the contracting officer for a covered contract
or task order for which more than 70 percent of the direct
labor cost of services to be performed will be expended for
persons other than employees of the contractor to ensure that
amounts paid to the contractor for overhead (including general
and administrative costs) and profit are reasonable in relation
to the cost of direct labor provided by employees of the
contractor and any other costs directly attributable to the
management of the subcontract by employees of the contractor;
and
(4) include such exceptions to the requirements in
paragraphs (1) through (3) as the Secretary considers
appropriate in the interest of the national defense.
(b) Covered Contract or Task Order Defined.--In this section, the
term ``covered contract or task order'' means a contract or task order
for the performance of services (other than construction) with a value
in excess of the simplified acquisition threshold that is entered into
for or on behalf of the Department of Defense, except that such term
does not include any contract or task order that provides a firm, fixed
price for each task to be performed and is--
(1) awarded on the basis of adequate price competition; or
(2) for the acquisition of commercial services as defined
in paragraphs (5) and (6) of section 103 of title 41, United
States Code.
(c) Effective Date.--The requirements of this section shall apply
to--
(1) covered contracts that are awarded on or after the date
that is 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act;
and
(2) covered task orders that are awarded on or after the
date that is 90 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act under contracts that are awarded before, on, or after such
date.
(d) Conforming Repeal.--Section 852 of the John Warner National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (120 Stat. 2340) is
repealed.
SEC. 823. AVAILABILITY OF AMOUNTS IN DEFENSE ACQUISITION WORKFORCE
DEVELOPMENT FUND FOR TEMPORARY MEMBERS OF WORKFORCE.
(a) In General.--Section 1705 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in subsection (e)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by adding at the end the
following new sentence: ``In the case of temporary
members of the acquisition workforce designated
pursuant to subsection (h)(2), such funds shall be
available only for the limited purpose of providing
training in the performance of acquisition-related
functions and duties.''; and
(B) in paragraph (5), by inserting before the
period at the end the following: ``, and who has
continued in the employment of the Department since
such time without a break in such employment of more
than a year'';
(2) by striking subsection (g);
(3) by redesignating subsection (h) as subsection (g); and
(4) by adding at the end the following new subsection (h):
``(h) Acquisition Workforce Defined.--In this section, the term
`acquisition workforce' means the following:
``(1) Personnel in positions designated under section 1721
of this title as acquisition positions for purposes of this
chapter.
``(2) Other military personnel or civilian employees of the
Department of Defense who--
``(A) contribute significantly to the acquisition
process by virtue of their assigned duties; and
``(B) are designated as temporary members of the
acquisition workforce by the Under Secretary of Defense
for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics, or by the
senior acquisition executive of a military department,
for the limited purpose of receiving training for the
performance of acquisition-related functions and
duties.''.
(b) Extension of Expedited Hiring Authority.--Subsection (g) of
such section, as redesignated by subsection (a)(3) of this section, is
further amended in paragraph (2) by striking ``September 30, 2015'' and
inserting ``September 30, 2017''.
(c) Plan Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology, and Logistics shall develop a plan for the implementation
of the authority provided by the amendments made by subsection (a) with
regard to temporary members of the defense acquisition workforce. The
plan shall include policy, criteria, and processes for designating
temporary members and appropriate safeguards to prevent the abuse of
such authority.
SEC. 824. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE POLICY ON CONTRACTOR PROFITS.
(a) Review of Guidelines on Profits.--The Secretary of Defense
shall review the profit guidelines in the Department of Defense
Supplement to the Federal Acquisition Regulation in order to identify
any modifications to such guidelines that are necessary to ensure an
appropriate link between contractor profit and contractor performance.
(b) Matters To Be Considered.--In conducting the review required by
subsection (a), the Secretary shall consider, at a minimum, the
following:
(1) Appropriate levels of profit needed to sustain
competition in the defense industry, taking into account
contractor investment and cash flow.
(2) Appropriate adjustments to address contract and
performance risk assumed by the contractor, taking into account
the extent to which such risk is passed on to subcontractors.
(3) Appropriate incentives for superior performance in
delivering quality products and services in a timely and cost-
effective manner, taking into account such factors as prime
contractor cost reduction, control of overhead costs,
subcontractor cost reduction, subcontractor management, and
effective competition (including the utilization of small
business) at the subcontract level.
(c) Modification of Guidelines.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall modify the
profit guidelines described in subsection (a) so as to achieve the link
described that subsection.
(d) Report.--Upon the completion of the modification of the profit
guidelines required by subsection (c), the Secretary shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report on the actions of the
Secretary under this section. The report shall set forth the following:
(1) The results of the review conducted under subsection
(a).
(2) A description of the modification carried out under
subsection (c).
SEC. 825. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITIES ON INTERNAL CONTROLS FOR
PROCUREMENTS ON BEHALF OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE BY
CERTAIN NON-DEFENSE AGENCIES.
(a) Discretionary Authority.--Subsection (a) of section 801 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (10 U.S.C. 2304
note) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``shall, not later than
the date specified in paragraph (2),'' and inserting ``may'';
(2) by striking paragraph (2);
(3) by redesignating paragraphs (3) through (6) as
paragraphs (2) through (5), respectively;
(4) in paragraph (3), as redesignated by paragraph (3) of
this section--
(A) by striking ``required under this subsection''
and inserting ``to be performed under this
subsection''; and
(B) by striking ``shall'' and inserting ``may'';
and
(5) in paragraph (4), as so redesignated, by striking
``shall'' and inserting ``may''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--Subsection (b)(1)(B) of such section is
amended--
(1) in clause (i), by striking ``required by subsection
(a)(4)'' and inserting ``to be entered into under subsection
(a)(3)''; and
(2) in clause (ii)--
(A) by striking ``required by subsection (a)'' and
inserting ``provided for under subsection (a)''; and
(B) by striking ``subsection (a)(5)'' and inserting
``subsection (a)(4)''.
SEC. 826. EXTENSION OF PILOT PROGRAM ON MANAGEMENT OF SUPPLY-CHAIN
RISK.
Section 806(g) of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 124 Stat. 4262; 10 U.S.C.
2304 note) is amended by striking ``the date that is three years after
the date of the enactment of this Act'' and inserting ``January 1,
2016''.
Subtitle C--Amendments Relating to General Contracting Authorities,
Procedures, and Limitations
SEC. 841. APPLICABILITY OF TRUTH IN NEGOTIATIONS ACT TO MAJOR SYSTEMS
AND RELATED SUBSYSTEMS, COMPONENTS, AND SUPPORT SERVICES.
(a) Authority To Require Submission of Cost or Pricing Data.--
Subsection (c) of section 2306a of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in the subsection caption, by striking ``below-
threshold'' and inserting ``certain''; and
(2) in paragraph (2), by inserting before the period at the
end the following: ``, except in the case of either of the
following:
``(A) A major system or a subsystem or component
thereof that is not a commercially available off-the-
shelf item (as defined in section 104 of title 41) and
was not developed exclusively at private expense as
demonstrated in accordance with the requirements of
section 2321(f)(2) of this title.
``(B) Services that are procured for support of a
system, subsystem, or component described in
subparagraph (A).''.
(b) Authority To Require Submission of Other Information.--
Subsection (d)(1) of such section is amended by striking ``at a
minimum'' and all that follows and inserting ``at a minimum--
``(A) appropriate information on the prices at
which the same item or similar items have previously
been sold that is adequate for evaluating the
reasonableness of the price for the procurement; and
``(B) in the case of a system, subsystem,
component, or services described in subparagraph (A) or
(B) of subsection (c)(2) for which price information
described in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph is not
adequate to evaluate price reasonableness, uncertified
cost data that is adequate for evaluating the
reasonableness of the price for the procurement.''.
(c) Technical Amendment.--Subsection (c)(3) of such section is
amended by striking ``paragraph'' and inserting ``subsection''.
SEC. 842. MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF ALLOWABLE COSTS OF COMPENSATION OF
CONTRACTOR EMPLOYEES.
(a) Modification of Maximum Amount.--Section 2324(e)(1)(P) of title
10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``the benchmark'' and
all that follows through ``section 1127 of title 41'' and inserting
``the annual amount payable under the aggregate limitation on pay as
established by the Office of Management and Budget (currently
$230,700)''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall
take effect on January 1, 2013, and shall apply with respect to costs
of compensation incurred on or after that date under contracts entered
into before, on, or after that date.
SEC. 843. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ACCESS TO AND USE OF CONTRACTOR
INTERNAL AUDIT REPORTS.
(a) Clarification of Audit Access Authority.--Section 2313(a)(2) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``or'' at the end;
(2) in subparagraph (D), by striking the period at the end
and inserting ``; or''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(E) the efficacy of contractor or subcontractor internal
controls and the reliability of contractor or subcontractor
business systems.''.
(b) Guidance on Access.--
(1) Guidance required.--Not later than 90 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense
Contract Audit Agency shall issue revised guidance on Defense
Contract Audit Agency auditor access to defense contractor
internal audit reports and supporting materials.
(2) Purpose.--The purpose of the guidance issued pursuant
to paragraph (1) shall be to ensure that the Defense Contract
Audit Agency has sufficient access to contractor internal audit
reports and supporting materials in order to--
(A) evaluate and test the efficacy of contractor
internal controls and the reliability of associated
contractor business systems; and
(B) assess the amount of risk and level of testing
required in connection with specific audits to be
conducted by the Agency.
(3) Matters to be addressed.--The guidance issued pursuant
to paragraph (1) shall address, at a minimum, the following:
(A) The extent to which Defense Contract Audit
Agency auditors should request access to defense
contractor internal audit reports and supporting
materials.
(B) The circumstances in which follow-up actions,
including subpoenas, may be required to ensure Agency
access to audit reports and supporting materials.
(C) The designation of Agency audit officials
responsible for coordinating issues pertaining to
Agency requests for audit reports and supporting
materials.
(D) The purposes for which Agency auditors may use
audit reports and supporting materials.
(E) Any protections that may be required to ensure
that audit reports and supporting materials are not
misused.
(F) Requirements for tracking Agency requests for
audit reports and supporting materials.
(c) Failure to Provide Access.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
revise the program required by section 893 of the Ike Skelton National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 124
Stat. 4311; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note) in order to--
(1) ensure that any assessment of the adequacy of
contractor business systems takes into account the efficacy of
contractor internal controls, including contractor internal
audit reports and supporting materials, that are relevant to
such assessment; and
(2) provide that the refusal of a contractor to permit
access to contractor internal audit reports and supporting
materials that are relevant to such an assessment is a basis
for disapproving the contractor business system or systems to
which such materials are relevant and taking the remedial
actions authorized under section 893.
SEC. 844. ENHANCEMENT OF WHISTLEBLOWER PROTECTIONS FOR CONTRACTOR
EMPLOYEES.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 2409 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``An employee'';
(2) in paragraph (1), as so designated--
(A) by inserting ``or subcontractor'' after
``employee of a contractor'';
(B) by striking ``a Member of Congress'' and all
that follows through ``the Department of Justice'' and
inserting ``a person or body described in paragraph
(2)'';
(C) by inserting ``an abuse of authority relating
to a Department of Defense contract or grant,'' after
``Department of Defense funds,''; and
(D) by inserting ``, rule, or regulation'' after
``a violation of law''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(2) The persons and bodies described in this paragraph are the
persons and bodies as follows:
``(A) A Member of Congress or a representative of a
committee of Congress.
``(B) An Inspector General.
``(C) The Government Accountability Office.
``(D) A Department of Defense employee responsible for
contract oversight or management.
``(E) An authorized official of the Department of Justice
or other law enforcement agency.
``(F) A court or grand jury.
``(G) A management official or other employee of the
contractor or subcontractor who has the responsibility to
investigate, discover, or address misconduct.
``(3) For the purposes of paragraph (1)--
``(A) an employee who initiates or provides evidence of
contractor or subcontractor misconduct in any judicial or
administrative proceeding relating to waste, fraud, or abuse on
a Department of Defense contract shall be deemed to have made a
disclosure covered by such paragraph; and
``(B) a reprisal described in paragraph (1) is prohibited
even if it is undertaken at the request of a Department of
Defense official, unless the request takes the form of a non-
discretionary directive and is within the authority of the
Department of Defense official making the request.''.
(b) Investigation of Complaints.--Subsection (b) of such section is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``fails to allege a
violation of the prohibition in subsection (a), or has
previously been addressed in another Federal or State judicial
or administrative proceeding initiated by the complainant,''
after ``is frivolous,'';
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ``, fails to
allege a violation of the prohibition in subsection
(a), or has previously been addressed in another
Federal or State judicial or administrative proceeding
initiated by the complainant'' after ``is frivolous'';
and
(B) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``, up to 180
days,'' after ``such additional period of time''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(3) The Inspector General may not respond to any inquiry or
disclose any information from or about any person alleging the
reprisal, except to the extent that such response or disclosure is--
``(A) made with the consent of the person alleging the
reprisal;
``(B) made in accordance with the provisions of section
552a of title 5 or as required by any other applicable Federal
law; or
``(C) necessary to conduct an investigation of the alleged
reprisal.
``(4) A complaint may not be brought under this subsection more
than three years after the date on which the alleged reprisal took
place.''.
(c) Remedy and Enforcement Authority.--Subsection (c) of such
section is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)(B), by striking ``the compensation
(including back pay)'' and inserting ``compensatory damages
(including back pay)'';
(2) in paragraph (2), by adding at the end following new
sentence: ``An action under this paragraph may not be brought
more than two years after the date on which remedies are deemed
to have been exhausted.'';
(3) in paragraph (4), by striking ``and compensatory and
exemplary damages.'' and inserting ``, compensatory and
exemplary damages, and attorney fees and costs. The person upon
whose behalf an order was issued may also file such an action
or join in an action filed by the head of the agency.'';
(4) in paragraph (5), by adding at the end the following
new sentence: ``Filing such an appeal shall not act to stay the
enforcement of the order of the head of an agency, unless a
stay is specifically entered by the court.''; and
(5) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(6) The legal burdens of proof specified in section 1221(e) of
title 5 shall be controlling for the purposes of any investigation
conducted by an Inspector General, decision by the head of an agency,
or judicial or administrative proceeding to determine whether
discrimination prohibited under this section has occurred.
``(7) The rights and remedies provided for in this section may not
be waived by any agreement, policy, form, or condition of employment,
including by any predispute arbitration agreement, other than an
arbitration provision in a collective bargaining agreement.''.
(d) Notification of Employees.--Such section is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new
subsection (d):
``(d) Notification of Employees.--The Secretary of Defense shall
ensure that contractors and subcontractors of the Department of Defense
inform their employees in writing of the rights and remedies provided
under this section, in the predominant native language of the
workforce.''.
(e) Abuse of Authority Defined.--Subsection (f) of such section, as
redesignated by subsection (d)(1) of this section, is further amended
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(6) The term `abuse of authority' means an arbitrary and
capricious exercise of authority that is inconsistent with the
mission of the Department of Defense or the successful
performance of a Department of Defense contract or grant.''.
(f) Allowability of Legal Fees.--Section 2324(k) of such title is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``commenced by the United
States or a State'' and inserting ``commenced by the United
States, by a State, or by a contractor employee submitting a
complaint under section 2409 of this title''; and
(2) in paragraph (2)(C), by striking ``the imposition of a
monetary penalty'' and inserting ``the imposition of a monetary
penalty or an order to take corrective action under section
2409 of this title''.
(g) Effective Date.--
(1) In general.--The amendments made by this section shall
take effect on the date that is 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, and shall apply to--
(A) all contracts awarded on or after such date;
(B) all task orders entered on or after such date
pursuant to contracts awarded before, on, or after such
date; and
(C) all contracts awarded before such date that are
modified to include a contract clause providing for the
applicability of such amendments.
(2) Revision of dod supplement to the far.--Not later than
180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Department of Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition
Regulation shall be revised to implement the requirements
arising under the amendments made by this section.
(3) Inclusion of contract clause in contracts awarded
before effective date.--At the time of any major modification
to a contract that was awarded before the date that is 180 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the head of the
contracting agency shall make best efforts to include in the
contract a contract clause providing for the applicability of
the amendments made by this section to the contract.
SEC. 845. EXTENSION OF CONTRACTOR CONFLICT OF INTEREST LIMITATIONS.
(a) Assessment of Extension of Limitations to Certain Additional
Functions and Contracts.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall review the
guidance on personal conflicts of interest for contractor employees
issued pursuant to section 841(a) of the Duncan Hunter National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat.
4537) in order to determine whether it would be in the best interest of
the Department of Defense and the taxpayers to extend such guidance to
personal conflicts of interest by contractor personnel performing any
of the following:
(1) Functions other than acquisition functions that are
closely associated with inherently governmental functions (as
that term is defined in section 2383(b)(3) of title 10, United
States Code).
(2) Personal services contracts (as that term is defined in
section 2330a(g)(5) of title 10, United States Code).
(3) Contracts for staff augmentation services (as that term
is defined in section 808(d)(3) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125
Stat. 1490)).
(b) Extension of Limitations.--If the Secretary determines pursuant
to the review under subsection (a) that the guidance on personal
conflicts of interest should be extended, the Secretary shall revise
the Defense Supplement to the Federal Acquisition Regulation to the
extent necessary to achieve such extension.
(c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the Committee on
Armed Services of the Senate and the Committee on Armed Services of the
House of Representatives a report setting forth the following:
(1) A summary of the review conducted under subsection (a).
(2) A summary description of any revisions of regulations
carried out under subsection (b).
SEC. 846. REPEAL OF SUNSET FOR CERTAIN PROTESTS OF TASK AND DELIVERY
ORDER CONTRACTS.
Section 2304c(e) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking paragraph (3).
Subtitle D--Provisions Relating to Wartime Contracting
SEC. 861. RESPONSIBILITY WITHIN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FOR CONTRACT
SUPPORT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
(a) Responsibility.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
prescribe in regulations the chain of authority and
responsibility within the Department of Defense for policy,
planning, and execution of contract support for overseas
contingency operations.
(2) Elements.--The regulations under paragraph (1) shall,
at a minimum--
(A) specify the officials, offices, and components
of the Department within the chain of authority and
responsibility described in paragraph (1);
(B) identify for each official, office, and
component specified under subparagraph (A)--
(i) requirements for policy, planning, and
execution of contract support for overseas
contingency operations, including, at a
minimum, requirements in connection with--
(I) coordination of functions,
authorities, and responsibilities
related to operational contract support
for overseas contingency operations;
(II) assessments of total force
data in support of Department force
planning scenarios, including the
appropriateness of and necessity for
the use of contractors for identified
functions;
(III) determinations of capability
requirements for non-acquisition
community operational contract support,
and identification of resources
required for planning, training, and
execution to meet such requirements;
(IV) determinations of policy
regarding the use of contractors by
function, and identification of the
training exercises that will be
required for contract support
(including an assessment whether or not
such exercises will include
contractors); and
(V) establishment of an inventory,
and identification of areas of high
risk and trade offs, for use of
contract support in overseas
contingency operations and for areas in
which members of the Armed Forces will
be used in such operations instead of
contract support; and
(ii) roles, authorities, responsibilities,
and lines of supervision for the achievement of
the requirements identified under clause (i),
including the position within the chain of
authority and responsibility described in
paragraph (1) with responsibility for reporting
directly to the Secretary regarding policy,
planning, and execution of contract support for
overseas contingency operations; and
(C) ensure that the chain of authority and
responsibility described in paragraph (1) is
appropriately aligned with, and appropriately
integrated into, the structure of the Department for
the conduct of overseas contingency operations,
including the military departments, the Joint Staff,
and the commanders of the unified combatant commands.
(b) Secretary of Defense Report.--Not later than one year after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the regulations prescribed
under subsection (a). The report shall set forth the following:
(1) The regulations.
(2) A comprehensive description of the requirements
identified under clause (i) of subsection (a)(2)(B), and a
comprehensive description of the manner in which the roles,
authorities, responsibilities, and lines of supervision under
clause (ii) of that subsection will further the achievement of
such requirements.
(3) A comprehensive description of the manner in which the
regulations will meet the requirements in subsection (a)(2)(C).
(c) Comptroller General Report.--Not later than 18 months after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General of the
United States shall submit to the congressional defense committees a
report on the regulations prescribed under subsection (a). The report
shall set forth an assessment by the Comptroller General of the extent
to which the regulations will further the achievement by the Department
of Defense of efficient and effective policy, planning, and execution
of contract support for overseas contingency operations.
SEC. 862. ANNUAL REPORTS ON CONTRACT SUPPORT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS INVOLVING COMBAT OPERATIONS.
(a) In General.--Not later than one year after the commencement or
designation of a contingency operation outside the United States that
includes combat operations, and annually thereafter until the
termination of the operation, the Secretary of Defense shall, except as
provided in subsection (b), submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on contract support for the operation.
(b) Exception.--If the total annual amount of obligations for
contracts for support of a contingency operation otherwise described by
subsection (a) do not exceed $250,000,000 in an annual reporting period
otherwise covered by that subsection, no report shall be required on
the operation under that subsection for that annual reporting period.
(c) Elements.--
(1) In general.--Each report under subsection (a) regarding
an operation shall set forth the following:
(A) A description and assessment of the policy,
planning, management, and oversight of the Department
of Defense with respect to contract support for the
operation.
(B) With respect to contracts entered into in
connection with the operation:
(i) The total number of contracts entered
into as of the date of such report.
(ii) The total number of such contracts
that are active as of such date.
(iii) The total value of contracts entered
into as of such date.
(iv) The total value of such contracts that
are active as of such date.
(v) An identification of the extent to
which the contracts entered into as of such
date were entered into using competitive
procedures.
(vi) The total number of contractor
personnel working under contracts entered into
as of the end of each calendar quarter during
the one-year period ending on such date.
(vii) The total number of contractor
personnel performing security functions under
contracts entered into as of the end of each
calendar quarter during the one-year period
ending on such date.
(viii) The total number of contractor
personnel killed or wounded under any contracts
entered into.
(C) The sources of information and data used to
prepare the portion of such report required by
subparagraph (B).
(D) A description of any known limitations of the
information or data reported under subparagraph (B),
including known limitations in methodology or data
sources.
(E) Any plans for strengthening collection,
coordination, and sharing of information on contracts
entered into in connection with the operation.
(2) Estimates.--In determining the total number of
contractor personnel working under contracts for purposes of
paragraph (1)(B)(vi), the Secretary may use estimates for any
category of contractor personnel for which the Secretary
determines it is not feasible to provide an actual count. Each
report under subsection (a) shall fully disclose the extent to
which such an estimate is used in lieu of an actual count.
(d) Prohibition on Preparation by Contractor Personnel.--A report
under subsection (a) may not be prepared by contractor personnel.
(e) Use of Existing Reports for Certain Contingency Operations.--
The requirement to submit reports under subsection (a) on a contingency
operation in Iraq or Afghanistan may be met by the submittal of the
reports required by section 863 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (10 U.S.C. 2302 note).
SEC. 863. INCLUSION OF CONTRACT SUPPORT IN CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS FOR
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PLANNING, JOINT PROFESSIONAL
MILITARY EDUCATION, AND MANAGEMENT STRUCTURE.
(a) Readiness Reporting System.--Section 117(c) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(8) Measure, on an annual basis, the capability of
operational contract support to support current and anticipated
wartime missions of the armed forces.''.
(b) Contingency Planning and Preparedness Functions of CJCS.--
Section 153(a)(3) of such title is amended by adding at the end the
following new subparagraph:
``(E) In coordination with the Under Secretary of Defense
for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics, the Secretaries of
the military departments, the heads of the Defense Agencies,
and the commanders of the combatant commands, determining the
operational contract support requirements of the armed forces
and recommending the resources required to improve and enhance
operational contract support for the armed forces and planning
for such operational contract support.''.
(c) Joint Professional Military Education.--
(1) Contingency operations as matter within course of
jpme.--Section 2151(a) of such title is amended by adding at
the end the following new paragraph:
``(6) Contingency operations.''.
(2) Curriculum for three-phase approach.--Section 2154 of
such title is amended by adding at the end the following new
subsection:
``(c) Curriculum Relating to Contingency Operations.--(1) The
curriculum for each phase of joint professional military education
implemented under this section shall include content appropriate for
such phase on the following:
``(A) Requirements definition.
``(B) Contingency program management.
``(C) Contingency contracting.
``(D) The strategic impact of contracting on military
missions.
``(2) In this subsection, the terms `requirements definition',
`contingency program management', and `contingency contracting' have
the meaning given those terms in section 2333(f) of this title.''.
(d) Management Structure.--Section 2330(c)(2) of such title is
amended by striking ``other than services'' and all that follows and
inserting ``including services in support of contingency operations.
The term does not include services relating to research and development
or military construction.''.
SEC. 864. RISK ASSESSMENT AND MITIGATION FOR CONTRACTOR PERFORMANCE OF
CRITICAL FUNCTIONS IN SUPPORT OF OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS.
(a) Comprehensive Risk Assessment and Mitigation Plan Required.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraphs (2) and (3), not
later than six months after the commencement or designation of
an overseas contingency operation that includes or is expected
to include combat operations, the Secretary of Defense shall
perform a comprehensive risk assessment and develop a risk
mitigation plan for operational and political risks associated
with contractor performance of critical functions in support of
the operation.
(2) Exceptions.--Except as provided in paragraph (3), a
risk assessment and risk mitigation plan shall not be required
under paragraph (1) for an overseas contingency operation if
both--
(A) the operation is not expected to continue for
more than one year; and
(B) the total annual amount of obligations for
contracts for support of the operation is not expected
to exceed, $250,000,000 in any fiscal year.
(3) Termination of exceptions.--Notwithstanding paragraph
(2), the Secretary shall perform a risk assessment and develop
a risk mitigation plan under paragraph (1) for an overseas
contingency operation with regard to which a risk assessment
and risk mitigation plan has not previously been performed
under paragraph (1) not later than 60 days after the first date
on which either of the following occurs:
(A) The operation has continued for more than one
year.
(B) The total amount of obligations for contracts
for support of the operation has exceeded $250,000,000
in a fiscal year.
(b) Comprehensive Risk Assessments.--A comprehensive risk
assessment for an overseas contingency operation under subsection (a)
shall consider, at a minimum, risks relating to the following:
(1) The goals and objectives of the operation (such as
risks from behavior that injures innocent members of the local
population or outrages their sensibilities).
(2) The continuity of the operation (such as risks from
contractors walking off the job or being unable to perform when
there is no timely back-up available).
(3) The safety of military and civilian personnel of the
United States if the presence or performance of contractor
personnel creates unsafe conditions or invites attack.
(4) The managerial control of the Government over the
operation (such as risks from over-reliance on contractors to
monitor other contractors with inadequate means for Government
personnel to monitor their work).
(5) The critical organic or core capabilities of the
Government, including critical knowledge or institutional
memory of key operations areas and subject-matter expertise.
(6) The ability of the Government to control costs, avoid
organizational or personal conflicts of interest, and minimize
waste, fraud, and abuse.
(c) Risk Mitigation Plans.--A risk mitigation plan for an overseas
contingency operation under subsection (a) shall include, at a minimum,
the following:
(1) For each high risk area identified in the comprehensive
risk assessment for the operation performed under subsection
(a)--
(A) specific actions to mitigate or reduce such
risk, including, but not limited to, the development of
alternative capabilities to reduce reliance on
contractor performance of critical functions;
(B) measurable milestones for the implementation of
planned risk mitigation or risk reduction measures; and
(C) a process for monitoring, measuring, and
documenting progress in mitigating or reducing risk.
(2) A continuing process for identifying and addressing new
and changed risks arising in the course of the operation,
including the periodic reassessment of risks and the
development of appropriate risk mitigation or reduction plans
for any new or changed high risk area identified.
(d) Reports to Congress.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 30 days after the
completion of a comprehensive risk assessment and risk
mitigation plan under subsection (a), the Secretary shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report setting
forth a summary description of the assessment and plan,
including a description of the risks identified through the
assessment and the actions to be taken to address such risks.
(2) Form.--Each report shall be submitted in unclassified
form, but may include a classified annex.
(e) Critical Functions.--For purposes of this section, critical
functions include, at a minimum, the following:
(1) Private security functions, as that term is defined in
section 864(a)(5) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2008 (10 U.S.C. 2302 note).
(2) Training and advising government personnel, including
military and security personnel, of a host nation.
(3) Conducting intelligence or information operations.
(4) Any other functions that are closely associated with
inherently governmental functions, including the functions set
forth in section 7.503(d) of the Federal Acquisition
Regulation.
SEC. 865. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF REPORTS ON CONTRACTING IN IRAQ
AND AFGHANISTAN.
(a) Two-year Extension of Requirement for Joint Report.--Subsection
(a)(5) of section 863 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2008 (10 U.S.C. 2302 note) is amended by striking
``February 1, 2013'' and inserting ``February 1, 2015''.
(b) Repeal of Comptroller General Review.--Such section is further
amended by striking subsection (b).
(c) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) In general.--Such section is further amended--
(A) by striking ``Joint Report Required.--'' and
all that follows through ``paragraph (6)'' and
inserting ``In General.--Except as provided in
subsection (f)'';
(B) by striking ``this subsection'' each place it
appears and inserting ``this section'';
(C) by redesignating paragraphs (2) through (7) as
subsections (b) through (g), respectively, and
indenting the left margins of such subsections, as so
redesignated, two ems from the left margin;
(D) in subsection (b), as redesignated by
subparagraph (C) of this paragraph, by redesignating
subparagraphs (A) through (H) as paragraphs (1) through
(8), respectively, and indenting the left margin of
such paragraphs, as so redesignated, four ems from the
left margin;
(E) in subsection (c), as redesignated by
subparagraph (C) of this paragraph--
(i) by redesignating subparagraphs (A)
through (C) as paragraphs (1) through (3),
respectively, and indenting the left margin of
such paragraphs, as so redesignated, four ems
from the left margin; and
(ii) by striking ``paragraph (2)'' each
place it appears and inserting ``subsection
(b)'';
(F) in subsection (f), as redesignated by
subparagraph (C) of this paragraph, by striking ``this
paragraph'' and inserting ``this subsection''; and
(G) in subsection (g), as so redesignated, by
striking ``paragraph (2)(F)'' and inserting
``subsection (b)(6)''.
(2) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended by striking ``and comptroller general review''.
SEC. 866. EXTENSION OF TEMPORARY AUTHORITY TO ACQUIRE PRODUCTS AND
SERVICES IN COUNTRIES ALONG A MAJOR ROUTE OF SUPPLY TO
AFGHANISTAN.
(a) Extension.--Subsection (f) of section 801 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123
Stat. 2399) is amended by striking ``on or after the date occurring
three years after the date of the enactment of this Act'' and inserting
``after December 31, 2014''.
(b) Repeal of Expired Reporting Requirement.--Subsection (g) of
such section is repealed.
(c) Clerical Amendment.--The heading of such section is amended by
striking ``; report''.
SEC. 867. COMPLIANCE WITH BERRY AMENDMENT REQUIRED FOR UNIFORM
COMPONENTS SUPPLIED TO AFGHANISTAN MILITARY OR
AFGHANISTAN NATIONAL POLICE.
(a) Requirement.--In the case of any textile components supplied by
the Department of Defense to the Afghanistan National Army or the
Afghanistan National Police for purposes of production of uniforms,
section 2533a of title 10, United States Code, shall apply, and no
exceptions or exemptions under that section shall apply.
(b) Effective Date.--This section shall apply to solicitations
issued and contracts awarded for the procurement of textile components
described in subsection (a) after the date of the enactment of this
Act.
SEC. 868. SENSE OF SENATE ON THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF LATVIA AND OTHER
NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION MEMBER NATIONS TO THE
SUCCESS OF THE NORTHERN DISTRIBUTION NETWORK.
(a) Findings.--The Senate makes the following findings:
(1) The remote and austere environments in which United
States troops are required to operate as part of the
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) mission in
Afghanistan have increased the need for reliable lines of
supply in southwest Asia.
(2) The country of Afghanistan presents unique logistics
challenges, which have precipitated the development of several
redundant lines of supply.
(3) United States Transportation Command and the Defense
Logistics Agency (DLA), in consultation with United States
Embassy officials and other parties, have successfully
established memoranda of understanding and other agreements
with nations in and around southwest Asia to ensure the
reliability of lines of supply to Afghanistan.
(4) The lines of supply through Pakistan have been
repeatedly threatened by instability in that country.
Airlifting goods to Afghanistan, while safer, is expensive.
(5) The Northern Distribution Network (NDN) was established
in late 2008 to ensure that a safe and cost-effective line of
supply is available for United States troops in Afghanistan.
(6) The two prongs of supply provided by the Northern
Distribution Network ship nonlethal goods from the Baltic ports
in the north and the Caucauses in the west to southwest Asia
and Afghanistan.
(7) The Northern Distribution Network has been successful
and now handles more than 50 percent of cargo shipped to
Afghanistan.
(8) North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) member
nations along the Northern Distribution Network routes have
contributed significantly to the success of the Northern
Distribution Network.
(9) The United States has strong economic ties to Northern
Distribution Network nations that are members of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization, and these nations may be able to
provide quality goods and services for near and long-term use
by the Department of Defense.
(10) Since 2009 the port of Riga, on the Baltic Sea, has
been a critical overland entry point for goods being shipped
using the Northern Distribution Network. Latvia is a member of
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and has been an ally of
the United States in the region for many years.
(11) In September 2010, the Defense Logistics Agency, the
General Services Administration, and other parties hosted a
local procurement conference in Riga, Latvia.
(12) One hundred nine Latvian vendors attended the
September 2010 conference in Riga, and contracts with Latvian
vendors have been entered into as a result.
(13) In May 2012, Latvia hosted an international workshop
in Riga to examine ways of transforming the Northern
Distribution Network from a route for the delivery of United
States and other Allies' non-lethal goods to Afghanistan into a
commercial route that would support the economic growth of
Afghanistan and the southwest Asia region.
(b) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) Latvia and other North Atlantic Treaty Organization
member nations along the Northern Distribution Network routes
are key economic and security partners of the United States and
are to be commended for their contribution to ensuring United
States and International Security Assistance Force troops have
reliable lines of supply to achieve the mission in Afghanistan;
(2) when quality products at competitive prices are
available, significant effort should be made to procure goods
locally from Latvia and other North Atlantic Treaty
Organization member nations along the Northern Distribution
Network routes; and
(3) Latvia and other North Atlantic Treaty Organization
member nations along the Northern Distribution Network routes
remain allies of the United States in the region, and a
mutually beneficial relationship should continue to be
cultivated between the United States and Latvia and such other
nations in the future.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
SEC. 881. REQUIREMENTS AND LIMITATIONS FOR SUSPENSION AND DEBARMENT
OFFICIALS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall ensure the
following:
(1) There shall be not less than one suspension and
debarment official each for the Department of the Army, the
Department of the Navy, the Department of the Air Force, and
the Defense Logistics Agency.
(2) A suspension and debarment official under paragraph (1)
may not report to or be subject to the supervision of the
acquisition office or the Inspector General of either the
Department of Defense or the military department or Defense
Agency concerned.
(3) The duties of a suspension and debarment official under
paragraph (1) may include only the following:
(A) The direction, management, and oversight of
suspension and debarment activities.
(B) The direction, management, and oversight of
fraud remedies activities.
(C) Membership and participation in the Interagency
Committee on Debarment and Suspension in accordance
with Executive Order No. 12549 and section 873 of the
Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2009 (as amended by this section).
(4) Each suspension and debarment official under paragraph
(1) shall have a staff and resources adequate for the discharge
of the suspension and debarment responsibilities of such
official.
(5) Each suspension and debarment official under paragraph
(1) shall document the basis for any final decision taken
pursuant to a formal referral in accordance with the policies
established under paragraph (6), including, but not limited to,
the following:
(A) Any final decision to suspend or debar any
person or entity.
(B) Any final decision not to suspend or debar any
person or entity.
(C) Any final decision declining to pursue
suspension or debarment of any person or entity.
(D) Any administrative agreement entered with any
person or persons in lieu of suspension or debarment of
such person or entity.
(6) Each suspension and debarment official under paragraph
(1) shall, in consultation with the General Counsel of the
Department of Defense, establish in writing policies for the
consideration of the following:
(A) Formal referrals of suspension and debarment
matters.
(B) Suspension and debarment matters that are not
formally referred.
(b) Duties of Interagency Committee on Debarment and Suspension.--
Section 873 of the Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2009 (31 U.S.C. 6101 note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``, including
with respect to contracts in connection with
contingency operations'' before the semicolon; and
(B) in paragraph (7)--
(i) in subparagraph (B), by striking
``and'' at the end;
(ii) in subparagraph (C), by striking the
period at the end and inserting ``; and''; and
(iii) by adding at the end the following
new subparagraph:
``(D) a summary of suspensions, debarments, and
administrative agreements during the previous year.'';
and
(2) by striking subsection (b) and inserting the following
new subsections:
``(b) Date of Submittal of Annual Reports.--The annual report
required by subsection (a)(7) shall be submitted not later than 120
days after the end of the first fiscal year ending after the date of
the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2013, and annually thereafter.
``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `contingency operation' has the meaning
given that term in section 101(a)(13) of title 10, United
States Code.
``(2) The term `Interagency Committee on Debarment and
Suspension' means the committee constituted under sections 4
and 5 of Executive Order No. 12549.''.
(c) Additional Bases for Suspension or Debarment.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
revise the Department of Defense supplement to the Federal
Acquisition Regulation to provide for the automatic referral of
a person described in paragraph (2) to the appropriate
suspension and debarment official for a determination whether
or not the person should be suspended or debarred.
(2) Covered persons.--A person described in this paragraph
is any person as follows:
(A) A person who has been charged with a Federal
criminal offense relating to the award or performance
of a Department of Defense contract.
(B) A person who has been alleged, in a civil or
criminal proceeding brought by the United States, to
have engaged in fraudulent actions in connection with
the award or performance of a Department of Defense
contract.
(C) A person who has been determined by the head of
a contracting agency of the Department of Defense to
have failed to pay or refund amounts due or owed to the
Federal Government in connection with the performance
of a Department of Defense contract.
SEC. 882. UNIFORM CONTRACT WRITING SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Uniform Standards and Controls Required.--Not later than 180
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Defense shall--
(1) establish uniform data standards, internal control
requirements, independent verification and validation
requirements, and business process rules for processing
Department of Defense procurement requests, contracts,
receipts, and invoices;
(2) establish and maintain one or more approved electronic
contract writing systems that conform with the standards,
requirements, and rules established pursuant to paragraph (1);
and
(3) require the use of electronic contract writing systems
approved in accordance with paragraph (2) for all contracts
entered into by the Department.
(b) Phase-in of Implementation of Requirement for Approved
Systems.--The Secretary may phase in the implementation of the
requirement to use approved electronic contract writing systems in
accordance with subsection (a)(3) over a period of up to five years
beginning with the date of the enactment of this Act.
(c) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on the implementation of the requirements
of this section. The report shall, at a minimum--
(1) describe the standards, requirements, and rules
established pursuant to subsection (a)(1);
(2) identify the electronic contract writing systems
approved pursuant to subsection (a)(2) and, if multiple systems
are approved, explain why the use of such multiple systems is
the most efficient and effective approach to meet the contract
writing needs of the Department; and
(3) provide the schedule for phasing in the use of approved
electronic contract writing systems in accordance with
subsections (a)(3) and (b).
SEC. 883. COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES REVIEW OF USE BY THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE OF URGENT AND COMPELLING EXCEPTION
TO COMPETITION.
(a) Review Required.--The Comptroller General of the United States
shall review the use by the Department of Defense of the unusual and
compelling urgency exception to full and open competition provided in
section 2304(c)(2) of title 10, United States Code.
(b) Matters To Be Reviewed.--The review of the use of the unusual
and compelling urgency exception required by subsection (a) shall
include a review of the following:
(1) The pattern of use of the exception by acquisition
organizations within the Department in order to determine which
organizations are commonly using the exception and the
frequency of such use.
(2) The range of items or services being acquired through
the use of the exception.
(3) The process for reviewing and approving justifications
involving the exception.
(4) Whether the justifications for use of the exception
typically meet the relevant requirements of the Federal
Acquisition Regulation applicable to the use of the exception.
(5) The extent to which the exception is used to solicit
bids or proposals from only one source and the extent to which
such sole-source procurements are appropriately documented and
justified.
(6) The compliance of the Department with the requirements
of section 2304(d)(3) of title 10, United States Code, that
limit the duration of contracts awarded pursuant to the
exception and require approval for any such contract in excess
of one year.
(c) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General shall submit to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report on the review required by subsection (a),
including a discussion of each of the matters specified in subsection
(b). The report shall include any recommendations relating to the
matters reviewed that the Comptroller General considers appropriate.
SEC. 884. AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE FEE-FOR-SERVICE INSPECTION AND TESTING
BY DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY FOR CERTAIN
CRITICAL EQUIPMENT IN THE ABSENCE OF A PROCUREMENT
CONTRACT.
(a) Authority.--Section 2539b of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) in paragraph (3), by striking ``and'' at the
end;
(B) in paragraph (4), by striking the period at the
end and inserting ``; and''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(5) make available to any person or entity, in advance of
the award of a procurement contract, through contracts or other
appropriate arrangements and subject to subsection (c), the
services of the Defense Contract Management Agency for testing
and inspection of items when such testing and inspection is
determined by such Secretary to be critical to a specific
program of the Department of Defense.'';
(2) by redesignating subsections (c) and (d) as subsections
(d) and (e), respectively; and
(3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsection (c):
``(c) DCMA Services.--Services of the Defense Contract Management
Agency may be made available under subsection (a)(5) only if the
contract or other arrangement for those services--
``(1) holds the United States harmless if the items covered
by the contract or other arrangement (whether or not tested and
inspected under the contract or other arrangement) are not
subsequently ordered by or delivered to the United States under
a procurement contract entered into after the contract or other
arrangement is entered into; and
``(2) holds the United States harmless against any claim
arising out of the inspection and testing, or the use in any
commercial application, of the equipment tested and inspected
by the Defense Contract Management Agency under the contract or
other arrangement.''.
(b) Fees.--Subsection (d) of such section, as redesignated by
subsection (a)(2) of this section, is amended--
(1) in the first sentence, by striking ``and (a)(4)'' and
inserting ``, (a)(4), and (a)(5)''; and
(2) in the second sentence--
(A) by inserting ``, travel, and other incidental
overhead expenses'' after ``salaries''; and
(B) by inserting ``or inspection'' before the
period at the end.
(c) Use of Fees.--Subsection (e) of such section, as so
redesignated, is amended by striking ``and (a)(4)'' and inserting ``,
(a)(4), and (a)(5)''.
SEC. 885. DISESTABLISHMENT OF DEFENSE MATERIEL READINESS BOARD.
(a) Disestablishment of Board.--The Defense Materiel Readiness
Board established pursuant to section 871 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 110-181; 10 U.S.C.
117 note) is hereby disestablished.
(b) Termination of Strategic Readiness Fund.--The Department of
Defense Strategic Readiness Fund established by section 872(d) of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (10 U.S.C. 117
note) is hereby closed.
(c) Repeal.--Subtitle G of title VIII of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (10 U.S.C. 117 note) is
repealed.
SEC. 886. MODIFICATION OF PERIOD OF WAIT FOLLOWING NOTICE TO CONGRESS
OF INTENT TO CONTRACT FOR LEASES OF CERTAIN VESSELS AND
VEHICLES.
Section 2401(h)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``of continuous session of Congress''.
SEC. 887. EXTENSION OF OTHER TRANSACTION AUTHORITY.
Section 845(i) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 1994 (10 U.S.C. 2371 note) is amended by striking ``September 30,
2013'' and inserting ``September 30, 2018''.
TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT
Subtitle A--Department of Defense Management
SEC. 901. DEFINITION AND REPORT ON TERMS ``PREPARATION OF THE
ENVIRONMENT'' AND ``OPERATIONAL PREPARATION OF THE
ENVIRONMENT'' FOR JOINT DOCTRINE PURPOSES.
(a) Definitions Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall define for
purposes of joint doctrine the following terms:
(1) The term ``preparation of the environment''.
(2) The term ``operational preparation of the
environment''.
(b) Report Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on
Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report
on the terms defined under subsection (a). The report shall include the
following:
(1) The definition of the term ``preparation of the
environment'' pursuant to subsection (a).
(2) Examples of activities meeting the definition of the
term ``preparation of the environment'' by special operations
forces and general purpose forces.
(3) The definition of the term ``operational preparation of
the environment'' pursuant to subsection (a).
(4) Examples of activities meeting the definition of the
term ``operational preparation of the environment'' by special
operations forces and general purpose forces.
(5) An assessment of the appropriate roles of special
operations forces and general purpose forces in conducting
activities meeting the definition of the term ``preparation of
the environment'' and the definition of the term ``operational
preparation of the environment''.
SEC. 902. EXPANSION OF DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE NUCLEAR
WEAPONS COUNCIL.
(a) Guidance on Nuclear Command, Control, and Communications
Systems.--Subsection (d) of section 179 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (10) as paragraph (11); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (9) the following new
paragraph (10):
``(10) Providing programmatic guidance on nuclear command,
control and communications systems.''.
(b) Budget and Funding Matters.--Such section is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (g); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new
subsection (f):
``(f) Budget and Funding Matters.--(1) The Council shall submit to
Congress each year, at the same time the budget of the President for
the fiscal year beginning in such year is submitted to Congress
pursuant to section 1105(a) of title 31, a certification whether or not
the amounts requested for the National Nuclear Security Administration
in such budget, and anticipated over the four fiscal years following
such budget, meets nuclear stockpile and stockpile stewardship program
requirements for such fiscal year and over such four fiscal years. If a
member of the Council does not concur in a certification, the
certification shall include the reasons for the member's non-
concurrence.
``(2) If a House of Congress adopts a bill authorizing or
appropriating funds for the National Nuclear Security Administration
for nuclear stockpile and stockpile stewardship program activities or
other activities that, as determined by the Council, provides
insufficient funds for such activities for the period covered by such
bill, the Council shall notify the congressional defense committees of
the determination.''.
Subtitle B--Space Activities
SEC. 911. OPERATIONALLY RESPONSIVE SPACE PROGRAM OFFICE.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 2273a of title 10,
United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(a) In General.--There is within the Air Force Space and Missile
Systems Center of the Department of Defense an office known as the
Operationally Responsive Space Program Office (in this section referred
to as the `Office'). The facilities of the Office may not be co-located
with the headquarters facilities of the Air Force Space and Missile
Systems Center.''.
(b) Head of Office.--Subsection (b) of such section is amended by
striking ``shall be--'' and all that follows and inserting ``the
designee of the Department of Defense Executive Agent for Space. The
head of the Office shall report to the Commander of the Air Force Space
and Missile Systems Center.''.
(c) Mission.--Subsection (c)(1) of such section is amended by
striking ``spacelift'' and inserting ``launch''.
(d) Senior Acquisition Executive.--Paragraph (1) of subsection (e)
of such section is amended to read as follows:
``(1) The Program Executive Officer (PEO) for Space shall
be the Acquisition Executive of the Office and shall provide
streamlined acquisition authorities for projects of the
Office.''.
(e) Executive Committee.--Such section is further amended by adding
at the end the following new subsection:
``(g) Executive Committee.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall
establish for the Office an Executive Committee (to be known as the
`Operationally Responsive Space Executive Committee') to provide
coordination, oversight, and approval of projects of the Office.
``(2) The Executive Committee shall consist of the officials (and
their duties) as follows:
``(A) The Department of Defense Executive Agent for Space,
who shall serve as Chair of the Executive Committee and provide
oversight, prioritization, coordination, and resources for the
Office.
``(B) The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology, and Logistics, who shall provide coordination and
oversight of the Office and recommend funding sources for
programs of the Office that exceed the approved program
baseline.
``(C) The Commander of the United States Strategic Command,
who shall validate requirements for systems to be acquired by
the Office and participate in approval of any acquisition
program initiated by the Office.
``(D) The Commander of the Air Force Space Command, who
shall organize, train, and equip forces to support the
acquisition programs of the Office.
``(E) Such other officials (and their duties) as the
Secretary of Defense considers appropriate.''.
(f) Transfer of Fiscal Year 2012 Funds.--
(1) In general.--To the extent provided in appropriations
Acts, the Secretary of the Air Force may transfer from the
funds described in paragraph (2), $60,000,000 to other, higher
priority programs of the Air Force.
(2) Covered funds.--The funds described in this paragraph
are amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2012
by section 201 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1329) and
available for Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation, Air
Force, for the Weather Satellite Follow On Program as specified
in the funding table in section 4201 of that Act.
(3) Effect on authorization amounts.--A transfer made from
one account to another under the authority of this subsection
shall be deemed to increase the amount authorized for the
account to which the amount is transferred by an amount equal
to the amount transferred.
(4) Construction of authority.--The transfer authority in
this subsection is in addition to any other transfer authority
provided in this Act.
(5) Program plan.--Not later than December 31, 2012, the
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees
a report setting forth a program plan for higher priority
programs described in paragraph (1).
SEC. 912. COMMERCIAL SPACE LAUNCH COOPERATION.
(a) In General.--Chapter 135 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2275. Commercial space launch cooperation
``(a) Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may, to assist the
Secretary of Transportation in carrying out responsibilities set forth
in title 51 with respect to private sector involvement in commercial
space activities and public-private partnerships pertaining to space
transportation infrastructure, take the following actions:
``(1) Maximize the use by the private sector in the United
States of the capacity of the space transportation
infrastructure of the Department of Defense.
``(2) Maximize the effectiveness and efficiency of the
space transportation infrastructure of the Department.
``(3) Reduce the cost of services provided by the
Department related to space transportation infrastructure at
launch support facilities and space recovery support
facilities.
``(4) Encourage commercial space activities by enabling
investment by covered entities in the space transportation
infrastructure of the Department.
``(5) Foster cooperation between the Department and covered
entities.
``(b) Authority for Contracts and Other Agreements Relating to
Space Transportation Infrastructure.--The Secretary of Defense--
``(1) may enter into a contract or other agreement with a
covered entity to provide to the covered entity support and
services related to the space transportation infrastructure of
the Department of Defense; and
``(2) upon the request of that covered entity, may include
such support and services in the space launch and reentry range
support requirements of the Department if--
``(A) the Secretary determines that the inclusion
of such support and services in such requirements--
``(i) is in the best interest of the
Federal Government;
``(ii) does not interfere with the
requirements of the Department; and
``(iii) does not compete with the
commercial space activities of other covered
entities, unless that competition is in the
national security interests of the United
States; and
``(B) any commercial requirement included in that
contract or other agreement has full non-Federal
funding before the execution of the contract or other
agreement.
``(c) Contributions.--(1) The Secretary of Defense may enter into
contracts or other agreements with covered entities on a cooperative
and voluntary basis to accept contributions of funds, services, and
equipment to carry out this section.
``(2) Any funds, services, or equipment accepted by the Secretary
under this subsection--
``(A) may be used only for the objectives specified in this
section in accordance with terms of use set forth in the
contract or other agreement entered into under this subsection;
and
``(B) shall be managed by the Secretary in accordance with
regulations of the Department of Defense.
``(3) A contract or other agreement entered into under this
subsection with a covered entity--
``(A) shall address the terms of use, ownership, and
disposition of the funds, services, or equipment contributed
pursuant to the contract or other agreement; and
``(B) shall include a provision that the covered entity
will not recover the costs of its contribution through any
other contract or agreement with the United States.
``(d) Defense Cooperation Space Launch Account.--(1) There is
established on the books of the Treasury a special account to be known
as the `Defense Cooperation Space Launch Account'.
``(2) Funds received by the Secretary of Defense under subsection
(c) shall be credited to the Defense Cooperation Space Launch Account.
``(3) Amounts in the Department Defense Cooperation Space Launch
Account shall be available, to the extent provided in appropriation
Acts, for costs incurred by the Department of Defense under subsection
(c). Funds in the Account shall remain available until expended.
``(e) Annual Report.--Not later than January 31 each year, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on the funds, services, and equipment accepted and
used by the Secretary under this section during the previous fiscal
year.
``(f) Regulations.--The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe
regulations to carry out this section.
``(g) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Covered entity.--The term `covered entity' means a
non-Federal entity that--
``(A) is organized under the laws of the United
States or of any jurisdiction within the United States;
and
``(B) is engaged in commercial space activities.
``(2) Launch support facilities.--The term `launch support
facilities' has the meaning given that term in section 50501(7)
of title 51.
``(3) Space recovery support facilities.--The term `space
recovery support facilities' has the meaning given that term in
section 50501(11) of title 51.
``(4) Space transportation infrastructure.--The term `space
transportation infrastructure' has the meaning given that term
in section 50501(12) of title 51.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 135 of such title is amended by adding at the end the following
new item:
``2275. Commercial space launch cooperation.''.
SEC. 913. REPORTS ON INTEGRATION OF ACQUISITION AND CAPABILITY DELIVERY
SCHEDULES FOR COMPONENTS FOR MAJOR SATELLITE ACQUISITION
PROGRAMS AND FUNDING FOR SUCH PROGRAMS.
(a) In General.--Chapter 135 of title 10, United States Code, as
amended by section 912 of this Act, is further amended by adding at the
end the following new section:
``Sec. 2276. Reports on integration of acquisition and capability
delivery schedules for components for major satellite
acquisition programs and funding for such programs
``(a) Reports Required.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on each major satellite
acquisition program in accordance with subsection (d) that assesses--
``(1) the integration of the schedules for the acquisition
and the delivery of the capabilities of the components for the
program; and
``(2) funding for the program.
``(b) Elements.--Each report required by subsection (a) with
respect to a major satellite acquisition program shall include the
following:
``(1) The amount of funding approved for the program and
for each related program that is necessary for the operational
capability of the program.
``(2) The dates by which the program is anticipated to
reach initial and full operational capability.
``(3) An assessment of the extent to which the schedules
for the acquisition and the delivery of the capabilities of the
components for the program or any related program referred to
in paragraph (1) are integrated.
``(4) If the Under Secretary determines pursuant to the
assessment under paragraph (3) that the schedules for the
acquisition and the delivery of the capabilities of the
components for the program, or a related program referred to in
paragraph (1), provide for the acquisition or the delivery of
the capabilities of at least two of the three components for
the program or related program more than one year apart, an
identification of--
``(A) the measures the Under Secretary is taking or
is planning to take to improve the integration of those
schedules; and
``(B) the risks and challenges that impede the
ability of the Department of Defense to fully integrate
those schedules.
``(c) Consideration by Milestone Decision Authority.--The Milestone
Decision Authority shall include the report required by subsection (a)
with respect to a major satellite acquisition program as part of the
documentation used to approve the acquisition of the program.
``(d) Submittal of Reports.--(1) In the case of a major satellite
acquisition program initiated before the date of the enactment of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013, the Under
Secretary shall submit the report required by subsection (a) with
respect to the program not later than one year after such date of
enactment.
``(2) In the case of a major satellite acquisition program
initiated on or after the date of the enactment of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013, the Under Secretary shall
submit the report required by subsection (a) with respect to the
program at the time of the Milestone B approval of the program.
``(e) Notification to Congress of Non-integrated Acquisition and
Capability Delivery Schedules.--If, after submitting the report
required by subsection (a) with respect to a major satellite
acquisition program, the Under Secretary determines that the schedules
for the acquisition and the delivery of the capabilities of the
components for the program, or a related program referred to in
subsection (b)(1), provide for the acquisition or the delivery of the
capabilities of at least two of the three components for the program or
related program more than one year apart, the Under Secretary shall,
not later than 30 days after making that determination, submit to the
congressional defense committees a report--
``(1) notifying the committees of that determination; and
``(2) identifying the measures the Under Secretary is
taking or is planning to take to improve the integration of
those schedules.
``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Components.--The term `components', with respect to a
major satellite acquisition program, refers to any satellites
acquired under the program and the ground equipment and user
terminals necessary for the operation of those satellites.
``(2) Major satellite acquisition program.--The term `major
satellite acquisition program' means a major defense
acquisition program (as defined in section 2430 of this title)
for the acquisition of a satellite.
``(3) Milestone b approval.--The term `Milestone B
approval' has the meaning given that term in section 2366(e)(7)
of this title.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 135 of such title, as so amended, is further amended by adding
at the end the following new item:
``2276. Reports on integration of acquisition and capability delivery
schedules for components for major
satellite acquisition programs and funding
for such programs.''.
SEC. 914. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE REPRESENTATION IN DISPUTE RESOLUTION
REGARDING SURRENDER OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE BANDS OF
ELECTROMAGNETIC FREQUENCIES.
Section 1062(b)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2000 (Public Law 106-65; 113 Stat. 768; 47 U.S.C. 921 note)
is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(2) in subparagraph (B), by striking the period at the end
and inserting ``; and''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(C) in the event of any dispute resolution
process involving the surrender of use of such band,
the Department of Defense has adequate representation
to convey its views.''.
Subtitle C--Intelligence-Related and Cyber Matters
SEC. 921. AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE GEOSPATIAL INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT TO
SECURITY ALLIANCES AND INTERNATIONAL AND REGIONAL
ORGANIZATIONS.
(a) Extension of Authority to Security Alliances and International
and Regional Organizations.--Section 443(a) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by inserting ``, regional organizations with defense
or security components, and international organizations and security
alliances of which the United States is a member'' after ``foreign
countries''.
(b) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of section 443 of such
title is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 443. Imagery intelligence and geospatial information: support
for foreign countries, security alliances, and
international and regional organizations''.
(2) Table of sections.--The table of sections at the
beginning of subchapter I of chapter 22 of such title is
amended by striking the item relating to section 443 and
inserting the following new item:
``443. Imagery intelligence and geospatial information: support for
foreign countries, security alliances, and
international and regional
organizations.''.
SEC. 922. ARMY DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND SYSTEM.
(a) Assignment of Responsibility for Oversight.--The Secretary of
the Army shall assign responsibility for oversight of the development,
acquisition, testing, and fielding of the Distributed Common Ground
System (DCGS) cloud computing program of the Army to the Chief
Information Officer of the Army ((CIO)/G-6).
(b) Review of Program.--
(1) In general.--Not later than December 1, 2012, the Chief
Information Officer shall submit to the Secretary a report on a
review of the Distributed Common Ground System cloud computing
program of the Army conducted by the Chief Information Officer
for purposes of this section.
(2) Elements.--The report shall include the following:
(A) An assessment of the program in comparison with
commercial products, if applicable, with respect to
each of the following:
(i) The effectiveness of analyst tools,
user interfaces, and data visualization in
supporting analyst missions and requirements.
(ii) Training requirements for analysts.
(iii) Ease of use for analysts.
(iv) Rates of progress in developing
analyst tools and linking tools for standard
workflows.
(B) An assessment of the soundness of the past
decisions of the Army, and the future plans of the
Army, for acquiring and integrating analyst tools, user
interfaces, and data visualization capabilities through
government-sponsored custom development, leasing of
commercial solutions, and government open source
development.
(C) Such recommendations regarding the program as
the Chief Information Officer considers appropriate in
light of the review under this subsection.
SEC. 923. RATIONALIZATION OF CYBER NETWORKS AND CYBER PERSONNEL OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall take appropriate
actions to substantially reduce the number of sub-networks and network
enclaves across the Department of Defense, and the associated security
and access management controls, in order to achieve the following
objectives for the Department:
(1) Visibility for the United States Cyber Command in the
operational and security status of all networks, network
equipment, and computers.
(2) Elimination of redundant network security
infrastructure and personnel.
(3) Rationalization and consolidation of cyber attack
detection, diagnosis, and response resources, and elimination
of gaps in security coverage.
(4) Reduction of barriers to information sharing and
enhancement of the capacity to rapidly create collaborative
communities of interest.
(5) Enhancement of access to information through
authentication-based and identity-based access controls.
(6) Enhancement of the capacity to deploy, and achieve
access to, enterprise-level services.
(7) Separation of server and end-user device computing to
facilitate server and data center consolidation and a more
secure tiered and zoned network architecture.
(b) Personnel Plan.--
(1) In general.--As part of the actions taken under
subsection (a), the Secretary shall establish and carry out a
plan to reassign personnel billets currently allocated to
network operations and security that will become available
pursuant to the reduction in network enclaves required by that
subsection to tasks related to potential offensive cyber
operations in order to achieve an appropriate balance between
the offensive and defensive missions of the United States Cyber
Command and its components. The plan shall include targets for
the number of personnel to be reassigned to tasks related to
offensive operations, and the rate at which such personnel
shall be added to the workforce for such tasks.
(2) Disposition of personnel.--In developing the plan
required by paragraph (1), the Secretary shall--
(A) determine whether the number of personnel
required to be reassigned to tasks related to offensive
operations in order to achieve the balance described in
paragraph (1) will be met, in pace and numbers, through
the reassignment of personnel billets pursuant to the
plan; and
(B) if the Secretary determines that the number of
personnel so required will not be so met (whether
because of insufficient numbers of personnel in billets
to be reassigned or because personnel available for
reassignment cannot be trained or directed to tasks
related to offensive operations), take appropriate
actions to ensure the availability to the United States
Cyber Command of appropriate numbers of personnel
qualified to undertake tasks related to offensive
operations.
(3) Submittal to congress.--The Secretary shall submit the
plan required by paragraph (1) to the congressional defense
committees at the time of the submittal to Congress of the
budget of the President for fiscal year 2014 pursuant to
section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code.
SEC. 924. NEXT-GENERATION HOST-BASED CYBER SECURITY SYSTEM FOR THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Strategy for Acquisition of System Required.--The Chief
Information Officer of the Department of Defense shall, in coordination
with the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and
Logistics, develop a strategy to acquire next-generation host-based
cybersecurity tools and capabilities (in this section referred to as a
``next-generation system'') for the Department of Defense.
(b) Elements of System.--It is the sense of Congress that any next-
generation system acquired under the strategy required by subsection
(a) should meet the following requirements:
(1) To overcome problems and limitations in current
capabilities, the system should not rely on anti-virus or
signature-based threat detection techniques that--
(A) cannot address new or rapidly morphing threats:
(B) consume substantial amounts of communications
capacity to remain current with known threats and to
report current status; or
(C) consume substantial amounts of resources to
store rapidly growing threat libraries.
(2) The system should provide an open architecture-based
framework for so-called ``plug-and-play'' integration of a
variety of types of deployable tools in addition to cyber
intrusion detection tools, including tools for--
(A) insider threat detection;
(B) continuous monitoring and configuration
management;
(C) remediation following infections; and
(D) protection techniques that do not rely on
detection of the attack, such as virtualization, and
diversification of attack surfaces.
(3) The system should be designed for ease of deployment to
potentially millions of host devices of tailored security
solutions depending on need and risk, and to be compatible with
cloud-based, thin-client, and virtualized environments as well
as battlefield devices and weapons systems.
(c) Submittal to Congress.--The Chief Information Office shall
submit to Congress a report setting forth the strategy required by
subsection (a) together with the budget justification materials of the
Department of Defense submitted to Congress with the budget of the
President for fiscal year 2015 pursuant to section 1105(a) of title 31,
United States Code.
SEC. 925. IMPROVEMENTS OF SECURITY, QUALITY, AND COMPETITION IN
COMPUTER SOFTWARE PROCURED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Comprehensive Program on Improvement of Procurement of Computer
Software.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology,
and Logistics shall, in coordination with the Chief Information Officer
of the Department of Defense, develop a comprehensive program for
improvements of the security, quality, and competition in the computer
software procured by the Department of Defense for covered systems
(b) Update of Development and Acquisition Models.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics shall, in coordination
with the Chief Information Officer, provide for the development
of updates and improvements to one or more existing best-
practice development and acquisition models (such as the
Capability Maturity Model Integration) in order to provide
explicit guidance under such model or models for improved
assurance, security, quality, and resiliency in the computer
software developed and procured by the Department.
(2) Elements.--Any update or improvement to a development
and acquisition model under this subsection shall--
(A) include diagnostic methods that enable
evaluations of conformance to the processes and best
practices of the model for achieving quality,
assurance, and security throughout the life cycle of
software products concerned; and
(B) be compatible with the variety of current agile
and incremental software development methodologies.
(c) Requirements for Secure Code Development Practices.--The Under
Secretary shall, in coordination with the Chief Information Officer--
(1) direct the Director of the Defense Information Systems
Agency to modify the Application Security and Development
Security Technical Implementation Guide (STIG) to require
(rather than highly recommend) the use of automated static
vulnerability analysis tools in the computer software code
development phase, and in development and operational testing,
to identify and remediate security vulnerabilities for covered
systems;
(2) develop a list of qualified government and private-
sector static analysis tools and third-party testing
organizations to support the requirement under paragraph (1);
(3) direct the Director--
(A) to designate secure software coding standards;
and
(B) to modify the Security Technical Implementation
Guide to reference the approved standards; and
(4) develop guidance and direction for Department program
managers to require government software development and
maintenance organizations and contractors to identify and
implement, through contract statements of work, a secure
software coding plan that includes verifiable processes and
practices.
(d) Verification of Effective Implementation.--The Under Secretary
shall, in coordination with the Chief Information Officer, develop
guidance and direction for Department program managers for covered
systems to do as follows:
(1) To require evidence that government software
development and maintenance organizations and contractors are
conforming in computer software coding to--
(A) approved secure coding standards of the
Department during software development, upgrade and
maintenance activities, including through the use of
inspection and appraisals;
(B) an applicable best practice development and
acquisition model; and
(C) the requirement established pursuant to
subsection (b)(1).
(2) To make appropriate use of authorized software code
assessment centers (whether a government center, Federally
funded research and development center, or government
contractor) to evaluate applications and software products for
conformance to secure coding requirements.
(e) Study on Additional Means of Improving Software Security.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary shall, in coordination
with the Chief Information Officer, provide for a study of
potential mechanisms for obtaining higher quality and secure
development of computer software for the Department.
(2) Mechanisms to be studied.--The mechanisms studied under
paragraph (1) may include the following:
(A) Liability for defects or vulnerabilities in
software code.
(B) So-called ``clawback'' provisions on earned
fees that enable the Department to recoup funds for
security vulnerabilities discovered after software is
delivered.
(C) Exemption from liability for rigorous
conformance with secure development processes.
(D) Warranties against software defects and
vulnerabilities.
(f) Software Repositories and Collaborative Development
Environments.--The Under Secretary shall, in consultation with the
Chief Information Officer--
(1) establish or require the use of one or more existing
computer software repositories and collaborative computer
software development environments (such as Forge.mil managed by
the Defense Information Systems Agency) for covered systems for
purposes of--
(A) storing software code owned by the government,
or to which it has use rights, together with all
associated documentation and quality and security test
results;
(B) minimizing duplicative investment in software
code development infrastructure while promoting common,
high-quality development practices and facilitating
sharing of best practices; and
(C) promoting software re-use and competition for
software capability insertion, upgrades, and
maintenance;
(2) establish rules and procedures for depositors in the
repositories and environments provided for under paragraph (1)
to keep the software code base current, if the depositors are
not already using such a repository or environment for software
development and life-cycle management; and
(3) ensure that the repositories and environments provided
for under paragraph (1) provide automated tools for software
reverse engineering, functionality analysis, and static and
dynamic vulnerability analysis of source code and binary code
in order to enable users to search for software relevant to
their requirements, understand what the code does and how it
functions, and assess its quality and security.
(g) Covered Systems Defined.--In this section, the term ``covered
systems'' means any Department of Defense critical information systems
and weapons systems, including--
(1) major systems, as that term is defined in section
2302(5) of title 10, United States Code;
(2) national security systems, as that term is defined in
section 3542(b)(2) of title 44, United States Code; and
(3) Department of Defense information systems categorized
as Mission Assurance Category I in Department of Defense
Directive 8500.01E that are funded by the Department of
Defense.
SEC. 926. COMPETITION IN CONNECTION WITH DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE DATA
LINK SYSTEMS.
(a) Competition in Connection With Data Link Systems.--
(1) In general.--Not later than December 1, 2013, the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics
shall--
(A) develop an inventory of all data link systems
in use and in development in the Department of Defense;
(B) conduct a business case analysis of each data
link system contained in the inventory under
subparagraph (A) to determine whether--
(i) the maintenance, upgrade, new
deployment, or replacement of such system
should be open to competition; or
(ii) the data link should be converted to
an open architecture, or a different data link
standard should be adopted to enable such
competition;
(C) for each data link system for which competition
is determined advisable under clause (i) or (ii) of
subparagraph (B), develop a plan (with specific
objectives, actions, and schedules) to achieve such
competition, including a plan to address any policy,
legal, programmatic, or technical barriers to such
competition; and
(D) for each data link system for which competition
is determined not advisable under subparagraph (B),
prepare a justification for the determination that it
is not practical to conduct such competition or to
convert the data link standard to open architecture or
adopt a different data link standard for which
competition is feasible.
(2) Element of business case analyses.--In conducting a
business case analysis for purposes of paragraph (1)(B), the
Under Secretary shall solicit the views of industry on the
merits and feasibility of introducing competition for the
maintenance, upgrade, new deployment, or replacement for the
data link system in question.
(b) Earlier Actions.--If the Under Secretary completes any portion
of the plan described in subsection (a)(1)(C) before December 1, 2013,
the Secretary may commence action on such portion of the plan upon
completion of such portion, including publication of such portion of
the plan.
(c) Reports.--
(1) Submittal of plan to congress.--The Under Secretary
shall submit to Congress the plan described in subsection
(a)(1)(C) at the same time the budget of the President for
fiscal year 2015 is submitted to Congress pursuant to section
1105(a) of title 31, United States Code. The Under Secretary
shall include with the plan--
(A) a list of the data link systems covered by
subsection (a)(1)(C);
(B) a list of the data link systems covered by
subsection (a)(1)(D); and
(C) for each data link system covered by subsection
(a)(1)(D), the justification prepared under that
subsection with respect to the data link system.
(2) Comptroller of the united states assessment.--Not later
than 90 days after the submittal to Congress under paragraph
(1) of the plan described in subsection (a)(1)(C), the
Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to
Congress a report setting forth the assessment of the
Comptroller General of the plan, including an assessment of the
adequacy and objectives of the plan.
SEC. 927. INTEGRATION OF CRITICAL SIGNALS INTELLIGENCE CAPABILITIES.
(a) Plan for Integration Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than January 1, 2013, the
Director of the Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance
(ISR) Task Force shall develop a plan to rapidly achieve an
operationally integrated signals intelligence collection and
dissemination capability to meet requirements for detecting,
tracking, and precisely geolocating high-band communications
devices in order to trigger the immediate observation and
tracking of high-value targets by imagery sensor by combining
or integrating capabilities that exist or are in development in
ongoing programs, including the following:
(A) The Guardrail program and the ARGUS A160
program of the Army.
(B) The Blue Moon quick reaction capability program
of the Air Force.
(C) The Wide Area Network Detection program of the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA).
(2) Consultation.--The Director shall consult with the
National Security Agency, the combatant commands (including the
United States Special Operations Command), and the formal
wireless working groups of the intelligence community in
developing the plan.
(3) Support.--The Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of
the Air Force, and the Director of the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency shall each provide the Director such
information and support as the Director shall require for the
development of the plan.
(b) Development and Deployment.--In addition to the responsibility
under subsection (a), the Director of the Intelligence, Surveillance,
and Reconnaissance Task Force shall also coordinate funding, provide
acquisition oversight, coordinate system deployment, and synchronize
operational integration in support of combat operations for purposes of
the development and deployment of the capability described in that
subsection.
SEC. 928. COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS OF NETWORK FLOW DATA.
(a) Development of Technologies.--The Chief Information Officer of
the Department of Defense may, in coordination with the Under Secretary
of Defense for Policy and the Under Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence and acting through the Director of the Defense Information
Systems Agency (DISA), use the available funding and research
activities and capabilities of the Community Data Center of the Defense
Information Systems Agency to develop and demonstrate collection,
processing, and storage technologies for network flow data that--
(1) are potentially scalable to the volume used by Tier 1
Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to collect and analyze the
flow data across their networks;
(2) will substantially reduce the cost and complexity of
capturing and analyzing high volumes of flow data; and
(3) support the capability--
(A) to detect and identify cybersecurity threats,
networks of compromised computers, and command and
control sites used for managing illicit cyber
operations and receiving information from compromised
computers;
(B) track illicit cyber operations for attribution
of the source; and
(C) provide early warning and attack assessment of
offensive cyber operations.
(b) Coordination.--Any research and development required in the
development of the technologies described in subsection (a) shall be
conducted in cooperation with the heads of other appropriate
departments and agencies of the Federal Government and, whenever
feasible, Tier 1 Internet Service Providers.
SEC. 929. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE USE OF NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY CLOUD
COMPUTING DATABASE AND INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY CLOUD
COMPUTING INFRASTRUCTURE AND SERVICES.
(a) Limitation on Use of NSA Database.--
(1) Limitation.--No component of the Department of Defense
may utilize the cloud computing database developed by the
National Security Agency (NSA) called Accumulo after September
30, 2013, unless the Chief Information Officer of the
Department of Defense certifies one of the following:
(A) That there are no viable commercial open source
databases with extensive industry support (such as the
Apache Foundation HBase and Cassandra databases) that
have security features comparable to the Accumulo
database that are considered essential by the Chief
Information Officer for purposes of the certification
under this paragraph.
(B) That the Accumulo database has become a
successful Apache Foundation open source database with
adequate industry support and diversification, based on
criteria to be established by the Chief Information
Officer for purposes of the certification under this
paragraph and submitted to the appropriate committees
of Congress not later than January 1, 2013.
(2) Construction.--The limitation in paragraph (1) shall
not apply to the National Security Agency.
(b) Adaptation of Accumulo Security Features to HBase Database.--
The Director of the National Security Agency shall take appropriate
actions to ensure that companies and organizations developing and
supporting open source and commercial open source versions of the
Apache Foundation HBase and Cassandra databases, or similar systems,
receive technical assistance from government and contractor developers
of software code for the Accumulo database to enable adaptation and
integration of the security features of the Accumulo database.
(c) Coordination Regarding DoD Use of Intelligence Community Cloud
Computing Infrastructure and Services.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics, the Chief Information
Officer of the Department of Defense, and the Chief Information
Officer of each of the military departments shall coordinate
with the Director of National Intelligence and the Under
Secretary of Defense for Intelligence regarding the use of
cloud computing infrastructure and software services offered by
the intelligence community by components of the Department of
Defense for purposes other than intelligence analysis.
(2) Purpose.--The purpose of the coordination required by
paragraph (1) is to ensure that Department use of cloud
computing infrastructure and software services described in
that paragraph is cost-effective and consistent with the
Information Technology Efficiencies initiative, data center and
server consolidation plans, and cybersecurity requirements and
policies of the Department.
(d) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the Committees on Armed Services and Appropriations and
the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate; and
(2) the Committees on Armed Services and Appropriations and
the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of
Representatives.
SEC. 930. ELECTRO-OPTICAL IMAGERY.
(a) Sustainment of Collection Capacity.--The Secretary of Defense
and the Director of National Intelligence shall jointly take
appropriate actions to sustain through fiscal year 2013 the commercial
electro-optical imaging collection capacity that was planned under the
Enhanced View program approved in the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81) to be available to the
Department of Defense though the Service Level Agreements with
commercial data providers.
(b) Identification of Department of Defense Electro-optical Imagery
Requirements.--
(1) Report.--Not later than April 1, 2013, the Vice
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff shall submit to the
Director of the Congressional Budget Office a report setting
forth a comprehensive description of Department of Defense
peacetime and wartime requirements for electro-optical imagery
under current circumstances and under anticipated revisions of
strategy and budgetary constraints.
(2) Scope of requirements.--The requirements under
paragraph (1) shall--
(A) be expressed in such terms as daily regional
and global area coverage and number of point targets,
resolution, revisit rates, mean-time to access,
latency, redundancy, survivability, and diversity; and
(B) take into consideration all types of imagery
and collection means available.
(c) Assessment of Identified Requirements.--
(1) In general.--Not later than September 15, 2013, the
Director of the Congressional Budget Office shall submit to the
appropriate committees of Congress a report setting forth an
assessment by the Director of the report required by subsection
(b).
(2) Elements.--The assessment required by paragraph (1)
shall include an assessment of the following:
(A) The extent to which the requirements of the
Department for electro-optical imagery from space can
be satisfied by commercial companies using either--
(i) current designs; or
(ii) enhanced designs that could be
developed at low risk.
(B) Whether a reduction by half in the amounts
requested for the Enhanced View program for fiscal year
2013 from amounts requested for that program for fiscal
year 2012 is consistent with Presidential Space Policy
of June 2010, Presidential Policy Directive 4,
applicable provisions of the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (10.001(a)(3)(ii) and 12.101(a)-(b)), and
section 2377 of title 10, United States Code, regarding
preferences for procuring commercial capabilities and
modifying as necessary and feasible commercial
capabilities to meet government requirements, and for
modifying government requirements to a reasonable
extent to enable commercial or non-developmental
products to meet government needs.
(3) Consultation and other resources.--In preparing the
assessment required by paragraph (1), the Director shall--
(A) consult widely with appropriate individuals and
entities, including Members and committees of Congress,
the Office of Management and Budget and other agencies
and officials of the Government, private industry, and
academia; and
(B) make maximum use of existing studies and
modeling and simulations conducted by or on behalf of
Members and committees of Congress, the Joint Staff,
the Director of National Intelligence, the National
Reconnaissance Office, the National Geospatial-
Intelligence Agency, private industry, and academia.
(4) Access to information.--The Director of National
Intelligence and the Secretary of Defense shall each provide
the staff of the Director of the Congressional Budget Office
with such access to information and programs applicable to the
assessment required by paragraph (1) as the Director of the
Congressional Budget Office shall require for the preparation
of the assessment.
(d) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the Committees on Armed Services and Appropriations and
the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate; and
(2) the Committees on Armed Services and Appropriations and
the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of
Representatives.
(e) Funding.--In addition to any other amounts authorized to be
appropriated by this Act and available for Service Level Agreements
described in subsection (a), of the amounts authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2013 by section 301 for operation and
maintenance and available as specified in the funding table in section
4301, $125,000,000 is available for such Service Level Agreements.
SEC. 931. SOFTWARE LICENSES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Audits.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, and every two years thereafter, the Chief
Information Officer of the Department of the Defense shall, in
consultation with chief information officers of the military
departments and the Defense Agencies--
(1) conduct an inventory of all existing software licenses
in favor of the Department of Defense, including licenses in
use and licenses not in use, on an application-by-application
basis;
(2) compare the number of software licenses in use, and the
manner of their use by Department employees, with the number of
software licenses available to the Department and the product
use rights contained in such licenses;
(3) assess the needs of the Department and the components
of the Department for software licenses during the two fiscal
years next following the date of the completion of the
inventory; and
(4) determine means by which the Department can achieve the
greatest possible economies of scale and cost-savings in the
procurement, use, and optimization of software licenses.
(b) Performance Plan.--
(1) In general.--If the Chief Information Officer
determines through an inventory conducted under subsection (a)
that the number of existing software licenses, on an
application-by-application basis, of the Department and the
components of the Department exceeds the needs of the
Department for such software licenses, the Secretary of Defense
shall, not later than 90 days after the date of the completion
of such inventory, implement a plan to bring the number of
software licenses, on an application-by-application basis, into
balance with the needs of the Department.
(2) Exceptions.--The Chief Information Officer may exempt
from coverage under a plan under paragraph (1) such
applications or categories of applications as the Chief
Information Officer considers appropriate. Immediately upon
finalizing the applications or categories of applications to be
exempt from coverage under a plan, the Chief Information
Officer shall submit to the congressional defense committees a
report (in classified form, if required) setting forth the
applications or categories of applications to be exempt from
coverage under the plan.
SEC. 932. DEFENSE CLANDESTINE SERVICE.
(a) Prohibition on Use of Funds for Additional Personnel.--Amounts
authorized to be appropriated by this Act for the Military Intelligence
Program (MIP) may not be obligated or expended to provide for a number
of personnel conducting or supporting human intelligence within the
Department of Defense in excess of the number of such personnel as of
April 20, 2012.
(b) CAPE Report on Costs.--Not later than 120 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Director of Cost Assessment and
Program Evaluation of the Department of Defense shall submit to the
appropriate committees of Congress an independent estimate of the costs
of the Defense Clandestine Service, whether funded through the Military
Intelligence Program or the National Intelligence Program, including an
estimate of the costs over the period of the current future-years
defense program and an estimate of the out year costs.
(c) USDI Report on DCS.--
(1) Report required.--Not later than February 1, 2013, the
Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence shall submit to the
appropriate committees of Congress a report on the Defense
Clandestine Service.
(2) Elements.--The report under paragraph (1) shall include
the following:
(A) A detailed description of the location and
schedule for current and anticipated deployments of
case officers trained under the Field Tradecraft
Course, whether overseas or domestically, and a
certification whether or not such deployments can be
accommodated and supported.
(B) A statement of the objectives for the effective
management of case officers trained under the Field
Tradecraft Course for each of the Armed Forces, the
Defense Intelligence Agency, and the United States
Special Operations Command, including objectives on
numbers of tours requiring training in the Field
Tradecraft Course and objectives for management of
career tracks and case officer covers.
(C) A statement of the manner in which each Armed
Force, the Defense Intelligence Agency, and the United
States Special Operations Command will each achieve the
objectives applicable thereto under subparagraph (B).
(D) A copy of any memoranda of understanding or
memoranda of agreement between the Department of
Defense and other departments and agencies of the
United States Government, or between components or
elements of the Department of Defense, that are
required to implement objectives for the Defense
Clandestine Service.
(d) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) The term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(A) the Committees on Armed Services and
Appropriations and the Select Committee on Intelligence
of the Senate; and
(B) the Committees on Armed Services and
Appropriations and the Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence of the House of Representatives.
(2) The term ``future-years defense program'' means the
future-years defense program under section 221 of title 10,
United States Code.
SEC. 933. AUTHORITY FOR SHORT-TERM EXTENSION OF LEASE FOR AIRCRAFT
SUPPORTING THE BLUE DEVIL INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND
RECONNAISSANCE PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding section 2401 of title 10, United
States Code, the Secretary of the Air Force may extend or renew the
lease of aircraft supporting the Blue Devil intelligence, surveillance,
and reconnaissance program after the date of the expiration of the
current lease of such aircraft for a term that is the shorter of--
(1) the period beginning on the date of the expiration of
the current lease and ending on the date on which the Commander
of the United States Central Command notifies the Secretary
that a substitute is available for the capabilities provided by
the lease, or that the capabilities provided by such aircraft
are no longer required; or
(2) six months.
(b) Funding.--Amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year
2013 by title XV and available for Overseas Contingency Operations for
operation and maintenance as specified in the funding tables in section
4302 may be available for the extension or renewal of the lease
authorized by subsection (a).
SEC. 934. SENSE OF SENATE ON POTENTIAL SECURITY RISKS TO DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE NETWORKS.
(a) Findings.--The Senate makes the following findings:
(1) Cybersecurity threats are pervasive and serious,
including through the supply chain of information technology
equipment and software.
(2) Semiconductor manufacturing is already dominated by
foreign producers, presenting supply chain risk management
challenges.
(3) In a number of instances, foreign manufacturers of
telecommunications equipment, including advanced wireless
technology, are gaining global market share due to high quality
and low prices. Competitive market forces ensure that
commercial providers of consumer, business, and government
systems and services will choose equipment and associated
software from these manufacturers. In some cases, like Huawei
Industries, this competitive position stems in part from
inappropriate government subsidies and other forms of
assistance.
(4) Some of these companies also present clear
cybersecurity supply chain risks that the Government must
address.
(5) The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States has blocked the attempt by Huawei to acquire United
States technology firms on two occasions and the National
Security Agency and the Secretary of Commerce have advised two
major United States telecommunications carriers against
selecting Huawei as a supplier.
(6) The Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383) provided authority and
mechanisms for the Secretary of Defense to control these supply
chain risks, but only for National Security Systems, leaving
many information technology systems and missions exposed to
supply chain risks.
(7) Blocking sales from providers of information technology
systems and services due to concerns about cybersecurity risks,
while maintaining our commitment to free trade and fair and
transparent competition, poses difficult policy challenges.
(b) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that the
Department of Defense--
(1) must ensure it maintains full visibility and adequate
control of its supply chain, including subcontractors, in order
to mitigate supply chain exploitation; and
(2) needs the authority and capability to mitigate supply
chain risks to its information technology systems that fall
outside the scope of National Security Systems.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
SEC. 941. NATIONAL LANGUAGE SERVICE CORPS.
(a) Authority To Establish.--The David L. Boren National Security
Education Act of 1991 (50 U.S.C. 1901 et seq.) is amended by adding at
the end the following new section:
``SEC. 813. NATIONAL LANGUAGE SERVICE CORPS.
``(a) Establishment.--(1) The Secretary of Defense may establish
and maintain within the Department of Defense a National Language
Service Corps (in this section referred to as the `Corps').
``(2) The purpose of the Corps is to provide a pool of personnel
with foreign language skills who, as provided in regulations prescribed
under this section, agree to provide foreign language services to the
Department of Defense or another department or agency of the United
States.
``(b) National Security Education Board.--If the Corps is
established, the Secretary shall provide for the National Security
Education Board to oversee and coordinate the activities of the Corps
to such extent and in such manner as determined by the Secretary under
paragraph (9) of section 803(d).
``(c) Membership.--To be eligible for membership in the Corps, a
person must be a citizen of the United States authorized by law to be
employed in the United States, have attained the age of 18 years, and
possess such foreign language skills as the Secretary considers
appropriate for membership in the Corps. Members of the Corps may
include employees of the Federal Government and of State and local
governments.
``(d) Training.--The Secretary may provide members of the Corps
such training as the Secretary prescribes for purposes of this section.
``(e) Service.--Upon a determination that it is in the national
interests of the United States, the Secretary shall call upon members
of the Corps to provide foreign language services to the Department of
Defense or another department or agency of the United States.
``(f) Funding.--The Secretary may impose fees, in amounts up to
full-cost recovery, for language services and technical assistance
rendered by members of the Corps. Amounts of fees received under this
section shall be credited to the account of the Department providing
funds for any costs incurred by the Department in connection with the
Corps. Amounts so credited to such account shall be merged with amounts
in such account, and shall be available to the same extent, and subject
to the same conditions and limitations, as amounts in such account. Any
amounts so credited shall remain available until expended.''.
(b) National Security Education Board Matters.--
(1) Composition.--Subsection (b) of section 803 of such Act
(50 U.S.C. 1903) is amended--
(A) by striking paragraph (5);
(B) by redesignating paragraphs (6) and (7) as
paragraphs (8) and (9), respectively; and
(C) by inserting after paragraph (4) the following
new paragraphs:
``(5) The Secretary of Homeland Security.
``(6) The Secretary of Energy.
``(7) The Director of National Intelligence.''.
(2) Functions.--Subsection (d) of such section is amended
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(9) To the extent provided by the Secretary of Defense,
oversee and coordinate the activities of the National Language
Service Corps under section 813, including--
``(A) identifying and assessing on a periodic basis
the needs of the departments and agencies of the
Federal Government for personnel with skills in various
foreign languages;
``(B) establishing plans to address foreign
language shortfalls and requirements of the departments
and agencies of the Federal Government;
``(C) recommending effective ways to increase
public awareness of the need for foreign languages
skills and career paths in the Federal government that
use those skills;
``(D) coordinating activities with Executive
agencies and State and Local governments to develop
interagency plans and agreements to address overall
foreign language shortfalls and to utilize personnel to
address the various types of crises that warrant
foreign language skills; and
``(E) proposing to the Secretary regulations to
carry out section 813.''.
SEC. 942. REPORT ON EDUCATION AND TRAINING AND PROMOTION RATES FOR
PILOTS OF REMOTELY PILOTED AIRCRAFT.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than January 31, 2013, the
Secretary of the Air Force and the Chief of Staff of the Air Force
shall jointly submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on education and training and promotion rates for Air Force pilots of
remotely piloted aircraft (RPA).
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
the following:
(1) A detailed analysis of the reasons for persistently
lower average education and training and promotion rates for
Air Force pilots of remotely piloted aircraft.
(2) An assessment of the long-term impact on the Air Force
of the sustainment of such lower rates
(3) A plan to raise such rates, including--
(A) a description of the near-term and longer-term
actions the Air Force intends to undertake to implement
the plan; and
(B) an analysis of the potential direct and
indirect impacts of the plan on the achievement and
sustainment of the combat air patrol objectives of the
Air Force for remotely piloted aircraft.
TITLE X--GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Financial Matters
SEC. 1001. GENERAL TRANSFER AUTHORITY.
(a) Authority To Transfer Authorizations.--
(1) Authority.--Upon determination by the Secretary of
Defense that such action is necessary in the national interest,
the Secretary may transfer amounts of authorizations made
available to the Department of Defense in this division for
fiscal year 2013 between any such authorizations for that
fiscal year (or any subdivisions thereof). Amounts of
authorizations so transferred shall be merged with and be
available for the same purposes as the authorization to which
transferred.
(2) Limitation.--Except as provided in paragraph (3), the
total amount of authorizations that the Secretary may transfer
under the authority of this section may not exceed
$5,000,000,000.
(3) Exception for transfers between military personnel
authorizations.--A transfer of funds between military personnel
authorizations under title IV shall not be counted toward the
dollar limitation in paragraph (2).
(b) Limitations.--The authority provided by this section to
transfer authorizations--
(1) may only be used to provide authority for items that
have a higher priority than the items from which authority is
transferred; and
(2) may not be used to provide authority for an item that
has been denied authorization by Congress.
(c) Effect on Authorization Amounts.--A transfer made from one
account to another under the authority of this section shall be deemed
to increase the amount authorized for the account to which the amount
is transferred by an amount equal to the amount transferred.
(d) Notice to Congress.--The Secretary shall promptly notify
Congress of each transfer made under subsection (a).
SEC. 1002. AUTHORITY TO TRANSFER FUNDS TO THE NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY
ADMINISTRATION TO SUSTAIN NUCLEAR WEAPONS MODERNIZATION.
(a) Transfer Authorized.--If the amount authorized to be
appropriated for the weapons activities of the National Nuclear
Security Administration for fiscal year 2013 in section 3101 is less
than $7,900,000,000 (the amount projected to be required for such
activities in fiscal year 2013 as specified in the report under section
1251 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010
(Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2549)), the Secretary of Defense may
transfer, from amounts authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2013 pursuant to this Act, to the Secretary
of Energy an amount, not to exceed $150,000,000, to be available only
for weapons activities of the National Nuclear Security Administration.
(b) Notice to Congress.--In the event of a transfer under
subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall promptly notify Congress
of the transfer, and shall include in such notice the Department of
Defense account or accounts from which funds are transferred.
(c) Transfer Mechanism.--Any funds transferred under this section
shall be transferred in accordance with established procedures for
reprogramming under section 1001 or successor provisions of law.
(d) Construction of Authority.--The transfer authority provided
under subsection (a) is in addition to any other transfer authority
provided under this Act.
SEC. 1003. AUDIT READINESS OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE STATEMENTS OF
BUDGETARY RESOURCES.
(a) Objective.--Section 1003(a)(2)(A)(ii) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat.
2439; 10 U.S.C. 2222 note) is amended by inserting ``, and the
statement of budgetary resources of the Department of Defense is
validated as ready for audit by not later than September 30, 2014''
after ``September 30, 2017''.
(b) Affordable and Sustainable Approach.--
(1) In general.--The Chief Management Officer of the
Department of Defense and the Chief Management Officers of each
of the military departments shall ensure that plans to achieve
an auditable statement of budgetary resources of the Department
of Defense by September 30, 2014, include appropriate steps to
minimize one-time fixes and manual work-arounds, are
sustainable and affordable, and will not delay full
auditability of financial statements.
(2) Additional elements in fiar plan report.--Each semi-
annual report on the Financial Improvement and Audit Readiness
Plan of the Department of Defense submitted by the Under
Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) under section 1003(b) of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 during
the period beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act
and ending on September 30, 2014, shall include the following:
(A) A description of the actions taken by the
military departments pursuant to paragraph (1).
(B) A determination by the Chief Management Officer
of each military department whether or not such
military department is able to achieve an auditable
statement of budgetary resources by September 30, 2014,
without an unaffordable or unsustainable level of one-
time fixes and manual work-arounds and without delaying
the full auditability of the financial statements of
such military department.
(C) If the Chief Management Officer of a military
department determines under subparagraph (B) that the
military department is not able to achieve an auditable
statement of budgetary resources by September 30, 2014,
as described in that subparagraph--
(i) an explanation why the military
department is unable to meet the deadline;
(ii) an alternative deadline by which the
military department will achieve an auditable
statement of budgetary resources;
(iii) a description of the plan of the
military department for meeting the alternative
deadline.
SEC. 1004. REPORT ON EFFECTS OF BUDGET SEQUESTRATION ON THE DEPARTMENT
OF DEFENSE.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The inability of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit
Reduction to find $1,200,000,000,000 in savings will trigger
automatic funding reductions known as ``sequestration'' to the
Department of Defense of $492,000,000,000 between 2013 and 2021
under section 251A of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit
Control Act of 1985 (2 USC 901a).
(2) These reductions are in addition to reductions of
$487,000,000,000 already being implemented by the Department of
Defense, and would decrease the readiness and capabilities of
the Armed Forces while increasing risks to the effective
implementation of the National Security Strategy of the United
States.
(3) The leaders of the Department of Defense have
consistently testified that threats to the national security of
the United States have increased, not decreased. Secretary of
Defense Leon Panetta said that these reductions would ``inflict
severe damage to our national defense for generations'',
comments that have been echoed by the Secretaries of the Army,
Navy, and Air Force.
(4) While reductions in funds available for the Department
of Defense will automatically commence January 2, 2013,
uncertainty regarding the reductions has already exacerbated
Department of Defense efforts to plan future defense budget.
(5) Sequestration will have a detrimental effect on the
industrial base that supports the Department of Defense.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than August 15, 2012, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a
detailed report on the impact on the Department of Defense of
the sequestration of funds authorized and appropriated for
fiscal year 2013 for the Department of Defense, if
automatically triggered on January 2, 2013, under section 251A
of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of
1985.
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) An assessment of the potential impact of
sequestration on the readiness of the Armed Forces,
including impacts to steaming hours, flying hours, and
full spectrum training miles, and an estimate of the
increase or decrease in readiness (as defined in the C
status C-1 through C-5).
(B) An assessment of the potential impact of
sequestration on the ability of the Department of
Defense to carry out the National Military Strategy of
the United States, and any changes to the most recent
Risk Assessment of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff under section 153(b) of title 10, United States
Code arising from sequestration.
(C) A list of the programs, projects, and
activities across the Department of Defense, the
military departments, and the elements and components
of the Department of Defense that would be reduced or
terminated as a result of sequestration.
(D) An estimate of the number and value of all
contracts that will be terminated, restructured, or
revised in scope as a result of sequestration,
including an estimate of potential termination costs
and of increased contract costs due to renegotiation
and reinstatement of contracts.
(3) Assumptions.--The report required by paragraph (1)
shall assume the following:
(A) Except as provided in subparagraph (B), the
funds subject to sequester are the funds in all 050
accounts, including all unobligated balances.
(B) The funds exempt from the sequester are the
following:
(i) Funds in accounts for military
personnel.
(ii) Funds in accounts for overseas
contingency operations.
(4) Presentation of certain information.--In listing
programs, projects, and activities under paragraph (2)(C), the
report required by paragraph (1) shall set forth for each the
following:
(A) The most specific level of budget item
identified in applicable appropriations Acts.
(B) Related classified annexes and explanatory
statements.
(C) Department of Defense budget justification
documents DOD P-1 and R-1 as subsequently modified by
congressional action, and as submitted by the
Department of Defense together with the budget
materials for the budget of the President for fiscal
year 2013 (as submitted to Congress pursuant to section
1105(a) of title 31, United States Code).
(D) Department of Defense document O-1 for
operation and maintenance accounts for fiscal year
2013, for which purpose the term ``program, project, or
activity'' means the budget activity account and sub
account for the program, project, or activity as
submitted in such document O-1.
Subtitle B--Counter-Drug Activities
SEC. 1011. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR JOINT TASK FORCES TO PROVIDE
SUPPORT TO LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES CONDUCTING COUNTER-
TERRORISM ACTIVITIES.
Section 1022(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2004 (10 U.S.C. 371 note) is amended by striking ``2012''
and inserting ``2013''.
SEC. 1012. REQUIREMENT FOR BIENNIAL CERTIFICATION ON PROVISION OF
SUPPORT FOR COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES TO CERTAIN FOREIGN
GOVERNMENTS.
Section 1033 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 1998 (Public Law 105-85; 111 Stat. 1881), as most recently amended
by section 1006 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1557), is further amended--
(1) in subsection (f)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``the written
certification described in subsection (g) for that
fiscal year.'' and inserting ``a written certification
described in subsection (g) applicable to that fiscal
year. The first such certification with respect to any
such government may apply only to a period of one
fiscal year. Subsequent certifications with respect to
any such government may apply to a period of not to
exceed two fiscal years.''; and
(B) in paragraph (4)(B), by striking ``The
Committee on National Security and the Committee on
International Relations of the House of
Representatives'' and inserting ``The Committee on
Armed Services and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of
the House of Representatives''; and
(2) in subsection (g), in the matter preceding paragraph
(1)--
(A) by striking ``The written'' and inserting ``A
written''; and
(B) by striking ``for a fiscal year'' and all that
follows through the colon and inserting ``with respect
to a government to receive support under this section
for any period of time is a certification of each of
the following with respect to that government:''.
SEC. 1013. AUTHORITY TO SUPPORT THE UNIFIED COUNTERDRUG AND
COUNTERTERRORISM CAMPAIGN IN COLOMBIA.
(a) Authority.--
(1) In general.--Of the amounts authorized to be
appropriated by section 1404 for the Department of Defense for
drug interdiction and counter-drug activities, Defense-wide for
fiscal year 2013, not more than $50,000,000 may be used by the
Secretary of Defense to provide in support of a unified
campaign by the Government of Colombia against narcotics
trafficking and against terrorist organizations (as designated
by the Secretary of State) in Colombia the following:
(A) Logistics support, services, and supplies.
(B) The types of support authorized under section
1004(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 1991 (10 U.S.C. 374 note).
(C) The types of support authorized under section
1033(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 1998 (Public Law 105-85).
(2) Scope of authority.--The authority to provide
assistance for a campaign under this subsection includes
authority to take actions to protect human health and welfare
in emergency circumstances, including the undertaking of rescue
operations.
(b) Assistance Otherwise Prohibited by Law.--The Secretary of
Defense may not use the authority in subsection (a) to provide any type
of assistance described in this subsection that is otherwise prohibited
by any provision of law.
(c) Limitation on Participation of United States Personnel.--No
United States Armed Forces personnel, United States civilian employees,
or United States civilian contractor personnel employed by the United
States may participate in any combat operation in connection with
assistance using funds pursuant to the authority in subsection (a),
except for the purpose of acting in self defense or of rescuing any
United States citizen, including any United States Armed Forces
personnel, United States civilian employee, or civilian contractor
employed by the United States.
(d) Relation to Other Authorities.--The authority provided by
subsection (a) is in addition to any other authority in law to provide
assistance to the Government of Colombia.
(e) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than November 1 following any
fiscal year in which the Secretary of Defense provides support
under subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report setting forth the
following:
(A) A description of the support provided,
including--
(i) a description of the support;
(ii) the cost of the support;
(iii) a list of the Colombia units to which
support was provided; and
(iv) a list of the Colombia operations
supported.
(B) Guidance for future Department of Defense
support for a unified campaign by the Government of
Colombia against narcotics trafficking and terrorism.
(2) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1014. QUARTERLY REPORTS ON USE OF FUNDS IN THE DRUG INTERDICTION
AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE-WIDE ACCOUNT.
(a) Quarterly Reports on Expenditures of Funds.--Not later than 60
days after the end of each fiscal year quarter, the Secretary of
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
setting forth a description of the expenditure of funds, by project
code, from the Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-
wide account during such fiscal year quarter, including expenditures of
funds in direct or indirect support of the counter-drug activities of
foreign governments.
(b) Information on Support of Counter-drug Activities of Foreign
Governments.--The information in a report under subsection (a) on
direct or indirect support of the counter-drug activities of foreign
governments shall include, for each foreign government so supported,
the following:
(1) The total amount of assistance provided to, or expended
on behalf of, the foreign government.
(2) A description of the types of counter-drug activities
conducted using the assistance.
(3) An explanation of the legal authority under which the
assistance was provided.
(c) Cessation of Requirement.--No report shall be required under
subsection (a) for any fiscal year quarter beginning on or after
October 1, 2017.
(d) Repeal of Obsolete Authority.--Section 1022 of the Floyd D.
Spence National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (as
enacted into law by Public Law 106-398) is repealed.
Subtitle C--Naval Vessels and Shipyards
SEC. 1021. RETIREMENT OF NAVAL VESSELS.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Chief of Naval Operations shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report that sets forth a
comprehensive description of the current requirements of the Navy for
combatant vessels of the Navy, including submarines.
(b) Additional Report Element if Less Than 313 Vessels Required.--
If the number of combatant vessels for the Navy (including submarines)
specified as being required in the report under subsection (a) is less
than 313 combatant vessels, the report shall include a justification
for the number of vessels specified as being so required and the
rationale by which the number of vessels is considered consistent with
applicable strategic guidance issued by the President and the Secretary
of Defense in 2012.
SEC. 1022. TERMINATION OF A MARITIME PREPOSITIONING SHIP SQUADRON.
(a) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 60 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Chief of Naval Operations and
the Commandant of the Marine Corps shall jointly submit to the
congressional defense committees a report setting forth an
assessment of the Marine Corps Prepositioning Program-Norway
and the capability of that program to address any readiness
gaps that will be created by the termination of Maritime
Prepositioning Ship Squadron One in the Mediterranean.
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) A detailed description of the time required to
transfer stockpiles onto Navy vessels for use in
contingency operations.
(B) A comparison of the response time of the Marine
Corps Prepositioning Program-Norway with the current
response time of Maritime Prepositioning Ship Squadron
One.
(C) A description of the equipment stored in the
stockpiles of the Marine Corps Prepositioning Program-
Norway, and an assessment of the differences, if any,
between that equipment and the equipment of a Maritime
Prepositioning Ship squadron.
(D) A description and assessment of the current age
and state of maintenance of the equipment of the Marine
Corps Maritime Prepositioning Program-Norway.
(E) A plan to address the equipment shortages and
modernization needs of the Marine Corps Maritime
Prepositioning Program-Norway.
(b) Limitation on Availability of Funds.--Amounts authorized to be
appropriated by this Act may not be obligated or expended to terminate
a Maritime Prepositioning Ship squadron until the date of the submittal
to the congressional defense committees of the report required by
subsection (a).
SEC. 1023. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON RECAPITALIZATION FOR THE NAVY AND COAST
GUARD.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) More than 70 percent of the world's surface is
comprised of navigable oceans.
(2) More than 80 percent of the population of the world
lives within 100 miles of an ocean.
(3) More than 90 percent of the world's commerce traverses
an oceans.
(4) The national security of the United States is
inextricably linked to the maintenance of global freedom of
access for both the strategic and commercial interests of the
United States.
(5) To maintain that freedom of access the sea services of
the United States, composed of the Navy, the Marine Corps, and
the Coast Guard, must be sufficiently positioned as
rotationally globally deployable forces with the capability to
decisively defend United States citizens, homeland, and
interests abroad from direct or asymmetric attack and must be
comprised of sufficient vessels to maintain global freedom of
action.
(6) To achieve appropriate capabilities to ensure national
security the Government of the United States must continue to
recapitalize the fleets of the Navy and Coast Guard and must
continue to conduct vital maintenance and repair of existing
vessels to ensure such vessels meet service life goals.
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the sea services of the United States should be funded
and maintained to provide the broad spectrum of capabilities
required to protect the national security of the United States;
(2) such capabilities should include--
(A) the ability to project United States power
rapidly anywhere on the globe without the need for host
nation basing permission or long and potentially
vulnerable logistics supply lines;
(B) the ability to land and recover maritime forces
from the sea for direct combat action, to evacuate
United States citizens from hostile situations, and to
provide humanitarian assistance where needed;
(C) the ability to operate from the subsurface with
overpowering conventional combat power, as well as
strategic deterrence; and
(D) the ability to operate in collaboration with
United States maritime partners in the common interest
of preventing piracy at sea and maintaining the
commercial sea lanes available for global commerce;
(3) the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the
Secretary of the Navy, should maintain the recapitalization
plans for the Navy as a priority in all future force structure
decisions; and
(4) the Secretary of Homeland Security should maintain the
recapitalization plans for the Coast Guard as a priority in all
future force structure decisions.
Subtitle D--Counterterrorism
SEC. 1031. EXTENSION OF CERTAIN PROHIBITIONS AND REQUIREMENTS RELATING
TO DETAINEES AT UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION, GUANTANAMO
BAY, CUBA.
(a) Prohibition on Use of Funds to Construct or Modify Facilities
in US for Transfer of Detainees.--Section 1026(a) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125
Stat. 1566) is amended by inserting ``or 2013'' after ``fiscal year
2012''.
(b) Requirements for Certifications on Transfers of Detainees to
Foreign Countries or Entities.--Section 1028(a)(1) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (125 Stat. 1567; 10
U.S.C. 801 note) is amended by inserting ``or 2013'' after ``fiscal
year 2012''.
Subtitle E--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations
SEC. 1041. ENHANCEMENT OF RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE CHAIRMAN OF THE JOINT
CHIEFS OF STAFF REGARDING THE NATIONAL MILITARY STRATEGY.
(a) In General.--Subsection (b) of section 153 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(b) National Military Strategy.--
``(1) National military strategy.--(A) The Chairman shall
determine each even-numbered year whether to prepare a new
National Military Strategy in accordance with this subparagraph
or to update a strategy previously prepared in accordance with
this subsection. The Chairman shall complete preparation of the
National Military Strategy or update in time for transmittal to
Congress pursuant to paragraph (3), including in time for
inclusion of the report of the Secretary of Defense, if any,
under paragraph (4).
``(B) Each National Military Strategy (or update) under
this paragraph shall be based on a comprehensive review
conducted by the Chairman in conjunction with the other members
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the commanders of the unified
and specified combatant commands.
``(C) Each National Military Strategy (or update) submitted
under this paragraph shall refer to and support each of the
following:
``(i) The most recent National Security Strategy
prescribed by the President pursuant to section 108 of
the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 404a).
``(ii) The most recent annual report of the
Secretary of Defense submitted to the President and
Congress pursuant to section 113 of this title.
``(iii) The most recent Quadrennial Defense Review
conducted by the Secretary of Defense pursuant to
section 118 of this title.
``(iv) Any other national security or defense
strategic guidance issued by the President or the
Secretary of Defense.
``(D) Each National Military Strategy (or update) submitted
under this paragraph shall do the following:
``(i) Describe the strategic environment and the
opportunities and challenges that affect United States
national interests and United States national security.
``(ii) Describe the threats, such as international,
regional, transnational, hybrid, terrorism, cyber-
attack, weapons of mass destruction, asymmetric
challenges, and any other categories of threats
identified by the Chairman, to the United States
national security.
``(iii) Identify the United States national
military objectives and the relationship of those
objectives to the strategic environment and to the
threats described under clause (ii).
``(iv) Identify the operational concepts, missions,
tasks, or activities necessary to support the
achievement of the objectives identified under clause
(iii).
``(v) Identify the fiscal, budgetary, and resource
environments and conditions that, in the assessment of
the Chairman, impact the strategy.
``(vi) Identify the implications of current force
planning and sizing constructs for the strategy.
``(vii) Identify and assess the capacity,
capabilities, and availability of United States forces
(including both the regular and reserve components) to
support the execution of missions required by the
strategy.
``(viii) Identify areas in which the armed forces
intends to engage and synchronize with other
departments and agencies of the United States
Government contributing to the execution of missions
required by the strategy.
``(ix) Identify and assess potential areas in which
the armed forces could be augmented by contributions
from alliances (such as the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO)), international allies, or other
friendly nations in the execution of missions required
by the strategy.
``(x) Identify and assess the requirements for
contractor support to the armed forces for conducting
training, peacekeeping, overseas contingency
operations, and other major combat operations under the
strategy.
``(xi) Identify the assumptions made with respect
to each of clauses (i) through (x).
``(E) Each update to a National Military Strategy under
this paragraph shall address only those parts of the most
recent National Military Strategy for which the Chairman
determines, on the basis of a comprehensive review conducted in
conjunction with the other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
and the commanders of the combatant commands, that a
modification is needed.
``(2) Risk assessment.--(A) The Chairman shall prepare each
year an assessment of the risks associated with the most
current National Military Strategy (or update) under paragraph
(1). The risk assessment shall be known as the `Risk Assessment
of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff'. The Chairman
shall complete preparation of the Risk Assessment in time for
transmittal to Congress pursuant to paragraph (3), including in
time for inclusion of the report of the Secretary of Defense,
if any, under paragraph (4).
``(B) The Risk Assessment shall do the following:
``(i) As the Chairman considers appropriate, update
any changes to the strategic environment, threats,
objectives, force planning and sizing constructs,
assessments, and assumptions in the National Military
Strategy.
``(ii) Identify and define the strategic risks to
United States interests and the military risks in
executing the missions of the National Military
Strategy.
``(iii) Identify and define levels of risk
distinguishing between the concepts of probability and
consequences, including an identification of what
constitutes `significant' risk in the judgment of the
Chairman.
``(iv) Identify and assess risk in the National
Military Strategy by category and level and the ways in
which risk might manifest itself, including how risk is
projected to increase, decrease, or remain stable over
time, and, for each category of risk, assess the extent
to which current or future risk increases, decreases,
or is stable as a result of budgetary priorities,
tradeoffs, or fiscal constraints or limitations as
currently estimated and applied in the most current
future-years defense program under section 221 of this
title.
``(v) Identify and assess risk associated with the
assumptions or plans of the National Military Strategy
about the contributions or support of--
``(I) other departments and agencies of the
United States Government (including their
capabilities and availability);
``(II) alliances, allies, and other
friendly nations, (including their
capabilities, availability, and
interoperability); and
``(III) contractors.
``(vi) Identify and assess the critical
deficiencies and strengths in force capabilities
(including manpower, logistics, intelligence, and
mobility support) identified during the preparation and
review of the contingency plans of each unified
combatant command, and identify and assess the effect
of such deficiencies and strengths for the National
Military Strategy.
``(3) Submittal of national military strategy and risk
assessment to congress.--(A) Not later than February 15 of each
even-numbered year, the Chairman shall, through the Secretary
of Defense, submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the
Senate and the House of Representatives the National Military
Strategy or update, if any, prepared under paragraph (1) in
such year.
``(B) Not later than February 15 each year, the Chairman
shall, through the Secretary of Defense, submit to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives the Risk Assessment prepared under paragraph
(2) in such year.
``(4) Secretary of defense reports to congress.--(A) In
transmitting a National Military Strategy (or update) or Risk
Assessment to Congress pursuant to paragraph (3), the Secretary
of Defense shall include in the transmittal such comments of
the Secretary thereon, if any, as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
``(B) If the Risk Assessment transmitted under paragraph
(3) in a year includes an assessment that a risk or risks
associated with the National Military Strategy (or update) are
significant, or that critical deficiencies in force
capabilities exist for a contingency plan described in
paragraph (2)(B)(vi), the Secretary shall include in the
transmittal of the Risk Assessment the plan of the Secretary
for mitigating such risk or deficiency. A plan for mitigating
risk of deficiency under this subparagraph shall--
``(i) address the risk assumed in the National
Military Strategy (or update) concerned, and the
additional actions taken or planned to be taken to
address such risk using only current technology and
force structure capabilities; and
``(ii) specify, for each risk addressed, the extent
of, and a schedule for expected mitigation of, such
risk, and an assessment of the potential for residual
risk, if any, after mitigation.''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--Such section is further amended by
striking subsection (d).
SEC. 1042. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY ON TRAINING OF SPECIAL OPERATIONS
FORCES WITH FRIENDLY FOREIGN FORCES.
(a) Authority To Pay for Minor Military Construction in Connection
With Training.--Subsection (a) of section 2011 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(4) Expenses of minor military construction directly
related to that training with such expenses payable from
amounts available to the commander for unspecified minor
military construction, except that--
``(A) the amount of any project for which such
expenses are so payable may not exceed $250,000; and
``(B) the total amount of such expenses so paid in
any fiscal year may not exceed $2,000,000.''.
(b) Purposes of Training.--Subsection (b) of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``(b) Purposes of Training.--The purposes of the training for which
payment may be made under subsection (a) shall be as follows:
``(1) To train the special operations forces of the
combatant command.
``(2) In the case of a commander of a combatant command
having a geographic area of responsibility, to train the
military forces and other security forces of a friendly foreign
country in a manner consistent with the Theater Campaign Plan
of the commander for that geographic area.''.
(c) Prior Approval.--Subsection (c) of such section is amended by
inserting before the period at the end of the second sentence the
following: ``, or, in the case of training activities carried out after
the date of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2013, the approval of the Secretary of Defense, in
coordination with the Secretary of State''.
(d) Reports.--Subsection (e) of such section is amended--
(1) in paragraph (3)--
(A) by inserting ``or other security'' after
``foreign'' the first place it appears; and
(B) by striking ``foreign military personnel'' and
inserting ``such foreign personnel'';
(2) in paragraph (4)--
(A) by striking ``and military training
activities'' and inserting ``military training
activities''; and
(B) by inserting before the period at the end the
following: ``, and training programs sponsored by the
Department of State'';
(3) by redesignating paragraph (6) as paragraph (7); and
(4) by inserting after paragraph (5) the following new
paragraph (6):
``(6) A description of any minor military construction
projects for which expenses were paid, including a
justification of the benefits of each such project to training
under this section.''.
(e) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take
effect on the of the enactment of this Act. The amendments made by
subsection (d) shall apply with respect to any reports submitted under
subsection (e) of section 2011 of title 10, United States Code (as so
amended), after that date.
SEC. 1043. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE ASSURED BUSINESS
GUARANTEES TO CARRIERS PARTICIPATING IN CIVIL RESERVE AIR
FLEET.
(a) Extension.--Subsection (k) of section 9515 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by striking ``December 31, 2015'' and inserting
``December 31, 2020''.
(b) Application to All Segments of CRAF.--Such section is further
amended--
(1) in subsection (a)(3), by striking ``passenger''; and
(2) in subsection (j), by striking ``, except that it only
means such transportation for which the Secretary of Defense
has entered into a contract for the purpose of passenger
travel''.
SEC. 1044. PARTICIPATION OF VETERANS IN THE TRANSITION ASSISTANCE
PROGRAM OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) In General.--Each veteran, during the one-year period beginning
on the date on which the veteran is discharged or separated from
service in the Armed Forces, shall be authorized to participate in the
Transition Assistance Program (TAP) of the Department of Defense.
(b) Scope of Authorized Participation.--As part of their
participation in the Transition Assistance Program pursuant to this
section, veterans shall be authorized to receive the following:
(1) Transition assistance counseling under the program at
any military installation at which transition assistance
counseling is being provided to members of the Armed Forces
under the program.
(2) Ongoing access to the electronic materials and
information provided as part of the Transition Assistance
Program, including access after the end of the one-year period
of participation under subsection (a).
(c) Memorandum of Understanding.--The Secretary of Defense and the
Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall enter into a memorandum of
understanding regarding the participation of veterans in the Transition
Assistance Program pursuant to this section. The memorandum of
understanding shall provide for the access of veterans to military
installations for purposes of participation in the Transition
Assistance Program and such other matters as such Secretaries jointly
consider appropriate for purposes of this section.
(d) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) The term ``Transition Assistance Program'' means the
program carried out by the Department of Defense under sections
1142 and 1144 of title 10, United States Code.
(2) The term ``veteran'' has the meaning given that term in
section 101 of title 38, United States Code.
SEC. 1045. MODIFICATION OF THE MINISTRY OF DEFENSE ADVISOR PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 1081 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125
Stat. 1599; 10 U.S.C. 168 note) is amended by inserting--
(1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by inserting ``,
regional organizations with defense or security components, and
international organizations of which the United States is a
member'' after ``foreign countries''; and
(2) by inserting ``or organization'' after ``ministry''
both places it appears.
(b) Reports.--Subsection (c) of such section is amended--
(1) by inserting ``or organizations'' after ``defense
ministries'' both places it appears; and
(2) by striking paragraph (7).
(c) Conforming Amendment.--The heading of such section is amended
to read as follows:
``SEC. 1081. AUTHORITY FOR ASSIGNMENT OF CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE AS ADVISORS TO FOREIGN MINISTRIES
OF DEFENSE AND CERTAIN REGIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATIONS.''.
SEC. 1046. INTERAGENCY COLLABORATION ON UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS.
(a) Findings on Joint Department of Defense Federal Aviation
Administration Executive Committee on Conflict and Dispute
Resolution.--Section 1036(a) of the Duncan Hunter National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat.
4596) is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(9) Collaboration of scientific and technical personnel
and sharing of technical information, test results, and
resources where available from the Department of Defense, the
Federal Aviation Administration, and the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration can advance an enduring relationship
of research capability to advance the access of unmanned
aircraft systems of the Department of Defense, the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration and other public agencies
to the National Airspace System.''.
(b) Interagency Collaboration.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall collaborate
with the Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration
and the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration to conduct research and seek solutions to
challenges associated with the safe integration of unmanned
aircraft systems into the National Airspace System in
accordance with subtitle B of title III of the FAA
Modernization and Reform Act of 2012 (Public Law 112-95; 126
Stat. 72).
(2) Activities in support of plan on access to national
airspace for unmanned aircraft systems.--Collaboration under
paragraph (1) may include research and development of
scientific and technical issues, equipment, and technology in
support of the plan to safely accelerate the integration of
unmanned aircraft systems as required by subtitle B of title
III of the FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012.
(3) Nonduplicative efforts.--If the Secretary of Defense
determines it is in the interest of the Department of Defense,
the Secretary may use existing aerospace-related laboratories,
personnel, equipment, research radars, and ground facilities of
the Department of Defense to avoid duplication of efforts in
carrying out collaboration under paragraph (1).
(4) Reports.--
(A) Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense, on
behalf of the UAS Executive Committee, shall annually
submit to the congressional defense committees, the
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, and the
Committee on Science, Space, and Technology of the
House of Representatives, and the Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate a
report on the progress of research activity of the
Department of Defense, including--
(i) progress in accomplishing the goals of
the unmanned aircraft systems research,
development, and demonstration as related to
the Department of Defense Final Report to
Congress on Access to National Airspace for
Unmanned Aircraft Systems of October 2010, and
any ongoing and collaborative research and
development programs with the Federal Aviation
Administration and the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration and
(ii) estimates of long-term funding needs
and details of funds expended and allocated in
the budget requests of the President that
support integration into the National Airspace.
(B) Termination.--The requirement to submit a
report under subparagraph (A) shall terminate on the
date that is 5 years after the date of the enactment of
this Act.
(c) UAS Executive Committee Defined.--In this section, the term
``UAS Executive Committee'' means the National Aeronautics and Space
and Administration and the Department of Defense-Federal Aviation
Administration executive committee described in section 1036(b) of the
Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009
and established by the Secretary of Defense and the Administrator of
the Federal Aviation Administration.
(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is hereby authorized to
be appropriated such sums as may be necessary to carry out this
section.
SEC. 1047. SENSE OF SENATE ON NOTICE TO CONGRESS ON UNFUNDED
PRIORITIES.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) not later than 45 days after the submittal to Congress
of the budget for a fiscal year under section 1105(a) of title
31, United States Code, each officer specified in paragraph (2)
should, through the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and
the Secretary of Defense, submit to the congressional defense
committees a list of any priority military programs or
activities under the jurisdiction of such officer for which, in
the estimate of such officer additional funds, if available,
would substantially reduce operational or programmatic risk or
accelerate the creation or fielding of a critical military
capability;
(2) the officers specified in this paragraph are--
(A) the Chief of Staff of the Army;
(B) the Chief of Naval Operations;
(C) the Chief of Staff of the Air Force;
(D) the Commandant of the Marine Corps; and
(E) the Commander of the United States Special
Operations Command; and
(3) each list, if any, under paragraph (1) should set forth
for each military program or activity on such list--
(A) a description of such program or activity;
(B) a summary description of the justification for
or objectives of additional funds, if available for
such program or activity; and
(C) the additional amount of funds recommended in
connection with the justification or objectives
described for such program or activity under
subparagraph (B).
Subtitle F--Reports
SEC. 1061. REPORT ON STRATEGIC AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT.
Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report that sets forth the following:
(1) An assessment of the feasibility and advisability of
obtaining a Federal Aviation Administration certification for
commercial use of each of the following:
(A) A commercial variant of the C-17 aircraft.
(B) A retired C-17A aircraft.
(C) a retired C-5A aircraft.
(2) An assessment of the current limitations of the
aircraft of the Civil Reserve Air Fleet.
(3) An assessment of the potential for using the aircraft
referred to in paragraph (1) in the Civil Reserve Air Fleet.
(4) An assessment of the advantages of adding the aircraft
referred to in paragraph (1) to the Civil Reserve Air Fleet.
(5) An update on the status of any cooperation between the
Federal Aviation Administration and the Department of Defense
on the certification of the aircraft referred to in paragraph
(1).
(6) A description of all actions required, including any
impediments to such actions, to offering retired C-5A aircraft
or retired C-17A aircraft as excess defense articles to United
States allies or for sale to Civil Reserve Air Fleet carriers.
(7) A description of the actions required for interested
allies or Civil Reserve Air Fleet carriers to take delivery of
excess C-5A aircraft or excess C-17A aircraft, including the
actions, modifications, or demilitarization necessary for such
recipients to take delivery of such aircraft, and provisions
for permitting such recipients to undertake responsibility for
such actions, to the maximum extent practicable.
SEC. 1062. REPEAL OF BIENNIAL REPORT ON THE GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM.
Section 2281 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (d); and
(2) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (d).
SEC. 1063. REPEAL OF ANNUAL REPORT ON THREAT POSED BY WEAPONS OF MASS
DESTRUCTION, BALLISTIC MISSILES, AND CRUISE MISSILES.
Section 234 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 1998 (Public Law 105-85; 111 Stat. 1664; 50 U.S.C. 2367) is
repealed.
Subtitle G--Nuclear Matters
SEC. 1071. STRATEGIC DELIVERY SYSTEMS.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The Nuclear Posture Review of 2010 said, with respect
to modernizing the triad, ``for planned reductions under New
START, the United States should retain a smaller Triad of
SLBMs, ICBMs, and heavy bombers. Retaining all three Triad legs
will best maintain strategic stability at reasonable cost,
while hedging against potential technical problems or
vulnerabilities''.
(2) The Senate stated in Declaration 12 of the Resolution
of Advice and Consent to Ratification of the New START Treaty
that ``In accordance with paragraph 1 of Article V of the New
START Treaty, which states that, `Subject to the provisions of
this Treaty, modernization and replacement of strategic
offensive arms may be carried out,' it is the sense of the
Senate that United States deterrence and flexibility is assured
by a robust triad of strategic delivery vehicles. To this end,
the United States is committed to accomplishing the
modernization and replacement of its strategic nuclear delivery
vehicles, and to ensuring the continued flexibility of United
States conventional and nuclear delivery systems''.
(3) The Senate required the President, prior to the entry
into force of the New START Treaty, to certify to the Senate
that the President intended to modernize or replace the triad
of strategic nuclear delivery systems.
(4) The President made this certification in a message to
the Senate on February 2, 2011, in which the President stated,
``I intend to (a) modernize or replace the triad of strategic
nuclear delivery systems: a heavy bomber and air-launched
cruise missile, an ICBM, and a nuclear-powered ballistic
missile submarine (SSBN) and SLBM; and (b) maintain the United
States rocket motor industrial base''.
(b) Requirements.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 23 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 491. Strategic delivery systems
``(a) Annual Certification.--Beginning in fiscal year 2013, the
President shall annually certify in writing to the congressional
defense committees whether plans to modernize or replace strategic
delivery systems are fully funded at levels equal to or more than the
levels set forth in the November 2010 update to the plan referred to in
section 1251 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2549), including plans regarding--
``(1) a heavy bomber and air-launched cruise missile;
``(2) an intercontinental ballistic missile;
``(3) a submarine-launched ballistic missile;
``(4) a ballistic missile submarine; and
``(5) maintaining the nuclear command and control system
(as first reported in section 1043 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125
Stat. 1576)).
``(b) Additional Report Matters Following Certain Certifications.--
If the President certifies under subsection (a) that plans to modernize
or replace strategic delivery systems are not fully funded, the
President shall include in the next annual report submitted to Congress
under section 1043 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2012 the following:
``(1) A determination whether or not the lack of full
funding will result in a loss of military capability when
compared with the November 2010 update to the plan referred to
in section 1251 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2010.
``(2) If the determination under paragraph (1) is that the
lack of full funding will result in a loss of military
capability--
``(A) a plan to preserve or retain the military
capability that would otherwise be lost; or
``(B) a report setting forth--
``(i) an assessment of the impact of the
lack of full funding on the strategic delivery
systems specified in subsection (a); and
``(ii) a description of the funding
required to restore or maintain the capability.
``(3) A certification by the President whether or not the
President is committed to accomplishing the modernization and
replacement of strategic delivery systems and will meet the
obligations concerning nuclear modernization as set forth in
declaration 12 of the Resolution of Advice and Consent to
Ratification of the New START Treaty.
``(c) Treatment of Certain Reductions.--Any certification under
subsection (a) shall not take into account the following:
``(1) Reductions made to ensure the safety, security,
reliability, and credibility of the nuclear weapons stockpile
and strategic delivery systems, including activities related to
surveillance, assessment, certification, testing, and
maintenance of nuclear warheads and delivery systems.
``(2) Strategic delivery systems that are retired or
awaiting dismantlement on the date of the certification under
subsection (a).
``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `New START Treaty' means the Treaty between
the United States of America and the Russian Federation on
Measures for the Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic
Offensive Arms, signed on April 8, 2010, and entered into force
on February 5, 2011.
``(2) The term `strategic delivery system' means a delivery
system for nuclear weapons.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 23 of such title is amended by adding at
the end the following new item:
``491. Strategic delivery systems.''.
SEC. 1072. REQUIREMENTS DEFINITION FOR COMBINED WARHEAD FOR CERTAIN
MISSILE SYSTEMS.
Not later than 60 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Nuclear Weapons Council shall submit Congress a report setting
forth a definition of the requirements for a combined warhead for the
W-78 Minuteman III missile system and the W-88 Trident D-5 missile
system. The definition shall serve as the basis for a 6.1 conception
definition and 6.2 feasibility study for the combined systems.
SEC. 1073. CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE ESTIMATE OF COSTS OF NUCLEAR
WEAPONS AND DELIVERY SYSTEMS.
Not later than one year after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Director of the Congressional Budget Office shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report setting forth the
following:
(1) An estimate of the costs over the 10-year period
beginning on the date of the report associated with fielding
and maintaining the current nuclear weapons and nuclear weapon
delivery systems of the United States.
(2) An estimate of the costs over the 10-year period
beginning on the date of the report of any life extension,
modernization, or replacement of any current nuclear weapons or
nuclear weapon delivery systems of the United States that is
anticipated as of the date of the report.
Subtitle H--Other Matters
SEC. 1081. REDESIGNATION OF THE CENTER FOR HEMISPHERIC DEFENSE STUDIES
AS THE WILLIAM J. PERRY CENTER FOR HEMISPHERIC DEFENSE
STUDIES.
(a) Redesignation.--
(1) In general.--The Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies
is hereby redesignated as the ``William J. Perry Center for
Hemispheric Defense Studies''.
(2) References.--Any reference in any law, regulation, map,
document, record, or other paper of the United States to the
center referred to in paragraph (1) shall be considered to be a
reference to the William J. Perry Center for Hemispheric
Defense Studies.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--Title 10, United States Code, is
amended as follows:
(1) In section 184--
(A) in subsection (b)(2), by striking subparagraph
(C) and inserting the following new subparagraph (C):
``(C) The William J. Perry Center for Hemispheric Defense
Studies, established in 1997 and located in Washington, D.C.'';
and
(B) in subsection (f)(5), by striking ``Center for
Hemispheric Defense Studies'' and inserting ``William
J. Perry Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies''.
(2) In section 2611(a)(2), by striking subparagraph (C) and
inserting the following new subparagraph (C):
``(C) The William J. Perry Center for Hemispheric Defense
Studies.''.
SEC. 1082. TECHNICAL AMENDMENTS TO REPEAL STATUTORY REFERENCES TO
UNITED STATES JOINT FORCES COMMAND.
Title 10, United States Code, is amended as follows:
(1)(A) Section 232 is repealed.
(B) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 9 is
amended by striking the item relating to section 232.
(2) Section 2859(d) is amended--
(A) by striking paragraph (2); and
(B) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph
(2).
(3) Section 10503(13)(B) is amended--
(A) by striking clause (iii); and
(B) redesignating clause (iv) as clause (iii).
SEC. 1083. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON NON-UNITED STATES CITIZENS WHO ARE
GRADUATES OF UNITED STATES EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS WITH
ADVANCED DEGREES IN SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING, AND
MATHEMATICS.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) It is a national security concern that more than half
of all graduates with advanced scientific and technical degrees
from United States institutions of higher education are non-
United States citizens who have very limited opportunities upon
graduation to contribute to the science and technology
activities of the Department of Defense and the United States
defense industrial base.
(2) The capabilities of the Armed Forces are highly reliant
upon advanced technologies that provide our forces with a
technological edge on the battlefield.
(3) In order to maintain and advance our military
technological superiority, the United States requires the best
and brightest scientists, mathematicians, and engineers to
discover, develop, and field the next generation of weapon
systems and defense technologies.
(4) The Department of Defense and the defense industrial
base compete with other sectors for a limited number of United
States citizens who have appropriate advanced degrees and
skills.
(5) While an overarching national priority is to increase
the numbers of United States citizens who have appropriate
advanced degrees in science, technology, engineering, and
mathematics (STEM), it would be beneficial if the Department of
Defense and the defense industrial base were able to access the
pool of talent of non-United States citizens with advanced
scientific and technical degrees from United States
institutions of higher education, many of whom are otherwise
returning to their home countries.
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress--
(1) that the Department of Defense should make every
reasonable and practical effort to increase the number of
United States citizens who pursue advanced degrees in science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics; and
(2) to strongly urge the Department of Defense to
investigate innovative mechanisms (subject to all appropriate
security requirements) to access to the pool of talent of non-
United States citizens with advanced scientific and technical
degrees from United States institutions of higher education,
especially in those scientific and technical areas that are
most vital to the national defense (such as those identified by
the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering
and the Armed Forces).
TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL MATTERS
SEC. 1101. AUTHORITY FOR TRANSPORTATION OF FAMILY HOUSEHOLD PETS OF
CIVILIAN PERSONNEL DURING EVACUATION OF NON-ESSENTIAL
PERSONNEL.
Section 5725 of title 5, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)(2), by inserting ``and family
household pets,'' after ``personal effects,''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(c)(1) Authority under subsection (a) to transport family
household pets of an employee includes authority for shipment and the
payment of quarantine costs, if any.
``(2) An employee for whom transportation of family household pets
is authorized under subsection (a) may be paid reimbursement or a
monetary allowance if other commercial transportation means have been
used.
``(3) The provision of transportation of family household pets for
an employee of the Department of Defense under subsection (a) and the
payment of reimbursement under paragraph (2) shall be subject to the
same terms and conditions as apply under subsection 406(b)(1)(H)(iii)
of title 37 with respect to family household pets of members of the
uniformed services, including limitations on the types, size, and
number of pets for which transportation may be provided or
reimbursement paid.''.
SEC. 1102. EXPANSION OF EXPERIMENTAL PERSONNEL PROGRAM FOR SCIENTIFIC
AND TECHNICAL PERSONNEL AT THE DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH
PROJECTS AGENCY.
(a) Expansion.--Section 1101(b)(1)(A) of the Strom Thurmond
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1999 (5 U.S.C. 3104
note) is amended by striking ``40'' and inserting ``60''.
(b) Construction.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall not
be construed as affecting any applicable authorization or delimitation
of the numbers of personnel that may be employed at the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency.
SEC. 1103. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF DISCRETIONARY AUTHORITY TO GRANT
ALLOWANCES, BENEFITS, AND GRATUITIES TO PERSONNEL ON
OFFICIAL DUTY IN A COMBAT ZONE.
Paragraph (2) of section 1603(a) of the Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations Act for Defense, the Global War on Terror, and Hurricane
Recovery, 2006 (Public Law 109-234; 120 Stat. 443), as added by section
1102 of the Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2009 (Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4616) and amended by section
1112 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012
(Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1616), is further amended by striking
``2013'' and inserting ``2014''.
TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS
Subtitle A--Assistance and Training
SEC. 1201. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO BUILD THE CAPACITY OF FOREIGN
MILITARY FORCES AND MODIFICATION OF NOTICE IN CONNECTION
WITH INITIATION OF ACTIVITIES.
(a) Extension.--Subsection (g) of section 1206 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006 (Public Law 109-163; 119
Stat. 3456), as most recent amended by section 1204(c) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125
Stat. 1622), is further amended--
(1) by striking ``September 30, 2013'' and inserting
``September 30, 2014''; and
(2) by striking ``fiscal years 2006 through 2013'' and
inserting ``fiscal years 2006 through 2014''.
(b) Modification of Notice.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (e)(2) of such section 1206, as
amended by section 1206(a) of the John Warner National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law 109-364; 120
Stat. 2418), is further amended by adding at the end the
following new subparagraph:
``(D) Detailed information (including the amount
and purpose) on the assistance provided the country
during the three preceding fiscal years under each of
the following programs or accounts:
``(i) A program under this section.
``(ii) The Foreign Military Financing
program under the Foreign Assistance Act of
1961.
``(iii) Peacekeeping Operations.
``(iv) The International Narcotics Control
and Law Enforcement (INCLE) program under
section 481 of the Foreign Assistance Act of
1961 (22 U.S.C. 2291).
``(v) Nonproliferation, Anti-Terrorism,
Demining, and Related Programs (NADR).''.
(2) Applicability.--The amendment made by paragraph (1)
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and
shall apply with respect to any country in which activities are
initiated under section 1206 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006 on or after that date.
SEC. 1202. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR NON-RECIPROCAL EXCHANGE OF
DEFENSE PERSONNEL BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND FOREIGN
COUNTRIES.
Section 1207(f) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2514; 10 U.S.C. 168
note) is amended by striking ``September 30, 2012'' and inserting
``September 30, 2017''.
SEC. 1203. AUTHORITY TO BUILD THE CAPACITY OF CERTAIN COUNTERTERRORISM
FORCES IN YEMEN AND EAST AFRICA.
(a) Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may, with the concurrence
of the Secretary of State, provide assistance as follows:
(1) To enhance the ability of the Yemen Ministry of
Interior Counter Terrorism Forces to conduct counterterrorism
operations against al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and its
affiliates.
(2) To enhance the capacity of the national military
forces, security agencies serving a similar defense function,
other counterterrorism forces, and border security forces of
Djibouti, Ethiopia, and Kenya to conduct counterterrorism
operations against al Qaeda, al Qaeda affiliates, and al
Shabaab.
(3) To enhance the capacity of national military forces
participating in the African Union Mission in Somalia to
conduct counterterrorism operations against al Qaeda, al Qaeda
affiliates, and al Shabaab.
(b) Types of Assistance.--
(1) Authorized elements.--Assistance under subsection (a)
may include the provision of equipment, supplies, training, and
minor military construction.
(2) Required elements.--Assistance under subsection (a)
shall be provided in a manner that promotes--
(A) observance of and respect for human rights and
fundamental freedoms; and
(B) respect for legitimate civilian authority in
the country receiving such assistance.
(3) Assistance otherwise prohibited by law.--The Secretary
of Defense may not use the authority in subsection (a) to
provide any type of assistance described in this subsection
that is otherwise prohibited by any other provision of law.
(4) Limitations on minor military construction.--The total
amount that may be obligated and expended on minor military
construction under subsection (a) in any fiscal year may not
exceed amounts as follows:
(A) In the case of minor military construction
under paragraph (1) of subsection (a), $10,000,000.
(B) In the case of minor military construction
under paragraphs (2) and (3) of subsection (a),
$10,000,000.
(c) Funding.--
(1) In general.--Of the amount authorized to be
appropriated for a fiscal year for the Department of Defense
for operation and maintenance--
(A) not more than $75,000,000 may be used to
provide assistance under paragraph (1) of subsection
(a); and
(B) not more than $75,000,000 may used to provide
assistance under paragraphs (2) and (3) of subsection
(a).
(2) Availability of funds for assistance across fiscal
years.--Amounts available under this subsection for the
authority in subsection (a) for a fiscal year may be used for
assistance under that authority that begins in such fiscal year
but ends in the next fiscal year.
(d) Notice to Congress.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 30 days before providing
assistance under subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the committees of Congress specified in paragraph (2)
a notice setting forth the assistance to be provided, including
the types of such assistance, the budget for such assistance,
and the completion date for the provision of such assistance.
(2) Committees of congress.--The committees of Congress
specified in this paragraph are--
(A) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee
on Foreign Relations, and the Committee on
Appropriations of the Senate; and
(B) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee
on Foreign Affairs, and the Committee on Appropriations
of the House of Representatives.
(e) Expiration.--Except as provided in subsection (c)(2), the
authority provided under subsection (a) may not be exercised after the
earlier of--
(1) the date on which the Global Security Contingency Fund
achieves full operational capability; or
(2) September 30, 2014.
SEC. 1204. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR STATE PARTNERSHIP
PROGRAM.
(a) Limitation.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated by
this Act and available for the State Partnership Program, not more than
50 percent may be obligated or expended for that Program until the
latter of the following:
(1) The date on which the Secretary of Defense submits to
the appropriate congressional committees the final regulations
required by subsection (a) of section 1210 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-
84; 123 Stat. 2517; 32 U.S.C. 107 note).
(2) The date on which the Secretary of Defense certifies to
the appropriate congressional committees that appropriate
modifications have been made, and appropriate controls have
been instituted, to ensure the compliance of the Program with
section 1341 of title 31, United States Code (commonly referred
to as the ``Anti-Deficiency Act''), in the future.
(b) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' has the meaning given
that term in subsection (d) of section 1210 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010.
Subtitle B--Matters Relating to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan
SEC. 1211. COMMANDERS' EMERGENCY RESPONSE PROGRAM IN AFGHANISTAN.
(a) One-year Extension.--
(1) In general.--Section 1201 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125
Stat. 1619) is amended by striking ``fiscal year 2012'' each
place it appears and inserting ``fiscal year 2013''.
(2) Conforming amendment.--The heading of subsection (a) of
such section is amended by striking ``fiscal Year 2012'' and
inserting ``fiscal Year 2013''.
(b) Amount of Funds Available During Fiscal Year 2013.--Subsection
(a) of such section is further amended by striking ``$400,000,000'' and
inserting ``$200,000,000''.
SEC. 1212. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO SUPPORT OPERATIONS AND ACTIVITIES
OF THE OFFICE OF SECURITY COOPERATION IN IRAQ.
(a) Limitation on Amount of Funds for Fiscal Year 2013.--Subsection
(c) of section 1215 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1631; 10 U.S.C. 113
note) is amended by striking ``in fiscal year 2012'' and all that
follows and inserting ``may not exceed amounts as follows:
``(1) In fiscal year 2012, $524,000,000.
``(2) In fiscal year 2013, $508,000,000.''.
(b) Source of Funds.--Subsection (d) of such section is amended by
inserting ``or 2013'' after ``fiscal year 2012''.
SEC. 1213. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO USE
FUNDS FOR REINTEGRATION ACTIVITIES IN AFGHANISTAN.
Section 1216 of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 124 Stat. 4392), as amended
by section 1216 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1632), is further amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) by striking ``$50,000,000'' and inserting
``$35,000,000''; and
(B) by striking ``in each of fiscal years 2011 and
2012'' and inserting ``for fiscal year 2013''; and
(2) in subsection (e)--
(A) by striking ``utilize funds'' and inserting
``obligate funds''; and
(B) by striking ``December 31, 2012'' and inserting
``December 31, 2013''.
SEC. 1214. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY FOR PROGRAM
TO DEVELOP AND CARRY OUT INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS IN
AFGHANISTAN.
Section 1217(f) of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 124 Stat. 4393), as
amended by section 1217(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1632), is further
amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the following
new paragraph (1):
``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), to carry out
the program authorized under subsection (a), the Secretary of
Defense may use amounts as follows:
``(A) Up to $400,000,000 made available to the
Department of Defense for operation and maintenance for
fiscal year 2012.
``(B) Up to $350,000,000 made available to the
Department of Defense for operation and maintenance for
fiscal year 2013.'';
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by striking ``85 percent'' and inserting ``50
percent'';
(B) by inserting ``for a fiscal year after fiscal
year 2011'' after ``in paragraph (1)''; and
(C) by striking ``fiscal year 2012.'' and inserting
``such fiscal year, including for each project to be
initiated during such fiscal year the following:
``(A) An estimate of the financial and other
requirements necessary to sustain such project on an
annual basis after the completion of such project.
``(B) An assessment whether the Government of
Afghanistan is committed to and has the capacity to
maintain and use such project after its completion.
``(C) A description of any arrangements for the
sustainment of such project following its completion if
the Government of Afghanistan lacks the capacity (in
either financial or human resources) to maintain such
project.''; and
(3) in paragraph (3), by adding at the end the following
new subparagraph:
``(C) In the case of funds for fiscal year 2013,
until September 30, 2014.''.
SEC. 1215. EXTENSION OF PAKISTAN COUNTERINSURGENCY FUND.
(a) Extension.--Section 1224(h) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat.
2521), as most recently amended by section 1220(a) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125
Stat. 1633), is further amended by striking ``September 30, 2012'' each
place it appears and inserting ``September 30, 2013''.
(b) Extension of Limitation on Funds Pending Report.--Section
1220(b)(1)(A) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2012 (125 Stat. 1633) is amended by striking ``fiscal year 2013'' and
inserting ``fiscal year 2013''.
SEC. 1216. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY FOR REIMBURSEMENT OF
CERTAIN COALITION NATIONS FOR SUPPORT PROVIDED TO UNITED
STATES MILITARY OPERATIONS.
(a) Extension of Authority.--Subsection (a) of section 1233 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law
110-181; 122 Stat. 393), as most recently amended by section 1213 of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law
112-81; 125 Stat. 1630), is further amended--
(1) by striking ``for fiscal year 2012'' and
(2) by inserting ``, during the period ending on September
30, 2013,'' after ``Secretary of Defense may''.
(b) Limitation on Amounts Available.--Subsection (d) of such
section, as so amended, is further amended--
(1) by striking ``during fiscal year 2012 may not exceed
$1,690,000,000'' and inserting ``may not exceed $1,750,000,000
during fiscal year 2013, except that reimbursements made during
fiscal year 2013 for support provided by Pakistan before May 1,
2011, using funds available for that purpose before fiscal year
2013 shall not count against this limitation''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) Prohibition on reimbursement of pakistan for support
during periods closed to transshipment.--Effective as of the
date of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2013, funds (including funds from a prior
fiscal year that remain available for obligation) may not be
used for reimbursements under the authority in subsection (a)
for Pakistan for claims of support provided during any period
when the ground lines of supply through Pakistan to Afghanistan
were closed to the transshipment of equipment and supplies in
support of United States military operations in Afghanistan.''.
(c) Supported Operations.--Such section is further amended in
subsections (a)(1) and (b) by striking ``Operation Iraqi Freedom or''.
(d) Limitation on Reimbursement of Pakistan in Fiscal Year 2013
Pending Certification on Pakistan.--
(1) In general.--Effective as of the date of the enactment
of this Act, no amounts authorized to be appropriated by this
Act, and no amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
years before fiscal year 2013 that remain available for
obligation, may be used for reimbursements of Pakistan under
the authority in subsection (a) of section 1233 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008, as so amended,
until the Secretary of Defense certifies to the congressional
defense committees each of the following:
(A) That Pakistan has opened and is maintaining
security along the ground lines of supply through
Pakistan to Afghanistan for the transshipment of
equipment and supplies in support of United States
military operations in Afghanistan.
(B) That Pakistan is not providing support to
militant extremists groups (including the Haqqani
Network and the Afghan Taliban Quetta Shura) located in
Pakistan and conducting cross-border attacks against
United States, coalition, or Afghanistan security
forces, and is taking actions to prevent such groups
from basing and operating in Pakistan.
(C) That Pakistan is demonstrating a continuing
commitment, and is making significant efforts toward
the implementation of a strategy, to counter improvised
explosive devices, including efforts to attack
improvised explosive device networks, monitor known
precursors used in improvised explosive devices, and
develop and implement a strict protocol for the
manufacture of explosive materials (including calcium
ammonium nitrate) and accessories and for their supply
to legitimate end users.
(D) That Pakistan is demonstrably cooperating with
United States counterterrorism efforts, including by
not detaining, prosecuting, or imprisoning citizens of
Pakistan as a result of their cooperation with such
efforts, including Dr. Shakil Afridi.
(2) Waiver authority.--The Secretary may waive the
limitation in paragraph (1) if the Secretary certifies to the
congressional defense committees in writing that the waiver is
in the national security interests of the United States and
includes with such certification a justification for the
waiver.
SEC. 1217. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF LOGISTICAL SUPPORT FOR
COALITION FORCES SUPPORTING CERTAIN UNITED STATES
MILITARY OPERATIONS.
(a) Extension.--Section 1234 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 111-181; 122 Stat. 394), as most
recently amended by section 1211 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1629)), is
further amended by striking ``fiscal year 2012'' each place it appears
and inserting ``fiscal year 2013''.
(b) Repeal of Authority for Use of Funds in Connection With Iraq.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (a) of such section 1234, as so
amended, is further amended by striking ``Iraq and''.
(2) Conforming amendment.--The heading of such section 1234
is amended by striking ``iraq and''.
SEC. 1218. STRATEGY FOR SUPPORTING THE ACHIEVEMENT OF A SECURE
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION IN AFGHANISTAN IN 2014.
(a) Strategy Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall, in
consultation with the Secretary of State, develop a strategy to support
the Government of Afghanistan in its efforts to achieve a secure
presidential election in Afghanistan in 2014.
(b) Elements.--The strategy shall include support to the Government
of Afghanistan for the following:
(1) The identification and training of an adequate number
of personnel within the current existing end strength of the
Afghanistan National Security Forces (ANSF) for security of
polling stations, election materials, and protection of
election workers and officials.
(2) The recruitment and training of an adequate number of
female personnel in the Afghanistan National Security Forces to
afford equitable access to polls for women, secure polling
stations, and secure locations for counting and storing
election materials.
(3) The securing of freedom of movement and communications
for candidates before and during the election.
(c) Funding Resources.--In developing the strategy, the Secretary
shall identify, from among funds currently available to the Department
of Defense for activities in Afghanistan, the funds required to execute
the strategy.
SEC. 1219. INDEPENDENT ASSESSMENT OF THE AFGHAN NATIONAL SECURITY
FORCES.
(a) Independent Assessment Required.--The Secretary of Defense
shall provide for the conduct of an independent assessment of the
strength, force structure, force posture, and capabilities required to
make the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) capable of providing
security for their own country so as to prevent Afghanistan from ever
again becoming a safe haven for terrorists that threaten Afghanistan,
the region, and the world.
(b) Conduct of Assessment.--The assessment required by subsection
(a) may, at the election of the Secretary, be conducted by--
(1) a Federally-funded research and development center
(FFRDC); or
(2) an independent, non-governmental institute described in
section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and
exempt from tax under section 501(a) of such Code that has
recognized credentials and expertise in national security and
military affairs appropriate for the assessment.
(c) Elements.--The assessment required by subsection (a) shall
include, but not be limited to, the following:
(1) An assessment of the likely internal and regional
security environment for Afghanistan over the next decade,
including challenges and threats to the security and
sovereignty of Afghanistan from state and non-state actors.
(2) An assessment of the strength, force structure, force
posture, and capabilities required to make the Afghan National
Security Forces capable of providing security for their own
country so as to prevent Afghanistan from ever again becoming a
safe haven for terrorists that threaten Afghanistan, the
region, and the world.
(3) An assessment of any capability gaps in the Afghan
National Security Forces that are likely to persist after 2014
and that will require continued support from the United States
and its allies.
(4) An assessment whether current proposals for the
resourcing of the Afghan National Security Forces after 2014
are adequate to establish and maintain long-term security for
the Afghanistan people, and implications of the under-
resourcing of the Afghan National Security Forces for United
States national security interests.
(d) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the entity selected for the conduct of the
assessment required by subsection (a) shall provide to the Secretary
and the congressional defense committees a report containing its
findings as a result of the assessment. The report shall be submitted
in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
(e) Funding.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated for
fiscal year 2013 by section 301 and available for operation and
maintenance for Defense-wide activities as specified in the funding
table in section 4301, up to $1,000,000 shall be made available for the
assessment required by subsection (a).
(f) Afghan National Security Forces.--For purposes of this section,
the Afghan National Security Forces shall include all forces under the
authority of the Afghan Ministry of Defense and Afghan Ministry of
Interior, including the Afghan National Army, the Afghan National
Police, the Afghan Border Police, the Afghan National Civil Order
Police, and the Afghan Local Police.
SEC. 1220. REPORT ON AFGHANISTAN PEACE AND REINTEGRATION PROGRAM.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in consultation
with the Secretary of State, submit to the appropriate committees of
Congress a report on the Afghanistan Peace and Reintegration Program
(APRP).
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
the following:
(1) A description of the goals and objectives of the
Afghanistan Peace and Reintegration Program.
(2) A description of the structure of the Program at the
national and sub-national levels in Afghanistan, including the
number and types of vocational training and other education
programs.
(3) A description of the activities of the Program as of
the date of the report.
(4) A description and assessment of the procedures for
vetting individuals seeking to participate in the Program,
including an assessment of the extent to which biometric
identification systems are used and the role of provincial
peace councils in such procedures.
(5) The amount of funding provided by the United States,
and by the international community, to support the Program, and
the amount of funds so provided that have been distributed as
of the date of the report.
(6) An assessment of the individuals who have been
reintegrated into the Program, set forth in terms as follows:
(A) By geographic distribution by province.
(B) By number of each of low-level insurgent
fighters, mid-level commanders, and senior commanders.
(C) By number confirmed to have been part of the
insurgency.
(D) By number who are currently members of the
Afghan Local Police.
(E) By number who are participating in or have
completed vocational training or other educational
programs as part of the Program.
(7) A description and assessment of the procedures for
monitoring the individuals participating in the Program.
(8) A description and assessment of the role of women and
minority populations in the implementation of the Program.
(9) An assessment of the effectiveness of the activities of
the Program described under paragraph (3) in achieving the
goals and objectives of the Program.
(10) Such recommendations as the Secretary of Defense
considers appropriate for improving the implementation,
oversight, and effectiveness of the Program.
(c) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Relations, and the Committee on Appropriations of the
Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Affairs, and the Committee on Appropriations of the
House of Representatives.
Subtitle C--Reports
SEC. 1231. REVIEW AND REPORTS ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EFFORTS TO BUILD
THE CAPACITY OF AND PARTNER WITH FOREIGN SECURITY FORCES.
(a) Review.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Defense Policy Board shall
conduct a review of the efforts of the Department of Defense to
build the capacity of, or partner with, foreign security forces
in support of national defense and security strategies.
(2) Elements.--The review required by this subsection shall
include the following:
(A) An examination of the ways in which the efforts
of the Department to build the capacity of, or partner
with, foreign security forces directly support
implementation of current national defense and security
strategies.
(B) An assessment of the range of effects that
efforts of the Department to build the capacity of, or
partner with, foreign security forces are designed to
achieve in support of current national defense and
security strategies.
(C) An assessment of the criteria used for
prioritizing such efforts in support of national
defense and security strategies.
(D) An identification of the authorities the
Department currently uses to implement such efforts,
together with an assessment of the adequacy of such
authorities.
(E) An assessment of the capabilities required by
the Department to implement such efforts.
(F) An assessment of the most effective
distribution of the roles and responsibilities for such
efforts within the Department, together with an
assessment whether the Department military and civilian
workforce is appropriately sized and shaped to meet the
requirements of such efforts.
(G) An evaluation of current measures of the
Department for assessing activities of the Department
designed to build the capacity of, or partner with,
foreign security forces, including an assessment
whether such measures address the extent to which such
activities directly support the priorities of national
defense and security strategies.
(H) An identification of recommendations for
clarifying or improving the guidance and assessment
measures of the Department relating to its efforts to
build the capacity of, or partner with, foreign
security forces in support of national defense and
security strategies.
(3) Report.--Not later than 90 days after the completion of
the review required by this subsection, the Secretary of
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a
report containing the result of the review.
(b) Strategic Guidance on Department of Defense Efforts To Build
Partner Capacity and Other Partnership Initiatives.--Not later than 120
days after the completion of the review required by subsection (a), the
Secretary of Defense shall, in coordination with the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, submit to the congressional defense committees a
report setting forth the following:
(1) An assessment, taking into account the recommendations
of the Defense Policy Board in the review required by
subsection (a), of the efforts of the Department of Defense to
build the capacity of, and partner with, foreign military
forces in support of national defense and security strategies.
(2) Strategic guidance for the Department for its efforts
to build the capacity of, and partner with, foreign military
forces in support of national defense and security strategies,
which guidance shall address--
(A) the ways such efforts directly support the
goals and objectives of national defense and security
strategies;
(B) the criteria to be used for prioritizing
activities to implement such efforts in support of
national defense and security strategies;
(C) the measures to be used to assess the effects
achieved by such efforts and the extent to which such
effects support the objectives of national defense and
security strategies;
(D) the appropriate roles and responsibilities of
the Armed Forces, the Defense Agencies, and other
components of the Department in conducting such
efforts; and
(E) the relationship of Department workforce
planning with the requirements for such efforts.
SEC. 1232. ADDITIONAL ELEMENTS IN ANNUAL REPORT ON MILITARY AND
SECURITY DEVELOPMENTS INVOLVING THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF
CHINA.
Section 1202 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2000 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (b)--
(A) by amending paragraph (9) to read as follows:
``(9) Developments in China's asymmetric capabilities,
including efforts to develop and deploy cyberwarfare and
electronic warfare capabilities, and associated activities
originating or suspected of originating from China. This
discussion of these developments shall include--
``(A) the nature of China's cyber activities
directed against the Department of Defense and an
assessment of the damage inflicted on the Department of
Defense by reason thereof, and the potential harms;
``(B) a description of China's strategy for use and
potential targets of offensive cyberwarfare and
electronic warfare capabilities;
``(C) details on the number of malicious cyber
incidents emanating from Internet Protocol addresses in
China, including a comparison of the number of
incidents during the reporting period to previous
years; and
``(D) details regarding the specific People's
Liberation Army; state security; research and academic;
state-owned, associated, or other commercial
enterprises; and other relevant actors involved in
supporting or conducting cyberwarfare and electronic
warfare activities and capabilities.'';
(B) by redesignating paragraphs (10), (11), and
(12) as paragraphs (15), (16), and (17) respectively;
(C) by inserting after paragraph (9) the following
new paragraphs:
``(10) The strategy and capabilities of Chinese space
programs, including trends, global and regional activities, the
involvement of military and civilian organizations, including
state-owned enterprises, academic institutions, and commercial
entities, and efforts to develop, acquire, or gain access to
advanced technologies that would enhance Chinese military
capabilities.
``(11) Developments in China's nuclear capabilities, which
shall include the following:
``(A) The size and state of China's nuclear
stockpile.
``(B) A description of China's nuclear strategy and
associated doctrines.
``(C) A description of the quantity, range, payload
features, and location of China's nuclear missiles and
the quantity and operational status of their associated
launchers or platforms.
``(D) An analysis of China's efforts to use
electromagnetic pulse.
``(E) Projections of possible future Chinese
nuclear arsenals, their capabilities, and associated
doctrines.
``(F) A description of China's fissile material
stockpile and civil and military production
capabilities and capacities.
``(G) A discussion of any significant uncertainties
or knowledge gaps surrounding China's nuclear weapons
program and the potential implications of any such
knowledge gaps for the security of the United States
and its allies.
``(12) A description of China's anti-access and area denial
capabilities.
``(13) A description of China's command, control,
communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance, and
reconnaissance modernization program and its applications for
China's precision guided weapons.
``(14) A description of China's maritime activities,
including--
``(A) China's response to Freedom of Navigation
activities conducted by the Department of Defense;
``(B) an account of each time People's Liberation
Army Navy vessels have transited outside the First
Island Chain, including the type of vessels that were
involved; and
``(C) the role of China's maritime law enforcement
vessels in maritime incidents, including details
regarding any collaboration between China's law
enforcement vessels and the People's Liberation Army
Navy.''; and
(D) by adding after paragraph (17), as redesignated
by subparagraph (B), the following new paragraphs:
``(18) A description of Chinese military-to-military
relationships with other countries, including the size and
activity of military attache offices around the world and
military education programs conducted in China for other
countries or in other countries for the Chinese.
``(19) A description of any significant sale or transfer of
military hardware, expertise, and technology to or from the
People's Republic of China, including a forecast of possible
future sales and transfers, and a description of the
implications of those sales and transfers for the security of
the United States and its friends and allies in Asia. The
information under this paragraph shall include--
``(A) the extent of the People's Republic of
China's knowledge, cooperation, or condoning of sales
or transfers of military hardware, expertise, or
technology to receiving states;
``(B) the extent in each selling state of
government knowledge, cooperation, or condoning of
sales or transfers of military hardware, expertise, or
technology to the People's Republic of China;
``(C) an itemization of significant sales and
transfers of military hardware, expertise, or
technology that have taken place during the reporting
period;
``(D) significant assistance by any selling state
to key research and development programs in China,
including programs for development of weapons of mass
destruction and delivery vehicles for such weapons,
programs for development of advanced conventional
weapons, and programs for development of unconventional
weapons;
``(E) significant assistance by the People's
Republic of China to the research and development
programs of purchasing or receiving states, including
programs for development of weapons of mass destruction
and delivery vehicles for such weapons, programs for
development of advanced conventional weapons, and
programs for development of unconventional weapons;
``(F) the extent to which arms sales to or from the
People's Republic of China are a source of funds for
military research and development or procurement
programs in China or the selling state;
``(G) a discussion of the ability of the People's
Liberation Army to assimilate such sales or transfers,
mass produce new equipment, and develop doctrine for
use; and
``(H) a discussion of the potential threat of
developments related to such sales on the security
interests of the United States and its friends and
allies in Asia.''; and
(2) by amending subsection (d) to read as follows:
``(d) Combatant Commander Assessment.--The report required under
subsection (a) shall include an annex, in classified or unclassified
form, that includes an assessment of the Commander of the United States
Pacific Command on the following matters:
``(1) Any gaps in intelligence that limit the ability of
the Commander to address challenges posed by the People's
Republic of China.
``(2) Any gaps in the capabilities, capacity, and
authorities of the Commander to address challenges posed by the
People's Republic of China to the United States Armed Forces
and United States interests in the region.
``(3) Any other matters the Commander considers to be
relevant.''.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
SEC. 1241. IMPROVED ADMINISTRATION OF THE AMERICAN, BRITISH, CANADIAN,
AND AUSTRALIAN ARMIES' PROGRAM.
(a) Authority.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 6 of title 10, United States Code,
is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 168a. American, British, Canadian, and Australian Armies'
Program: administration; agreements with other
participating countries
``(a) Authority.--As part of the participation by the United States
in the land-force program known as the American, British, Canadian, and
Australian Armies' Program (in this section referred to as the
`Program'), the Secretary of Defense may, with the concurrence of the
Secretary of State, enter into agreements with the other participating
countries in accordance with this section, and the Program shall be
managed pursuant to a joint agreement among the participating
countries.
``(b) Participating Countries.--In addition to the United States,
the countries participating in the Program are the following:
``(1) Australia.
``(2) Canada.
``(3) New Zealand.
``(4) The United Kingdom.
``(c) Contributions by Participants.--(1) An agreement under
subsection (a) shall provide that each participating country shall
contribute to the Program--
``(A) its equitable share of the full cost for the Program,
including the full cost of overhead and administrative costs
related to the Program; and
``(B) any amount allocated to it in accordance with the
agreement for the cost for monetary claims asserted against any
participating country as a result of participation in the
Program.
``(2) Such an agreement shall also provide that each participating
country (including the United States) may provide its contribution for
its equitable share under the agreement in funds, in personal property,
or in services required for the Program (or in any combination
thereof).
``(3) Any contribution by the United States to the Program that is
provided in funds shall be made from funds available to the Department
of Defense for operation and maintenance.
``(4) Any contribution received by the United States from another
participating country to meet that country's share of the costs of the
Program shall be credited to appropriations available to the Department
of Defense, as determined by the Secretary of Defense. The amount of a
contribution credited to an appropriation account in connection with
the Program shall be available only for payment of the share of the
Program expenses allocated to the participating country making the
contribution. Amounts so credited shall be available for the following
purposes:
``(A) Payments to contractors and other suppliers
(including the Department of Defense and participating
countries acting as suppliers) for necessary goods and services
of the Program.
``(B) Payments for any damages and costs resulting from the
performance or cancellation of any contract or other obligation
in support of the Program.
``(C) Payments for any monetary claim against a
participating country as a result of the participation of that
country in the Program.
``(D) Payments or reimbursements of other Program expenses,
including overhead and administrative costs for any
administrative office for the Program.
``(E) Refunds to other participating countries.
``(5) Costs for the operation of any office established to carry
out the Program shall be borne jointly by the participating countries
as provided for in an agreement referred to in subsection (a).
``(d) Authority To Contract for Program Activities.--As part of the
participation by the United States in the Program, the Secretary of
Defense may enter into contracts or incur other obligations on behalf
of the other participating countries for activities under the Program.
Any payment for such a contract or other obligation under this
subsection may be paid only from contributions credited to an
appropriation under subsection (c)(4).
``(e) Disposal of Property.--As part of the participation by the
United States in the Program, the Secretary of Defense may, with
respect to any property that is jointly acquired by the countries
participating in the Program, agree to the disposal of the property
without regard to any law of the United States that is otherwise
applicable to the disposal of property owned by the United States. Such
disposal may include the transfer of the interest of the United States
in the property to one or more of the other participating countries or
the sale of the property. Reimbursement for the value of the property
disposed of (including the value of the interest of the United States
in the property) shall be made in accordance with an agreement under
subsection (a).
``(f) Sunset.--Any agreement entered into by the United States with
another country under subsection (a), and United States participation
in the joint agreement described in that subsection, shall expire not
later than five years after the date of the enactment of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 6 of such title is amended by adding at
the end the following new item:
``168a. American, British, Canadian, and Australian Armies' Program:
administration; agreements with other
participating countries.''.
(b) Report.--Not later than 60 days before the expiration date for
agreements under subsection (a) of section 168a of title 10, United
States Code (as added by subsection (a) of this section), pursuant to
subsection (f) of such section, the Secretary of Defense shall submit
to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report on the activities, costs, and accomplishments
of the American, British, Canadian, and Australian Armies' Program
during the five-year period ending on the date of such report.
SEC. 1242. UNITED STATES PARTICIPATION IN HEADQUARTERS EUROCORPS.
(a) Participation Authorized.--The Secretary of Defense may, with
the concurrence of the Secretary of State, authorize the participation
of members of the Armed Forces as members of the staff of Headquarters
Eurocorps for the purpose of supporting the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) activities of the NATO Rapid Deployable Corps
Eurocorps.
(b) Memorandum of Understanding.--
(1) Requirement.--The participation of members of the Armed
Forces as members of the staff of Headquarters Eurocorps shall
be in accordance with the terms of one or more memoranda of
understanding entered into by the Secretary of Defense, with
the concurrence of the Secretary of State, and Headquarters
Eurocorps.
(2) Cost-sharing arrangements.--If Department of Defense
facilities, equipment, or funds are used to support
Headquarters Eurocorps, the memoranda of understanding under
paragraph (1) shall provide details of any cost-sharing
arrangement or other funding arrangement.
(c) Limitation on Number of Members Participating as Staff.--Not
more than two members of the Armed Forces may participate as members of
the staff of Headquarters Eurocorps, until the Secretary of Defense
submits to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House
of Representatives a report setting forth the following:
(1) A certification by the Secretary of Defense that the
participation of more than two members of the Armed Forces in
Headquarters Eurocorps is in the national interests of the
United States.
(2) A description of the benefits of the participation of
the additional members proposed by the Secretary.
(3) A description of the plans for the participation of the
additional members proposed by the Secretary, including the
grades and posts to be filled.
(4) A description of the costs associated with the
participation of the additional members proposed by the
Secretary.
(d) Availability of Appropriated Funds.--
(1) Availability.--Funds appropriated to the Department of
Defense for operation and maintenance are available as follows:
(A) To pay the United States' share of the
operating expenses of Headquarters Eurocorps.
(B) To pay the costs of the participation of
members of the Armed Forces participating as members of
the staff of Headquarters Eurocorps, including the
costs of expenses of such participants.
(2) Limitation.--No funds may be used under this section to
fund the pay or salaries of members of the Armed Forces who
participate as members of the staff of the Headquarters, North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Rapid Deployable Corps
under this section.
(e) Headquarters Eurocorps Defined.--In this section, the term
``Headquarters Eurocorps'' refers to the multinational military
headquarters, established on October 1, 1993, which is one of the High
Readiness Forces (Land) associated with the Allied Rapid Reaction Corps
of NATO.
SEC. 1243. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PARTICIPATION IN EUROPEAN PROGRAM ON
MULTILATERAL EXCHANGE OF AIR TRANSPORTATION AND AIR
REFUELING SERVICES.
(a) Participation Authorized.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of State, authorize the
participation of the United States in the Air Transport, Air-
to-Air Refueling and other Exchanges of Services program (in
this section referred to as the ``ATARES program'') of the
Movement Coordination Centre Europe.
(2) Scope of participation.--Participation in the ATARES
program under paragraph (1) shall be limited to the reciprocal
exchange or transfer of air transportation and air refueling
services on a reimbursable basis or by replacement-in-kind or
the exchange of air transportation or air refueling services of
an equal value.
(3) Limitations.--The United States' balance of executed
flight hours, whether as credits or debits, in participation in
the ATARES program under paragraph (1) may not exceed 500
hours. The United States' balanced of executed flight hours for
air refueling in the ATARES program under paragraph (1) may not
exceed 200 hours.
(b) Written Arrangement or Agreement.--
(1) Arrangement or agreement required.--The participation
of the United States in the ATARES program under subsection (a)
shall be in accordance with a written arrangement or agreement
entered into by the Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence
of the Secretary of State, and the Movement Coordination Centre
Europe.
(2) Funding arrangements.--If Department of Defense
facilities, equipment, or funds are used to support the ATARES
program, the written arrangement or agreement under paragraph
(1) shall specify the details of any equitable cost sharing or
other funding arrangement.
(3) Other elements.--Any written arrangement or agreement
entered into under paragraph (1) shall require that any accrued
credits and liabilities resulting from an unequal exchange or
transfer of air transportation or air refueling services shall
be liquidated, not less than once every five years, through the
ATARES program.
(c) Implementation.--In carrying out any written arrangement or
agreement entered into under subsection (b), the Secretary of Defense
may--
(1) pay the United States' equitable share of the operating
expenses of the Movement Coordination Centre Europe and the
ATARES consortium from funds available to the Department of
Defense for operation and maintenance; and
(2) assign members of the Armed Forces or Department of
Defense civilian personnel, from among members and personnel
within billets authorized for the United States European
Command, to duty at the Movement Coordination Centre Europe as
necessary to fulfill the United States' obligations under that
arrangement or agreement.
(d) Crediting of Receipts.--Any amount received by the United
States in carrying out a written arrangement or agreement entered into
under subsection (b) shall be credited, as elected by the Secretary of
Defense, to the following:
(1) The appropriation, fund, or account used in incurring
the obligation for which such amount is received.
(2) An appropriation, fund, or account currently available
for the purposes for which such obligation was made.
(e) Annual Secretary of Defense Reports.--Not later than 30 days
after the end of each fiscal year in which the authority provided by
this section is in effect, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to
Congress a report on United States participation in the ATARES program
during such fiscal year. Each report shall include the following:
(1) The United States balance of executed flight hours at
the end of the fiscal year covered by such report.
(2) The types of services exchanged or transferred during
the fiscal year covered by such report.
(3) A description of any United States costs under the
written arrangement or agreement under subsection (b)(1) in
connection with the use of Department of Defense facilities,
equipment, or funds to support the ATARES program under that
subsection as provided by subsection (b)(2).
(4) A description of the United States' equitable share of
the operating expenses of the Movement Coordination Centre
Europe and the ATARES consortium paid under subsection (c)(1).
(5) A description of any amounts received by the United
States in carrying out a written arrangement or agreement
entered into under subsection (b).
(f) Comptroller General of United States Report.--Not later than
one year after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller
General of the United States shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on the ATARES program. The report shall set forth
the assessment of the Comptroller General of the program, including the
types of services available under the program, whether the program is
achieving its intended purposes, and, on the basis of actual cost data
from the performance of the program, the cost-effectiveness of the
program.
(g) Expiration.--The authority provided by this section to
participate in the ATARES program shall expire five years after the
date on which the Secretary of Defense first enters into a written
arrangement or agreement under subsection (b). The Secretary shall
publish notice of such date on a public website of the Department of
Defense.
SEC. 1244. AUTHORITY TO ESTABLISH PROGRAM TO PROVIDE ASSISTANCE TO
FOREIGN CIVILIANS FOR HARM INCIDENT TO COMBAT OPERATIONS
OF THE ARMED FORCES IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES.
(a) Authority To Establish Program.--The Secretary of Defense may
establish a program, under such regulations as the Secretary may
prescribe, to enable military commanders at their discretion to provide
assistance to foreign civilians for damage, personal injury, or death
that is incident to combat operations of the Armed Forces in a foreign
country.
(b) Elements.--
(1) Nature of assistance.--Any assistance provided under a
program under subsection (a) may be provided only ex gratia,
and shall not be considered an admission or acknowledgment of
any legal obligation to compensate for any damage, personal
injury, or death.
(2) Treatment with other compensation.--In the event
compensation for damage, personal injury, or death covered by
this section is received through a separate program operated by
the United States Government, receipt of compensation in such
amount should be considered by the commander or legal advisor
determining appropriate assistance under a program under
subsection (a).
(3) Amount of assistance.--If the Secretary of Defense
determines a program under subsection (a) to be fitting in a
particular setting, the amount of assistance, if any, to be
provided to civilians determined to have suffered harm incident
to combat operations of the Armed Forces under the program
should be determined pursuant to regulations prescribed by the
Secretary and based on an assessment of cultural
appropriateness and prevailing economic conditions.
(c) Records.--
(1) In general.--The regulations prescribed by the
Secretary of Defense for purposes of any program under
subsection (a) shall include requirements as follows:
(A) That local military commanders maintain a
written record of any assistance offered or denied
under such program.
(B) That local military commanders submit on a
timely basis a report summarizing such written records
to the appropriate office in the Department of Defense
as specified by the Secretary in such regulations.
SEC. 1245. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR CERTAIN CAPITAL
PROJECTS IN CONNECTION WITH OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS.
(a) Limitation.--
(1) In general.--Upon the commencement or designation of a
military operation as an overseas contingency operation on or
after the date that is 60 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, amounts authorized to be appropriated for the
Department of Defense may not be obligated or expended for a
capital project described in subsection (b) unless the
Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the United States
commander of military operations in the country in which the
project will be carried out, completes an assessment on the
necessity and sustainability of the project.
(2) Elements.--Each assessment on a capital project under
this subsection shall include, but not be limited to, the
following:
(A) An estimate of the total cost of the project to
the United States.
(B) An estimate of the financial and other
requirements necessary for the host government to
sustain the project on an annual basis after completion
of the project.
(C) An assessment whether the host government has
the capacity (in both financial and human resources) to
maintain and use the project after completion.
(D) A description of any arrangements for the
sustainment of the project following its completion if
the host government lacks the capacity (in either
financial or human resources) to maintain the project.
(E) An assessment whether the host government has
requested or expressed its need for the project, and an
explanation of the decision to proceed with the project
absent such request or need.
(F) An assessment of the effect of the project on
the military mission of the United States in the
country concerned.
(b) Covered Capital Projects.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), a
capital project described in this subsection is any capital
project overseas for an overseas contingency operation for the
direct benefit of a host country and funded by the Department
of Defense if the capital project--
(A) in the case of a project that directly supports
building the capacity of indigenous security forces in
the host country, has an estimated value in excess of
$10,000,000; or
(B) in the case of any other project, has an
estimated value in excess of $2,000,000.
(2) Exclusion.--A capital project described in this
subsection does not include any project for military
construction (as that term is defined in section 114 (b) of
title 10, United States Code) or a military family housing
project under section 2821 of such title.
(c) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the limitation in
subsection (a) in order to initiate a capital project if the Secretary
determines that the project is in the national security interests of
the United States. In the first report submitted under subsection (d)
after any waiver under this subsection, the Secretary shall include a
detailed justification of such waiver. Not later than 180 days after
issuing a waiver under this subsection, the Secretary shall submit to
Congress the assessment described in subsection (a) with respect to the
capital project concerned.
(d) Quarterly Reports.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 30 days after the end of
each fiscal-year quarter the Secretary of Defense shall submit
to Congress a report setting forth each assessment conducted
under subsection (a) during such fiscal-year quarter.
(2) Form.--Each report shall be submitted in unclassified
form, but may include a classified annex.
(e) Capital Project Defined.--In this section, the term ``capital
project'' has the meaning given that term in section 308 of the Aid,
Trade, and Competitiveness Act of 1992 (22 U.S.C. 2421e).
TITLE XIII--COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION
SEC. 1301. SPECIFICATION OF COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION PROGRAMS AND
FUNDS.
(a) Specification of Cooperative Threat Reduction Programs.--For
purposes of section 301 and other provisions of this Act, Cooperative
Threat Reduction programs are the programs specified in section 1501 of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1997 (50 U.S.C.
2632 note).
(b) Fiscal Year 2013 Cooperative Threat Reduction Funds Defined.--
As used in this title, the term ``fiscal year 2013 Cooperative Threat
Reduction funds'' means the funds appropriated pursuant to the
authorization of appropriations in section 301 and made available by
the funding table in section 4301 for Cooperative Threat Reduction
programs.
(c) Availability of Funds.--Funds appropriated pursuant to the
authorization of appropriations in section 301 and made available by
the funding table in section 4301 for Cooperative Threat Reduction
programs shall be available for obligation for fiscal years 2013, 2014,
and 2015.
SEC. 1302. FUNDING ALLOCATIONS.
(a) Funding for Specific Purposes.--Of the $519,100,000 authorized
to be appropriated to the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2013 in
section 301 and made available by the funding table in section 4301 for
Cooperative Threat Reduction programs, the following amounts may be
obligated for the purposes specified:
(1) For strategic offensive arms elimination, $68,300,000.
(2) For chemical weapons destruction, $14,600,000.
(3) For global nuclear security, $99,800,000.
(4) For cooperative biological engagement, $276,400,000.
(5) For proliferation prevention, $32,400,000.
(6) For threat reduction engagement, $2,400,000.
(7) For other assessments/administrative support,
$25,200,000.
(b) Report on Obligation or Expenditure of Funds for Other
Purposes.--No fiscal year 2013 Cooperative Threat Reduction funds may
be obligated or expended for a purpose other than a purpose listed in
paragraphs (1) through (7) of subsection (a) until 15 days after the
date that the Secretary of Defense submits to Congress a report on the
purpose for which the funds will be obligated or expended and the
amount of funds to be obligated or expended. Nothing in the preceding
sentence shall be construed as authorizing the obligation or
expenditure of fiscal year 2013 Cooperative Threat Reduction funds for
a purpose for which the obligation or expenditure of such funds is
specifically prohibited under this title or any other provision of law.
(c) Limited Authority To Vary Individual Amounts.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), in any case in
which the Secretary of Defense determines that it is necessary
to do so in the national interest, the Secretary may obligate
amounts appropriated for fiscal year 2013 for a purpose listed
in paragraphs (1) through (7) of subsection (a) in excess of
the specific amount authorized for that purpose.
(2) Notice-and-wait required.--An obligation of funds for a
purpose stated in paragraphs (1) through (7) of subsection (a)
in excess of the specific amount authorized for such purpose
may be made using the authority provided in paragraph (1) only
after--
(A) the Secretary submits to Congress notification
of the intent to do so together with a complete
discussion of the justification for doing so; and
(B) 15 days have elapsed following the date of the
notification.
TITLE XIV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Military Programs
SEC. 1401. WORKING CAPITAL FUNDS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for the use of the Armed Forces and other activities and agencies of
the Department of Defense for providing capital for working capital and
revolving funds, as specified in the funding table in section 4501.
SEC. 1402. NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for the National Defense Sealift Fund, as specified in the funding
table in section 4501.
SEC. 1403. DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2013 for expenses, not otherwise provided
for, for the Defense Health Program, as specified in the funding table
in section 4501.
SEC. 1404. CHEMICAL AGENTS AND MUNITIONS DESTRUCTION, DEFENSE.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized
to be appropriated for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2013
for expenses, not otherwise provided for, for Chemical Agents and
Munitions Destruction, Defense, as specified in the funding table in
section 4501.
(b) Use.--Amounts authorized to be appropriated under subsection
(a) are authorized for--
(1) the destruction of lethal chemical agents and munitions
in accordance with section 1412 of the Department of Defense
Authorization Act, 1986 (50 U.S.C. 1521); and
(2) the destruction of chemical warfare materiel of the
United States that is not covered by section 1412 of such Act.
SEC. 1405. DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE-WIDE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2013 for expenses, not otherwise provided
for, for Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide,
as specified in the funding table in section 4501.
SEC. 1406. DEFENSE INSPECTOR GENERAL.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2013 for expenses, not otherwise provided
for, for the Office of the Inspector General of the Department of
Defense, as specified in the funding table in section 4501.
Subtitle B--National Defense Stockpile
SEC. 1411. RELEASE OF MATERIALS NEEDED FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE PURPOSES
FROM THE STRATEGIC AND CRITICAL MATERIALS STOCKPILE.
(a) Authority for President to Delegate Special Disposal Authority
of President for Release for National Defense Purposes.--Section 7(a)
of the Strategic and Critical Materials Stock Piling Act (50 U.S.C.
98f(a)) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking the period at the end and
inserting ``; and''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) on the order of the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics, if the President has
designated the Under Secretary to have authority to issue
release orders under this subsection and, in the case of any
such order, if the Under Secretary determines that the release
of such materials is required for use, manufacture, or
production for purposes of national defense.''.
(b) Exclusion From Delegation Limitation.--Section 16 of such Act
(50 U.S.C. 98h-7) is amended by striking ``sections 7 and 13'' each
place it appears and inserting ``sections 7(a)(1) and 13''.
Subtitle C--Chemical Demilitarization Matters
SEC. 1421. SUPPLEMENTAL CHEMICAL AGENT AND MUNITIONS DESTRUCTION
TECHNOLOGIES AT PUEBLO CHEMICAL DEPOT, COLORADO, AND BLUE
GRASS ARMY DEPOT, KENTUCKY.
(a) Supplemental Destruction Technologies.--Section 1412 of the
Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1986 (50 U.S.C. 1521) is
amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (o) as subsection (p); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (n) the following new
subsection (o):
``(o) Supplemental Destruction Technologies.--In determining the
technologies to supplement the neutralization destruction of the
stockpile of lethal chemical agents and munitions at Pueblo Chemical
Depot, Colorado, and Blue Grass Army Depot, Kentucky, the Secretary of
Defense may consider the following:
``(1) Explosive Destruction Technologies.
``(2) Any technologies developed for treatment and disposal
of agent or energetic hydrolysates, if problems with the
current on-site treatment of hydrolysates are encountered.''.
(b) Repeal of Superseded Provision.--Section 151 of the Floyd D.
Spence National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (as
enacted into law by Public Law 106-398; 114 Stat. 1645A-30) is
repealed.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
SEC. 1431. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT
HOME.
There is hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
from the Armed Forces Retirement Home Trust Fund the sum of $67,590,000
for the operation of the Armed Forces Retirement Home.
SEC. 1432. ADDITIONAL WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION CIVIL SUPPORT TEAMS.
(a) In General.--Section 1403 of the Bob Stump National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2003 (Public Law 107-314; 116 Stat.
2676; 10 U.S.C. 12310 note) is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (b);
(2) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
(3) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new
subsections (b) and (c):
``(b) Establishment of Further Additional Teams.--The Secretary of
Defense is authorized to have established two additional teams
designated as Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support teams, beyond
the 55 teams required in subsection (a), if--
``(1) the Secretary of Defense has made the certification
provided for in section 12310(c)(5) of title 10, United States
Code, with respect to each of such additional teams before
December 31, 2011; and
``(2) the establishment of such additional teams does not
require an increase in authorized personnel levels above the
numbers authorized as of the date of the enactment of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013.
``(c) Limitation of Establishment of Further Teams.--No Weapons of
Mass Destruction Civil Support Team may be established beyond the
number authorized by subsections (a) and (b) unless--
``(1) the Secretary submits to Congress a request for
authority to establish such team, including a detailed
justification for their establishment; and
``(2) the establishment of such team is specifically
authorized by a law enacted after the date of the enactment of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013.''.
(b) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the Weapons of Mass
Destruction Civil Support Teams. The report shall include the
following:
(1) A detailed description of risk management criteria and
considerations to be used in determining the optimal number and
location of Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support Teams.
(2) A description of the operational and training
activities conducted by the Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil
Support Teams during each of fiscal years 2010, 2011, and 2012.
(3) An assessment of the optimal number and location of
Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support Teams in light of the
information under paragraphs (1) and (2).
(4) A comparative analysis of the cost of establishing
Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil Support Teams in the reserve
components of the Armed Forces (other than the National Guard)
with the cost of establishing Weapons of Mass Destruction Civil
Support Teams in the National Guard.
(5) A description of the portion of the costs of Weapons of
Mass Destruction Civil Support Teams that is currently borne by
the States.
TITLE XV--AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 1501. PURPOSE.
The purpose of this subtitle is to authorize appropriations for the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2013 to provide additional funds
for overseas contingency operations being carried out by the Armed
Forces.
SEC. 1502. PROCUREMENT.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for procurement accounts for the Army, the Navy and the Marine Corps,
the Air Force, and Defense-wide activities, as specified in the funding
table in section 4102.
SEC. 1503. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for the use of the Department of Defense for research, development,
test, and evaluation, as specified in the funding table in section
4202.
SEC. 1504. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for the use of the Armed Forces and other activities and agencies of
the Department of Defense for expenses, not otherwise provided for, for
operation and maintenance, as specified in the funding table in section
4302.
SEC. 1505. MILITARY PERSONNEL.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for the use of the Armed Forces and other activities and agencies of
the Department of Defense for expenses, not otherwise provided for, for
military personnel, as specified in the funding table in section 4402.
SEC. 1506. WORKING CAPITAL FUNDS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013
for the use of the Armed Forces and other activities and agencies of
the Department of Defense for providing capital for working capital and
revolving funds, as specified in the funding table in section 4502.
SEC. 1507. DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2013 for expenses, not otherwise provided
for, for the Defense Health Program, as specified in the funding table
in section 4502.
SEC. 1508. DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE-WIDE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2013 for expenses, not otherwise provided
for, for Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide,
as specified in the funding table in section 4502.
SEC. 1509. DEFENSE INSPECTOR GENERAL.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2013 for expenses, not otherwise provided
for, for the Office of the Inspector General of the Department of
Defense, as specified in the funding table in section 4502.
Subtitle B--Financial Matters
SEC. 1521. TREATMENT AS ADDITIONAL AUTHORIZATIONS.
The amounts authorized to be appropriated by this title are in
addition to amounts otherwise authorized to be appropriated by this
Act.
SEC. 1522. SPECIAL TRANSFER AUTHORITY.
(a) Authority to Transfer Authorizations.--
(1) Authority.--Upon determination by the Secretary of
Defense that such action is necessary in the national interest,
the Secretary may transfer amounts of authorizations made
available to the Department of Defense in this title for fiscal
year 2013 between any such authorizations for that fiscal year
(or any subdivisions thereof). Amounts of authorizations so
transferred shall be merged with and be available for the same
purposes as the authorization to which transferred.
(2) Limitation.--The total amount of authorizations that
the Secretary may transfer under the authority of this
subsection may not exceed $4,000,000,000.
(b) Terms and Conditions.--Transfers under this section shall be
subject to the same terms and conditions as transfers under section
1001.
(c) Additional Authority.--The transfer authority provided by this
section is in addition to the transfer authority provided under section
1001.
Subtitle C--Limitations and Other Matters
SEC. 1531. AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES FUND.
(a) Continuation of Existing Limitations.--Funds available to the
Department of Defense for the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund for
fiscal year 2013 shall be subject to the conditions contained in
subsections (b) through (g) of section 1513 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 110-181; 122 Stat.
428), as amended by section 1531(b) of the Ike Skelton National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 124 Stat.
4424).
(b) Availability for Support of Training of Afghan Public
Protection Force.--Assistance provided during fiscal year 2013
utilizing funds in the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund may be used to
increase the capacity of the Government of Afghanistan to recruit, vet,
train, and manage the Afghan Public Protection Force within the
Afghanistan Ministry of Interior, including activities in connection
with the following:
(1) Expanding the capacity of the Force to train and
qualify recruits for static security, convoy security, and
personal detail security.
(2) Improving the infrastructure of the Afghan Public
Protection Force Training Center or other facilities for
training Force personnel.
(3) Increasing the capacity of the Afghanistan Ministry of
Interior to manage the Force.
(4) Improving procedures for recruiting and vetting Force
personnel.
(5) Establishing or implementing requirements for
qualifications, training, and accountability consistent with
the purposes of section 862 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (10 U.S.C. 2302 note),
to the extent feasible.
(c) Plan for Use of Afghanistan Security Forces Fund Through
2017.--No later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a plan for using funds available to the Department of
Defense to provide assistance to the security forces of Afghanistan
through the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund through September 30,
2017.
SEC. 1532. JOINT IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE DEVICE DEFEAT FUND.
(a) Use and Transfer of Funds.--Subsections (b) and (c) of section
1514 of the John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2007 (Public Law 109-364; 120 Stat. 2439), as in effect before the
amendments made by section 1503 of the Duncan Hunter National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat.
4649), shall apply to the funds made available to the Department of
Defense for the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Fund for
fiscal year 2013.
(b) Availability of Certain Fiscal Year 2013 Funds.--
(1) In general.--Of the funds made available to the
Department of Defense for the Joint Improvised Explosive Device
Defeat Fund for fiscal year 2013, $15,000,000 may be available
to the Secretary of Defense to provide training, equipment,
supplies, and services to ministries and other entities of the
Government of Pakistan that the Secretary has identified as
critical for countering the flow of improvised explosive device
precursor chemicals from Pakistan to locations in Afghanistan.
(2) Provision through other us agencies.--If jointly agreed
upon by the Secretary of Defense and the head of another
department or agency of the United States Government, the
Secretary of Defense may transfer funds available under
paragraph (1) to such department or agency for the provision of
training, equipment, supplies, and services to ministries and
other entities of the Government of Pakistan as described in
that paragraph by such department or agency.
(3) Notice to congress.--Funds may not be used under the
authority in paragraph (1) until 15 days after the date on
which the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional
defense committees a notice on the training, equipment,
supplies, and services to be provided using such funds.
(c) Expiration.--This section shall cease to be effective on
December 31, 2013.
SEC. 1533. PLAN FOR TRANSITION IN FUNDING OF UNITED STATES SPECIAL
OPERATIONS COMMAND FROM SUPPLEMENTAL FUNDING FOR OVERSEAS
CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS TO RECURRING FUNDING UNDER THE
FUTURE-YEARS DEFENSE PROGRAM.
The Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees, at the same time as the budget of the President for fiscal
year 2014 is submitted to Congress pursuant to section 1105(a) of title
31, United States Code, a plan for the transition of funding of the
United States Special Operations Command from funds authorized to be
appropriated for overseas contingency operations (commonly referred to
as the ``overseas contingency operations budget'') to funds authorized
to be appropriated for recurring operations of the Department of
Defense in accordance with applicable future-years defense programs
under section 221 of title 10, United States Code (commonly referred to
as the ``base budget'').
SEC. 1534. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY ON TASK FORCE FOR BUSINESS AND
STABILITY OPERATIONS IN AFGHANISTAN.
Section 1535(a) of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 124 Stat. 4426), as
amended by section 1534 of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1658), is further
amended--
(1) in the second sentence of paragraph (4)--
(A) by striking ``The amount of funds used'' and
inserting ``The amount of fund obligated'';
(B) by inserting ``and $93,000,000 for fiscal year
2013'' after ``fiscal year 2012''; and
(C) by inserting ``for fiscal year 2012'' after
``except that'';
(2) in paragraph (6), by striking ``October 31, 2011, and
October 31, 2012'' and inserting ``October 31 of each of 2011,
2012, and 2013''; and
(3) in paragraph (7)--
(A) by striking ``provided in'' and inserting ``to
obligate funds for projects under''; and
(B) by striking ``September 30, 2012'' and
inserting ``September 30, 2013''.
SEC. 1535. ASSESSMENTS OF TRAINING ACTIVITIES AND INTELLIGENCE
ACTIVITIES OF THE JOINT IMPROVISED EXPLOSIVE DEVICE
DEFEAT ORGANIZATION.
(a) Training Activities.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in
consultation with the Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff and the
other chiefs of staff of the Armed Forces, submit to the
congressional defense committees a report setting forth an
assessment of the training-related activities of the Joint
Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization (JIEDDO).
(2) Elements.--The assessment required by paragraph (1)
shall--
(A) include all training programs and functions
executed by the Joint Improvised Explosive Device
Defeat Organization in support of the United States
Armed Forces or coalition partners;
(B) identify any program or function which is
duplicated elsewhere within the Department of Defense;
and
(C) assess the value of maintaining such
duplication.
(3) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
(4) Limitation.--No training-related program may be
initiated by the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat
Organization between the date of the enactment of this Act and
the date of the submittal of the report required by paragraph
(1).
(b) Intelligence Activities.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in
consultation with the Director of National Intelligence, submit
to the congressional defense committees a report setting forth
an assessment of the activities of the Counter-Improvised-
Explosive-Device Operations Integration Center of the Joint
Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization.
(2) Elements.--The assessment required by paragraph (1)
shall--
(A) include all intelligence analysis programs and
functions executed by the Counter-Improvised-Explosive-
Device Operations Integration Center in support of the
United States Government or coalition partners;
(B) identify any program or function which is
duplicated elsewhere within the Department of Defense,
including the intelligence components of the
Department, or the intelligence community of the United
States; and
(C) assess the value of maintaining such
duplication.
(3) Form.--The report required by paragraph (2) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
TITLE XVI--MILITARY COMPENSATION AND RETIREMENT MODERNIZATION
COMMISSION
SEC. 1601. SHORT TITLE.
This title may be cited as the ``Military Compensation and
Retirement Modernization Commission Act of 2012''.
SEC. 1602. PURPOSE.
The purpose of this title is to establish a Commission to review
and make recommendations to modernize the military compensation and
retirement systems in order to--
(1) ensure the long-term viability of the All-Volunteer
Force;
(2) enable the quality of life for members of the Armed
Forces and the other uniformed services and their families in a
manner that fosters successful recruitment, retention, and
careers for members of the Armed Forces and the other uniformed
services; and
(3) modernize and achieve fiscal sustainability for the
compensation and retirements systems for the Armed Forces and
the other uniformed services for the 21st century.
SEC. 1603. DEFINITIONS.
In this title:
(1) The term ``military compensation and retirement
systems'' means the military compensation system and the
military retirement system.
(2) The term ``military compensation system'' means
provisions of law providing eligibility for and the computation
of military compensation, including regular military
compensation, special and incentive pays and allowances,
medical and dental care, educational assistance and related
benefits, and commissary and exchange benefits and related
benefits and activities.
(3) The term ``military retirement system'' means
retirement benefits, including retired pay based upon service
in the uniformed services and survivor annuities based upon
such service.
(4) The term ``Armed Forces'' has the meaning given the
term ``armed forces'' in section 101(a)(4) of title 10, United
States Code.
(5) The term ``uniformed services'' has the meaning given
that term in section 101(a)(5) of title 10, United States Code.
(6) The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary of Defense.
(7) The term ``Commission'' means the commission
established under section 1604.
(8) The term ``Commission establishment date'' means the
first day of the first month beginning on or after the date of
the enactment of this Act.
(9) The terms ``veterans service organization'' and
``military-related advocacy group or association'' mean an
organization the primary purpose of which is to advocate for
veterans, military personnel, military retirees, or military
families.
SEC. 1604. MILITARY COMPENSATION AND RETIREMENT MODERNIZATION
COMMISSION.
(a) Establishment.--There is established in the executive branch an
independent commission to be known as the Military Compensation and
Retirement Modernization Commission. The Commission shall be considered
an independent establishment of the Federal Government as defined by
section 104 of title 5, United States Code, and a temporary
organization under section 3161 of such title.
(b) Appointment.--
(1) In general.--
(A) Members.--The Commission shall be composed of
nine members appointed by the President, in
consultation with--
(i) the Chairman and Ranking Member of the
Committee on Armed Services of the Senate; and
(ii) the Chairman and Ranking Member of the
Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives.
(B) Deadline for appointment.--The President shall
make appointments to the Commission not later than six
months after the Commission establishment date.
(C) Termination for lack of appointment.--If the
President does not make all appointments to the
Commission on or before the date specified in
subparagraph (B), the Commission shall be terminated.
(2) Qualifications of individuals appointed.--In appointing
individuals to the Commission, the President shall--
(A) ensure that--
(i) there are members with significant
expertise in Federal compensation and
retirement systems, including the military
compensation and retirement systems, private
sector compensation, retirement, or human
resource systems, and actuarial science;
(ii) at least five members have active-duty
military experience, including--
(I) at least one of whom has
active-duty experience as an enlisted
member; and
(II) at least one of whom has
experience as a member of a reserve
component; and
(iii) at least one member was the spouse of
a member of the Armed Forces, or, in the sole
determination of the President, has significant
experience in military family matters; and
(B) select individuals who are knowledgeable and
experienced with the uniformed services and military
compensation and retirement issues.
(3) Limitation.--The President may not appoint to the
Commission an individual who within the preceding year has been
employed by a veterans service organization or military-related
advocacy group or association.
(4) Chair.--At the time the President appoints the members
of the Commission, the President shall designate one of the
members to be Chair of the Commission. The individual
designated as Chair of the Commission shall be a person who has
expertise in the military compensation and retirement systems.
The Chair, or the designee of the Chair, shall preside over
meetings of the Commission and be responsible for establishing
the agenda of Commission meetings and hearings.
(c) Terms.--Members shall be appointed for the life of the
Commission (subject to subsection (b)(3)). A vacancy in the Commission
shall not affect its powers, and shall be filled in the same manner as
the original appointment was made.
(d) Status as Federal Employees.--Notwithstanding the requirements
of section 2105 of title 5, United States Code, including the required
supervision under subsection (a)(3) of such section, the members of the
Commission shall be deemed Federal employees.
SEC. 1605. COMMISSION HEARINGS AND MEETINGS.
(a) In General.--The Commission shall conduct hearings on the
recommendations it is taking under consideration. Any such hearing,
except a hearing in which classified information is to be considered,
shall be open to the public. Any hearing open to the public shall be
announced on a Federal website at least 14 days in advance. For all
hearings open to the public, the Commission shall release an agenda and
a listing of materials relevant to the topics to be discussed.
(b) Meetings.--
(1) Initial meeting.--The Commission shall hold its initial
meeting not later than 30 days after the date as of which all
members have been appointed.
(2) Subsequent meetings.--After its initial meeting, the
Commission shall meet upon the call of the Chair or a majority
of its members.
(3) Public meetings.--Each meeting of the Commission shall
be held in public unless any member objects.
(c) Quorum.--Five members of the Commission shall constitute a
quorum, but a lesser number may hold hearings.
(d) Public Comments.--
(1) In general.--The Commission shall seek written comments
from the general public and interested parties on measures to
modernize the military compensation and retirement systems.
Comments shall be requested through a solicitation in the
Federal Register and announcement on the Internet website of
the Commission.
(2) Period for submittal.--The period for the submittal of
comments pursuant to the solicitation under paragraph (1) shall
end not earlier than 30 days after the date of the solicitation
and shall end on or before the date on which the Secretary
transmits the recommendations of the Secretary to the
Commission under section 1606(b).
(3) Use by commission.--The Commission shall consider the
comments submitted under this subsection when developing its
recommendations.
SEC. 1606. PRINCIPLES AND PROCEDURE FOR COMMISSION RECOMMENDATIONS.
(a) Principles.--
(1) Context of commission review.--The Commission shall
conduct a review of the military compensation and retirement
systems in the context of all elements of the current military
compensation and retirement systems, force management
objectives, and changes in life expectancy and the labor force.
(2) Development of commission recommendations.--
(A) Consistency with presidential principles.--The
Commission shall develop recommendations for
modernizing the military compensation and retirement
systems that are consistent with principles established
by the President under paragraph (3).
(B) Grandfathering.--The recommendations of the
Commission may not apply to any person who first
becomes a member of a uniformed service before the date
of the enactment of a military compensation and
retirement modernization Act pursuant to this title
(except that such recommendations may include
provisions allowing for such a member to make a
voluntary election to be covered by some or all of the
provisions of such recommendations).
(3) Presidential principles.--Not later than five months
after the Commission establishment date, the President shall
establish and transmit to the Commission and Congress
principles for modernizing the military compensation and
retirement systems. The principles established by the President
shall address the following:
(A) Maintaining recruitment and retention of the
best military personnel.
(B) Modernizing the active and reserve military
compensation and retirement systems.
(C) Differentiating between active and reserve
military service.
(D) Differentiating between service in the Armed
Forces and service in the other uniformed services.
(E) Assisting with force management.
(F) Ensuring the fiscal sustainability of the
military compensation and retirement systems.
(b) Secretary of Defense Recommendations.--
(1) In general.--Not later than nine months after the
Commission establishment date, the Secretary shall transmit to
the Commission the recommendations of the Secretary for
military compensation and retirement modernization. The
Secretary shall concurrently transmit the recommendations to
Congress.
(2) Development of recommendations.--The Secretary shall
develop the recommendations of the Secretary under paragraph
(1)--
(A) on the basis of the principles established by
the President pursuant to subsection (a)(3);
(B) in consultation with the Secretary of Homeland
Security, with respect to recommendations concerning
members of the Coast Guard;
(C) in consultation with the Secretary of Health
and Human Services, with respect to recommendations
concerning members of the Public Health Service;
(D) in consultation with the Secretary of Commerce,
with respect to recommendations concerning members of
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration;
and
(E) in consultation with the Director of the Office
of Management and Budget.
(3) Justification.--The Secretary shall include with the
recommendations under paragraph (1) the justification of the
Secretary for each recommendation.
(4) Availability of information.--The Secretary shall make
available to the Commission and to Congress the information
used by the Secretary to prepare the recommendations of the
Secretary under paragraph (1).
(c) Commission Hearings on Recommendations of Secretary.--After
receiving from the Secretary the recommendations of the Secretary for
military compensation and retirement modernization pursuant to
subsection (b), the Commission shall conduct public hearings on the
recommendations.
(d) Commission Report and Recommendations.--
(1) Report.--Not later than 15 months after the Commission
establishment date, the Commission shall transmit to the
President a report containing the findings and conclusions of
the Commission, together with the recommendations of the
Commission for the modernization of the military compensation
and retirement systems. The Commission shall include in the
report legislative language to implement the recommendations of
the Commission. The findings and conclusions in the report
shall be based on the review and analysis by the Commission of
the recommendations of the Secretary.
(2) Requirement for approval.--The recommendations of the
Commission must be approved by at least five members of the
Commission before the recommendations may be transmitted to the
President under paragraph (1).
(3) Procedures for changing recommendations of secretary.--
The Commission may make a change described in paragraph (4) in
the recommendations made by the Secretary only if the
Commission--
(A) determines that the change is consistent with
the principles established by the President under
subsection (a)(3);
(B) publishes a notice of the proposed change not
less than 45 days before transmitting its
recommendations to the President pursuant to paragraph
(1); and
(C) conducts a public hearing on the proposed
change.
(4) Covered changes.--Paragraph (3) applies to a change by
the Commission in the recommendations of the Secretary that
would--
(A) add a new recommendation;
(B) delete a recommendation; or
(C) substantially change a recommendation.
(5) Explanation and justification for changes.--The
Commission shall explain and justify in its report submitted to
the President under paragraph (1) any recommendation made by
the Commission that is different from the recommendations made
by the Secretary pursuant to subsection (b).
(6) Transmittal to congress.--The Commission shall transmit
a copy of its report to Congress on the same date on which it
transmits its report to the President under paragraph (1).
SEC. 1607. CONSIDERATION OF COMMISSION RECOMMENDATIONS BY THE PRESIDENT
AND CONGRESS.
(a) Review by the President.--
(1) Report of presidential approval or disapproval.--Not
later than 60 days after the date on which the Commission
transmits its report to the President under section 1606(d),
the President shall transmit to the Commission and to Congress
a report containing the approval or disapproval by the
President of the recommendations of the Commission in the
report.
(2) Presidential approval.--If in the report under
paragraph (1) the President approves all the recommendations of
the Commission, the President shall include with the report the
following:
(A) A copy of the recommendations of the
Commission.
(B) The certification by the President of the
approval of the President of each recommendation.
(C) The legislative language transmitted by the
Commission to the President as part of the report of
the Commission under section 1606(d)(1).
(3) Presidential disapproval.--
(A) Reasons for disapproval.--If in the report
under paragraph (1) the President disapproves the
recommendations of the Commission, in whole or in part,
the President shall include in the report the reasons
for that disapproval.
(B) Revised recommendations from commission.--The
Commission shall then transmit to the President, not
later one month after the date of the report of the
President under paragraph (1), revised recommendations
for the modernization of the military compensation and
retirement systems, together with revised legislative
language to implement the revised recommendations of
the Commission.
(4) Action on revised recommendations.--If the President
approves all of the revised recommendations of the Commission
transmitted pursuant to paragraph (3)(B), the President shall
transmit to Congress, not later than one month after receiving
the revised recommendations, the following:
(A) A copy of the revised recommendations.
(B) The certification by the President of the
approval of the President of each recommendation as so
revised.
(C) The revised legislative language transmitted to
the President under paragraph (3)(B).
(5) Termination of commission.--If the President does not
transmit to Congress an approval and certification described in
paragraph (2) or (4) in accordance with the applicable deadline
under such paragraph, the Commission shall be terminated not
later than one month after the expiration of the period for
transmittal of a report under paragraph (4).
(b) Consideration by Congress.--
(1) Rulemaking.--The provisions of this subsection are
enacted by Congress--
(A) as an exercise of the rulemaking power of the
Senate and the House of Representatives, respectively,
and as such they shall be considered as part of the
rules of each House, respectively, or of that House to
which they specifically apply, and such rules supersede
other rules only to the extent that they are
inconsistent therewith; and
(B) with full recognition of the constitutional
right of either House to change such rules (so far as
relating to the procedure of that House) at any time,
in the same manner and to the same extent as in the
case of any other rule of that House.
(2) Military compensation and retirement modernization
bill.--For the purpose of this subsection, the term ``military
compensation and retirement modernization bill'' means only a
bill consisting of the proposed legislative language
recommended by the Commission and submitted to Congress by the
President pursuant to subsection (a).
(3) Introduction of legislative proposal in house and
senate.--If the President transmits to Congress under
subsection (a) a copy of the recommendations of the Commission
(including the legislative language recommended by the
Commission), together with a certification of the approval of
the President of the recommendations, the proposed legislative
language recommended by the Commission and submitted to
Congress by the President pursuant to that subsection--
(A) shall be introduced in the Senate (by request)
on the next day on which the Senate is in session by
the chairman of the Committee on Armed Services of the
Senate; and
(B) shall be introduced in the House of
Representatives (by request) on the next legislative
day by the chair of the Committee on Armed Services of
the House of Representatives.
(4) Consideration in the house of representatives.--
(A) Referral and reporting.--Any committee of the
House of Representatives to which the military
compensation and retirement modernization bill is
referred shall report it to the House without amendment
not later than the end of the 60-day period beginning
on the date on which the bill is introduced. If a
committee fails to report the bill to the House within
that period, it shall be in order to move that the
House discharge the committee from further
consideration of the bill. Such a motion shall not be
in order after the last committee authorized to
consider the bill reports it to the House or after the
House has disposed of a motion to discharge the bill.
The previous question shall be considered as ordered on
the motion to its adoption without intervening motion
except 20 minutes of debate equally divided and
controlled by the proponent and an opponent. If such a
motion is adopted, the House shall proceed immediately
to consider the Commission bill in accordance with
subparagraphs (B) and (C). A motion to reconsider the
vote by which the motion is disposed of shall not be in
order.
(B) Proceeding to consideration.--After the last
committee authorized to consider a military
compensation and retirement modernization bill reports
it to the House or has been discharged (other than by
motion) from its consideration, it shall be in order to
move to proceed to consider the military compensation
and retirement modernization bill in the House. Such a
motion shall not be in order after the House has
disposed of a motion to proceed with respect to the
military compensation and retirement modernization
bill. The previous question shall be considered as
ordered on the motion to its adoption without
intervening motion. A motion to reconsider the vote by
which the motion is disposed of shall not be in order.
(C) Consideration.--The military compensation and
retirement modernization bill shall be considered as
read. All points of order against the bill and against
its consideration are waived. The previous question
shall be considered as ordered on the bill to its
passage without intervening motion except 2 hours of
debate equally divided and controlled by the proponent
and an opponent and one motion to limit debate on the
bill. A motion to reconsider the vote on passage of the
bill shall not be in order.
(D) Vote on passage.--The vote on passage of the
military compensation and retirement modernization bill
shall occur not later than the end of the 90-day period
beginning on the date on which the bill is introduced.
(5) Expedited procedure in the senate.--
(A) Committee consideration.--A military
compensation and retirement modernization bill
introduced in the Senate under subsection (a) shall be
jointly referred to the committee or committees of
jurisdiction, which committees shall report the bill
without any revision and with a favorable
recommendation, an unfavorable recommendation, or
without recommendation, not later than the end of the
60-day period beginning on the date on which the bill
is introduced. If any committee fails to report the
bill within that period, that committee shall be
automatically discharged from consideration of the
bill, and the bill shall be placed on the appropriate
calendar.
(B) Motion to proceed.--Notwithstanding Rule XXII
of the Standing Rules of the Senate, it is in order,
not later than 2 days of session after the date on
which a military compensation and retirement
modernization bill is reported or discharged from all
committees to which it was referred, for the majority
leader of the Senate or the majority leader's designee
to move to proceed to the consideration of the military
compensation and retirement modernization bill. It
shall also be in order for any Member of the Senate to
move to proceed to the consideration of the military
compensation and retirement modernization bill at any
time after the conclusion of such 2-day period. A
motion to proceed is in order even though a previous
motion to the same effect has been disagreed to. All
points of order against the motion to proceed to the
military compensation and retirement modernization bill
are waived. The motion to proceed is not debatable. The
motion is not subject to a motion to postpone. A motion
to reconsider the vote by which the motion is agreed to
or disagreed to shall not be in order. If a motion to
proceed to the consideration of the military
compensation and retirement modernization bill is
agreed to, the military compensation and retirement
modernization bill shall remain the unfinished business
until disposed of.
(C) Consideration.--All points of order, other than
budget points of order, against the military
compensation and retirement modernization bill and
against consideration of the bill are waived.
Consideration of the bill and of all debatable motions
and appeals in connection therewith shall not exceed a
total of 10 hours which shall be divided equally
between the majority and minority leaders or their
designees. A motion further to limit debate on the bill
is in order, shall require an affirmative vote of
three-fifths of the Members duly chosen and sworn, and
is not debatable. Any debatable motion or appeal is
debatable for not to exceed 1 hour, to be divided
equally between those favoring and those opposing the
motion or appeal. All time used for consideration of
the bill, including time used for quorum calls and
voting, shall be counted against the total 10 hours of
consideration.
(D) No amendments.--An amendment to the Commission
bill, or a motion to postpone, or a motion to proceed
to the consideration of other business, or a motion to
recommit the Commission bill, is not in order.
(E) Vote on passage.--If the Senate has voted to
proceed to the military compensation and retirement
modernization bill, the vote on passage of the bill
shall occur immediately following the conclusion of the
debate on a military compensation and retirement
modernization bill, and a single quorum call at the
conclusion of the debate if requested. The vote on
passage of the bill shall occur not later the end of
the 90-day period beginning on the date on which the
bill is introduced.
(F) Rulings of the chair on procedure.--Appeals
from the decisions of the Chair relating to the
application of the rules of the Senate, as the case may
be, to the procedure relating to a military
compensation and retirement modernization bill shall be
decided without debate.
(6) Amendment.--The military compensation and retirement
modernization bill shall not be subject to amendment in either
the House of Representatives or the Senate.
(7) Consideration by the other house.--If, before passing
the military compensation and retirement modernization bill,
one House receives from the other a military compensation and
retirement modernization bill--
(A) the military compensation and retirement
modernization bill of the other House shall not be
referred to a committee; and
(B) the procedure in the receiving House shall be
the same as if no military compensation and retirement
modernization bill had been received from the other
House until the vote on passage, when the military
compensation and retirement modernization bill received
from the other House shall supplant the military
compensation and retirement modernization bill of the
receiving House.
SEC. 1608. PAY FOR MEMBERS OF THE COMMISSION.
(a) In General.--Each member, other than the Chair, of the
Commission shall be paid at a rate equal to the daily equivalent of the
annual rate of basic pay payable for level IV of the Executive Schedule
under section 5315 of title 5, United States Code, for each day
(including travel time) during which the member is engaged in the
actual performance of duties vested in the Commission.
(b) Chair.--The Chair of the Commission shall be paid at a rate
equal to the daily equivalent of the annual rate of basic pay payable
for level III of the Executive Schedule under section 5314, of title 5,
United States Code, for each day (including travel time) during which
the member is engaged in the actual performance of duties vested in the
Commission.
SEC. 1609. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR.
(a) Appointment.--The Commission shall appoint and fix the rate of
basic pay for an Executive Director in accordance with section 3161 of
title 5, United States Code.
(b) Limitations.--The Executive Director may not have served on
active duty in the Armed Forces or as a civilian employee of the
Department of Defense during the one-year period preceding the date of
such appointment and may not have been employed by a veterans service
organization or a military-related advocacy group or association during
that one-year period.
SEC. 1610. STAFF.
(a) In General.--Subject to subsections (b) and (c), the Executive
Director, with the approval of the Commission, may appoint and fix the
rate of basic pay for additional personnel as staff of the Commission
in accordance with section 3161 of title 5, United States Code.
(b) Limitations on Staff.--
(1) Number of detailees from department of defense.--Not
more than one-third of the personnel employed by or detailed to
the Commission may be on detail from the Department of Defense.
(2) Prior duties within department of defense.--A person
may not be detailed from the Department of Defense to the
Commission if, in the year before the detail is to begin, that
person participated personally and substantially in any matter
within the Department concerning the preparation of
recommendations for military compensation and retirement
modernization.
(3) Number of detailees eligible for military retired
pay.--Not more than one-fourth of the personnel employed by or
detailed to the Commission may be persons eligible for or
receiving military retired pay.
(4) Prior employment with certain organizations.--A person
may not be employed by or detailed to the Commission if, in the
year before the employment or detail is to begin, that person
was employed by a veterans service organization or a military-
related advocacy group or association.
(c) Limitations on Performance Reviews.--No member of the Armed
Forces, and no officer or employee of the Department of Defense, may--
(1) prepare any report concerning the effectiveness,
fitness, or efficiency of the performance of the staff of the
Commission or any person detailed from the Department to that
staff;
(2) review the preparation of such a report; or
(3) approve or disapprove such a report.
SEC. 1611. CONTRACTING AUTHORITY.
The Commission may lease space and acquire personal property to the
extent funds are available.
SEC. 1612. JUDICIAL REVIEW PRECLUDED.
The following shall not be subject to judicial review:
(1) Actions of the President, the Secretary, and the
Commission under section 1606.
(2) Actions of the President under section 1607(a).
SEC. 1613. TERMINATION.
Except as otherwise provided in this title, the Commission shall
terminate not later than 26 months after the Commission establishment
date.
SEC. 1614. FUNDING.
Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated by this division for
the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2013, up to $10,000,000 shall
be available to the Commission to carry out its duties under this
title. Funds available to the Commission under the preceding sentence
shall remain available until expended.
TITLE XVII--NATIONAL COMMISSION ON THE STRUCTURE OF THE AIR FORCE
SEC. 1701. SHORT TITLE.
This title may be cited as the ``National Commission on the
Structure of the Air Force Act of 2012''.
SEC. 1702. ESTABLISHMENT OF COMMISSION.
(a) Establishment.--There is established the National Commission on
the Structure of the Air Force (in this title referred to as the
``Commission'').
(b) Membership.--
(1) Composition.--The Commission shall be composed of eight
members, of whom--
(A) four shall be appointed by the President, of
whom one shall be the Chairman of the Reserve Forces
Policy Board;
(B) one shall be appointed by the Chairman of the
Committee on Armed Services of the Senate;
(C) one shall be appointed by the Ranking Member of
the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate;
(D) one shall be appointed by the Chairman of the
Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives; and
(E) one shall be appointed by the Ranking Member of
the Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives.
(2) Appointment date.--The appointments of the members of
the Commission shall be made not later than 90 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act.
(3) Effect of lack of appointment by appointment date.--If
one or more appointments under subparagraph (A) of paragraph
(1) is not made by the appointment date specified in paragraph
(2), the authority to make such appointment or appointments
shall expire, and the number of members of the Commission shall
be reduced by the number equal to the number of appointments so
not made. If an appointment under subparagraph (B), (C), (D),
or (E) of paragraph (1) is not made by the appointment date
specified in paragraph (2), the authority to make an
appointment under such subparagraph shall expire, and the
number of members of the Commission shall be reduced by the
number equal to the number otherwise appointable under such
subparagraph.
(c) Period of Appointment; Vacancies.--Members shall be appointed
for the life of the Commission. Any vacancy in the Commission shall not
affect its powers, but shall be filled in the same manner as the
original appointment.
(d) Initial Meeting.--Not later than 30 days after the date on
which all members of the Commission have been appointed, the Commission
shall hold its first meeting.
(e) Meetings.--The Commission shall meet at the call of the Chair.
(f) Quorum.--A majority of the members of the Commission shall
constitute a quorum, but a lesser number of members may hold hearings.
(g) Chair and Vice Chairman.--The Commission shall select a Chair
and Vice Chair from among its members.
SEC. 1703. DUTIES OF THE COMMISSION.
(a) Study.--
(1) In general.--The Commission shall undertake a
comprehensive study of the current structure of the Air Force
to determine whether, and how, the structure should be modified
to best fulfill current and anticipated mission requirements
for the Air Force in a manner consistent with available
resources.
(2) Considerations.--In considering an alternative
structure for the Air Force, the Commission shall give
particular consideration to identifying a structure that--
(A) meets current and anticipated requirements of
the combatant commands;
(B) achieves an appropriate balance between the
regular and reserve components of the Air Force, taking
advantage of the unique strengths and capabilities of
each;
(C) ensures that the reserve components of the Air
Force have the capacity needed to support current and
anticipated homeland defense and disaster assistance
missions in the United States;
(D) provides for sufficient numbers of regular
members of the Air Force to provide a base of trained
personnel from which the personnel of the reserve
components of the Air Force could be recruited;
(E) maintains a peacetime rotation force to avoid
exceeding operational tempo goals of 1:2 for regular
members of the Air Forces and 1:5 for members of the
reserve components of the Air Force; and
(F) maximizes achievable costs savings.
(b) Report.--Not later than March 31, 2013, the Commission shall
submit to the President and the congressional defense committees a
report which shall contain a detailed statement of the findings and
conclusions of the Commission as a result of the study required by
subsection (a), together with its recommendations for such legislation
and administrative actions as it considers appropriate in light of the
results of the study.
SEC. 1704. POWERS OF THE COMMISSION.
(a) Hearings.--The Commission may hold such hearings, sit and act
at such times and places, take such testimony, and receive such
evidence as the Commission considers advisable to carry out this title.
(b) Information From Federal Agencies.--The Commission may secure
directly from any Federal department or agency such information as the
Commission considers necessary to carry out this title. Upon request of
the Chair of the Commission, the head of such department or agency
shall furnish such information to the Commission.
(c) Postal Services.--The Commission may use the United States
mails in the same manner and under the same conditions as other
departments and agencies of the Federal Government.
(d) Gifts.--The Commission may accept, use, and dispose of gifts or
donations of services or property.
SEC. 1705. COMMISSION PERSONNEL MATTERS.
(a) Compensation of Members.--Each member of the Commission who is
not an officer or employee of the Federal Government shall be
compensated at a rate equal to the daily equivalent of the annual rate
of basic pay prescribed for level IV of the Executive Schedule under
section 5315 of title 5, United States Code, for each day (including
travel time) during which such member is engaged in the performance of
the duties of the Commission. All members of the Commission who are
officers or employees of the United States shall serve without
compensation in addition to that received for their services as
officers or employees of the United States.
(b) Travel Expenses.--The members of the Commission shall be
allowed travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, at
rates authorized for employees of agencies under subchapter I of
chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code, while away from their homes
or regular places of business in the performance of services for the
Commission.
(c) Staff.--
(1) In general.--The Chair of the Commission may, without
regard to the civil service laws and regulations, appoint and
terminate an executive director and such other additional
personnel as may be necessary to enable the Commission to
perform its duties. The employment of an executive director
shall be subject to confirmation by the Commission.
(2) Compensation.--The Chair of the Commission may fix the
compensation of the executive director and other personnel
without regard to chapter 51 and subchapter III of chapter 53
of title 5, United States Code, relating to classification of
positions and General Schedule pay rates, except that the rate
of pay for the executive director and other personnel may not
exceed the rate payable for level V of the Executive Schedule
under section 5316 of such title.
(d) Detail of Government Employees.--Any Federal Government
employee may be detailed to the Commission without reimbursement, and
such detail shall be without interruption or loss of civil service
status or privilege.
(e) Procurement of Temporary and Intermittent Services.--The Chair
of the Commission may procure temporary and intermittent services under
section 3109(b) of title 5, United States Code, at rates for
individuals which do not exceed the daily equivalent of the annual rate
of basic pay prescribed for level V of the Executive Schedule under
section 5316 of such title.
SEC. 1706. TERMINATION OF THE COMMISSION.
The Commission shall terminate 90 days after the date on which the
Commission submits its report under section 1703.
SEC. 1707. FUNDING.
Amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013 and
available for operation and maintenance for the Air Force as specified
in the funding table in section 4301 may be available for the
activities of the Commission under this title.
SEC. 1708. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR REDUCTIONS TO THE
AIR NATIONAL GUARD AND THE AIR FORCE RESERVE.
(a) In General.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by
this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2013 for the Air
Force may be used to divest, retire, or transfer, or prepare to divest,
retire, or transfer, any aircraft of the Air Force assigned to units of
the Air National Guard or Air Force Reserve as of May 31, 2012.
(b) Exception.--The Secretary of the Air Force may divest or
retire, or prepare to divest or retire, C-5A aircraft if the Secretary
replaces such aircraft through a transfer of C-5B, C-5M, or C-17
mobility aircraft so as to maintain all Air National Guard and Air
Force Reserve units impacted by such divestment or retirement at
current or higher assigned manpower levels to operate the aircraft so
transferred.
SEC. 1709. FUNDING FOR MAINTENANCE OF FORCE STRUCTURE OF THE AIR FORCE
PENDING COMMISSION RECOMMENDATIONS.
There is hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Department of
Defense for fiscal year 2013, $1,400,000,000 for the force structure of
the Air Force. The amount authorized to be appropriated by this section
is in addition to any other amounts authorized to be appropriated by
this Act.
SEC. 1710. RETENTION OF CORE FUNCTIONS OF THE ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS CENTER
AT HANSCOM AIR FORCE BASE PENDING FUTURE STRUCTURE STUDY.
The Secretary of the Air Force shall retain the current leadership
rank and core functions of the Electronic Systems Center at Hanscom Air
Force Base with the same integrated mission elements, responsibilities,
and capabilities as existed as of November 1, 2011, until 180 days
after the National Commission on the Structure of the Air Force submits
to the congressional defense committees the report required under
section 1703.
DIVISION B--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATIONS
SEC. 2001. SHORT TITLE.
This division may be cited as the ``Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013''.
SEC. 2002. EXPIRATION OF AUTHORIZATIONS AND AMOUNTS REQUIRED TO BE
SPECIFIED BY LAW.
(a) Expiration of Authorizations After Three Years.--Except as
provided in subsection (b), all authorizations contained in titles XXI
through XXVII for military construction projects, land acquisition,
family housing projects and facilities, and contributions to the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment Program (and
authorizations of appropriations therefor) shall expire on the later
of--
(1) October 1, 2015; or
(2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds
for military construction for fiscal year 2016.
(b) Exception.--Subsection (a) shall not apply to authorizations
for military construction projects, land acquisition, family housing
projects and facilities, and contributions to the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization Security Investment Program (and authorizations of
appropriations therefor), for which appropriated funds have been
obligated before the later of--
(1) October 1, 2015; or
(2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds
for fiscal year 2016 for military construction projects, land
acquisition, family housing projects and facilities, or
contributions to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Security Investment Program.
TITLE XXI--ARMY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 2101. AUTHORIZED ARMY CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2103 and available
for military construction projects inside the United States as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the
Army may acquire real property and carry out military construction
projects for the installations or locations inside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Army: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska...................................... Fort Wainwright.................................. $10,400,000
Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.................. $7,900,000
California.................................. Concord.......................................... $8,900,000
Colorado.................................... Fort Carson...................................... $18,000,000
Fort McNair...................................... $7,200,000
Georgia..................................... Fort Benning..................................... $16,000,000
Fort Gordon...................................... $23,300,000
Fort Stewart..................................... $49,650,000
Hawaii...................................... Pohakuloa Training Area.......................... $29,000,000
Schofield Barracks............................... $96,000,000
Wheeler Army Air Field........................... $85,000,000
Kansas...................................... Fort Riley....................................... $12,200,000
Kentucky.................................... Fort Campbell.................................... $81,800,000
Fort Knox........................................ $6,000,000
Missouri.................................... Fort Leonard Wood................................ $123,000,000
New Jersey.................................. Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst................. $47,000,000
Picatinny Arsenal................................ $10,200,000
New York.................................... Fort Drum........................................ $95,000,000
North Carolina.............................. Fort Bragg....................................... $68,000,000
Oklahoma.................................... Fort Sill........................................ $4,900,000
South Carolina.............................. Fort Jackson..................................... $24,000,000
Texas....................................... Corpus Christi................................... $37,200,000
Fort Bliss....................................... $7,200,000
Fort Hood........................................ $51,200,000
Joint Base San Antonio........................... $21,000,000
Virginia.................................... Fort Belvoir..................................... $94,000,000
Fort Lee......................................... $81,000,000
Washington.................................. Joint Base Lewis McChord......................... $164,000,000
Yakima........................................... $5,100,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2103 and available
for military construction projects outside the United States as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the
Army may acquire real property and carry out military construction
projects for the installations or locations outside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Army: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Italy......................................... Camp Ederle.................................... $36,000,000
Vicenza........................................ $32,000,000
Japan......................................... Okinawa........................................ $78,000,000
Sagami......................................... $18,000,000
Korea......................................... Camp Humphreys................................. $45,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2102. FAMILY HOUSING.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2103 and available for military family
housing functions as specified in the funding table in section 4601,
the Secretary of the Army may carry out architectural and engineering
services and construction design activities with respect to the
construction or improvement of family housing units in an amount not to
exceed $4,641,000.
SEC. 2103. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, ARMY.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2012, for military construction, land
acquisition, and military family housing functions of the Department of
the Army, as specified in the funding table in section 4601.
SEC. 2104. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2010 PROJECT.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section
2101(a) of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2010 (division B of Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2628) for Fort
Belvoir, Virginia, for construction of a Road and Access Control Point
at the installation, the Secretary of the Army may construct a standard
design Access Control Point consistent with the Army's construction
guidelines for Access Control Points.
SEC. 2105. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2009
PROJECTS.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (division B of
Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4658), authorizations set forth in the
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2101 of that Act (122
Stat. 4659), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2013, or the date
of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military construction
for fiscal year 2014, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:
Army: Extension of 2009 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama............................... Anniston Army Depot..... Lake Yard Interchange............ $1,400,000
New Jersey............................ Picatinny Arsenal....... Ballistic evaluation Facility $9,900,000
Phase I.........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2106. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2010
PROJECTS.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (division B of
Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2627), authorizations set forth in the
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2101 of that Act (123
Stat. 2628), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2013, or the date
of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military construction
for fiscal year 2014, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:
Army: Extension of 2010 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State/Country Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Louisiana............................. Fort Polk................ Land Purchases and Condemnation. $17,000,000
New Jersey............................ Picatinny Arsenal........ Ballistic Evaluation Facility, $10,200,000
Ph2............................
Virginia.............................. Fort Belvoir............. Road and Access Control Point... $9,500,000
Washington............................ Fort Lewis............... Fort Lewis-McCord AFB Joint $9,000,000
Access.........................
Kuwait................................ Kuwait................... APS Warehouses.................. $82,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2107. ADDITIONAL AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2013
PROJECT.
(a) Project Authorization.--The Secretary of the Army may carry out
a military construction project to construct a cadet barracks at the
U.S. Military Academy, New York, in the amount of $192,000,000.
(b) Use of Unobligated Prior-year Military Construction Funds.--The
Secretary of the Army shall use available, unobligated military
construction funds appropriated for a fiscal year before fiscal year
2013 for the project described in subsection (a).
(c) Congressional Notification.--The Secretary of the Army shall
provide information in accordance with section 2851(c) of title 10,
United States Code, regarding the project described in subsection (a).
If it becomes necessary to exceed the estimated project cost, the
Secretary shall utilize the authority provided by section 2853 of such
title regarding authorized cost and scope of work variations.
TITLE XXII--NAVY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 2201. AUTHORIZED NAVY CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2204 and available
for military construction projects inside the United States as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the
Navy may acquire real property and carry out military construction
projects for the installations or locations inside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arizona...................................... Yuma............................................ $29,285,000
California................................... Camp Pendleton.................................. $88,110,000
Coronado........................................ $78,541,000
Miramar......................................... $27,897,000
San Diego....................................... $71,188,000
Seal Beach...................................... $30,594,000
Twentynine Palms................................ $47,270,000
Ventura County.................................. $12,790,000
Florida...................................... Jacksonville.................................... $21,980,000
Hawaii....................................... Kaneohe Bay..................................... $97,310,000
Mississippi.................................. Meridian........................................ $10,926,000
New Jersey................................... Earle........................................... $33,498,000
North Carolina............................... Camp Lejeune.................................... $69,890,000
Cherry Point Marine Corps Air Station........... $45,891,000
New River....................................... $8,525,000
South Carolina............................... Beaufort........................................ $81,780,000
Parris Island................................... $10,135,000
Virginia..................................... Dahlgren........................................ $28,228,000
Oceana Naval Air Station........................ $39,086,000
Portsmouth...................................... $32,706,000
Quantico........................................ $58,714,000
Yorktown........................................ $48,823,000
Washington................................... Whidbey Island.................................. $6,272,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2204 and available
for military construction projects outside the United States as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the
Navy may acquire real property and carry out military construction
projects for the installation or location outside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Navy: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bahrain Island................................ SW Asia......................................... $51,348,000
Diego Garcia.................................. Diego Garcia.................................... $1,691,000
Djibouti...................................... Camp Lemonier................................... $99,420,000
Greece........................................ Souda Bay....................................... $25,123,000
Japan......................................... Iwakuni......................................... $13,138,000
Okinawa......................................... $8,206,000
Romania....................................... Deveselu........................................ $45,205,000
Spain......................................... Rota............................................ $17,215,000
Worldwide Unspecified......................... Unspecified Worldwide Locations................. $34,048,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2202. FAMILY HOUSING.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2204 and available for military family
housing functions as specified in the funding table in section 4601,
the Secretary of the Navy may carry out architectural and engineering
services and construction design activities with respect to the
construction or improvement of family housing units in an amount not to
exceed $4,527,000.
SEC. 2203. IMPROVEMENTS TO MILITARY FAMILY HOUSING UNITS.
Subject to section 2825 of title 10, United States Code, and using
amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in
section 2204 and available for military family housing functions as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the
Navy may improve existing military family housing units in an amount
not to exceed $97,655,000.
SEC. 2204. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NAVY.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2012, for military construction, land
acquisition, and military family housing functions of the Department of
the Navy, as specified in the funding table in 4601, including
incremental funding for the construction of increment 2 of explosives
handling wharf 2 at Kitsap, Washington, authorized by section 2201(a)
of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012
(division B of Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1666), $254,241,000.
SEC. 2205. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2012 PROJECT.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section
2201(a) of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2012 (division B of Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1666), for Kitsap
(Bangor) Washington, for construction of Explosives Handling Wharf #2
at that location, the Secretary of the Navy may acquire fee or lesser
real property interests to accomplish required environmental mitigation
for the project using appropriations authorized for the project.
SEC. 2206. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2009
PROJECTS.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (division B of
Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4658), the authorization set forth in the
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2201 of that Act (122
Stat 4670) and extended by section 2206 of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (division B of Public Law 112-
81; 125 Stat. 1668), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2013, or
the date of an Act authorizing funds for military construction for
fiscal year 2014, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:
Navy: Extension of 2009 Project Authorization
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State/Country Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California............................... Marine Corps Base, Camp Operations Access Points, $11,970,00
Pendleton................. Red Beach................. 0
Marine Corps Air Station, Emergency Response Station. $6,530,000
Miramar...................
District of Columbia..................... Washington Navy Yard....... Child Development Center... $9,340,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2207. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2010
PROJECTS.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (division B of
Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2627), the authorization set forth in the
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2201 of that Act (123
Stat. 2632), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2013, or the date
of an Act authorizing funds for military construction for fiscal year
2014, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:
Navy: Extension of 2010 Project Authorization
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State/Country Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California............................... Mountain Warfare Training Mountain Warfare Training, $6,830,000
Center, Bridgeport........ Commissary................
Maine.................................... Portsmouth Naval Shipyard.. Gate 2 Security $7,090,000
Improvements..............
Djibouti................................. Camp Lemonier.............. Security Fencing........... $8,109,000
Ammo Supply Point.......... $21,689,000
Interior Paved Roads....... $7,275,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2208. REALIGNMENT OF MARINES IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC REGION.
(a) Restriction on Use of Funds.--Except as provided in subsection
(c), none of the funds authorized to be appropriated under this Act,
and none of the amounts provided by the Government of Japan for
construction activities on land under the jurisdiction of the
Department of Defense, may be obligated or expended to implement the
realignment of Marine Corps forces from Okinawa to other locations
until--
(1) the Commander of the United States Pacific Command
provides to the congressional defense committees an assessment
of the strategic and logistical resources needed to ensure the
distributed lay-down of members of the United States Marine
Corps in the United States Pacific Command Area of
Responsibility meets the contingency operations plans;
(2) the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional
defense committees master plans for the construction of
facilities and infrastructure to execute the Marine Corps
distributed lay-down on Guam, Australia, and Hawaii, including
a detailed description of costs and the schedule for such
construction;
(3) the Secretary of the Navy submits a plan to the
congressional defense committees detailing the proposed
investments and schedules required to restore facilities and
infrastructure at Marine Corps Air Station Futenma; and
(4) a plan coordinated by all pertinent Federal agencies is
provided to the congressional defense committees detailing
descriptions of work, costs, and a schedule for completion of
construction, improvements, and repairs to the non-military
utilities, facilities, and infrastructure, if any, on Guam
affected by the realignment of forces.
(b) Development of Public Infrastructure.--
(1) Authorization required.--If the Secretary of Defense
determines that any grant, cooperative agreement, transfer of
funds to another Federal agency, or supplement of funds
available in fiscal year 2012 or fiscal year 2013 under Federal
programs administered by agencies other than the Department of
Defense will result in the development (including repair,
replacement, renovation, conversion, improvement, expansion,
acquisition, or construction) of public infrastructure on Guam,
the Secretary of Defense may not carry out such grant, transfer
cooperative agreement, or supplemental funding unless
specifically authorized by law.
(2) Public infrastructure defined.--In this section, the
term ``public infrastructure'' means any utility, method of
transportation, item of equipment, or facility under the
control of a public entity or State or local government that is
used by, or constructed for the benefit of, the general public.
(c) Exception to Restriction on Use of Funds.--The Secretary of
Defense may use funds described in subsection (a) to carry out
additional analysis or studies required the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) for proposed actions on
Guam or Hawaii.
(d) Distributed Lay-down Defined.--For purposes of this section,
the term ``distributed lay-down'' refers to the planned distribution of
Marines in Okinawa, Guam, Hawaii, Australia, and possibly elsewhere
that is contemplated in support of the joint statement of the U.S. -
Japan Security Consultative Committee dated April 27, 2012.
(e) Repeal.--Section 2207 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1668) is repealed.
TITLE XXIII--AIR FORCE MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 2301. AUTHORIZED AIR FORCE CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION
PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2304 and available
for military construction projects inside the United States as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the
Air Force may acquire real property and carry out military construction
projects for the installations or locations inside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Air Force: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arkansas....................................... Little Rock AFB............................. $30,178,000
Florida........................................ Tyndall AFB................................. $14,750,000
Georgia........................................ Fort Stewart................................ $7,250,000
Moody AFB................................... $8,500,000
New Mexico..................................... Holloman AFB................................ $25,000,000
North Dakota................................... Minot AFB................................... $4,600,000
Texas.......................................... Joint Base San Antonio...................... $18,000,000
Utah........................................... Hill AFB.................................... $13,530,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2304 and available
for military construction projects outside the United States as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the
Air Force may acquire real property and carry out military construction
projects for the installations or locations outside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Air Force: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Greenland...................................... Thule AB.................................... $24,500,000
Italy.......................................... Aviano AB................................... $9,400,000
Worldwide Unspecified.......................... Unspecified Worldwide Locations............. $34,657,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2302. FAMILY HOUSING.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2304 and available for military family
housing functions as specified in the funding table in section 4601,
the Secretary of the Air Force may carry out architectural and
engineering services and construction design activities with respect to
the construction or improvement of family housing units in an amount
not to exceed $4,253,000.
SEC. 2303. IMPROVEMENTS TO MILITARY FAMILY HOUSING UNITS.
Subject to section 2825 of title 10, United States Code, and using
amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in
section 2304 and available for military family housing functions as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the
Air Force may improve existing military family housing units in an
amount not to exceed $79,571,000.
SEC. 2304. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, AIR FORCE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2012, for military construction, land
acquisition, and military family housing functions of the Department of
the Air Force, as specified in the funding table in section 4601,
including incremental funding for the construction of increment 2 of
the U.S. Strategic Command Replacement Facility at Offutt Air Force
Base, Nebraska, authorized by section 2301(a) of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (division B of
Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1670), $111,000,000.
SEC. 2305. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2010
PROJECTS.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (division B of
Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2627), authorizations set forth in the
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2301 of that Act (123
Stat. 2636), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2013, or the date
of an Act authorizing funds for military construction for fiscal year
2014, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:
Air Force: Extension of 2010 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Missouri............................... Whiteman AFB............... Land Acquisition North & $5,500,000
South Boundary..........
Montana................................ Malmstrom AFB.............. Weapons Storage Area $10,600,000
(WSA), Phase 2..........
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XXIV--DEFENSE AGENCIES MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Subtitle A--Defense Agency Authorizations
SEC. 2401. AUTHORIZED DEFENSE AGENCIES CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2403 and available
for military construction projects inside the United States as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of
Defense may acquire real property and carry out military construction
projects for the installations or locations inside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Defense Agencies: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arizona....................................... Yuma............................................ $1,300,000
California.................................... Coronado........................................ $55,259,000
DEF Fuel Support Point - San Diego.............. $91,563,000
Edwards Air Force Base.......................... $27,500,000
Twentynine Palms................................ $27,400,000
Colorado...................................... Buckley Air Force Base.......................... $30,000,000
Fort Carson..................................... $56,673,000
Pikes Peak...................................... $3,600,000
CONUS Classified.............................. Classified Location............................. $6,477,000
Delaware...................................... Dover AFB....................................... $2,000,000
Florida....................................... Eglin AFB....................................... $41,695,000
Hurlburt Field.................................. $16,000,000
MacDill AFB..................................... $34,409,000
Hawaii........................................ Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.................. $24,289,000
Illinois...................................... Great Lakes..................................... $28,700,000
Scott AFB...................................... $86,711,000
Indiana....................................... Grissom ARB..................................... $26,800,000
Kentucky...................................... Fort Campbell................................... $71,639,000
Louisiana..................................... Barksdale AFB................................... $11,700,000
Maryland...................................... Annapolis....................................... $66,500,000
Bethesda Naval Hospital......................... $62,200,000
Fort Meade...................................... $128,600,000
Missouri...................................... Fort Leonard Wood............................... $18,100,000
New Mexico.................................... Cannon AFB...................................... $93,085,000
New York...................................... Fort Drum....................................... $43,200,000
North Carolina................................ Camp Lejeune.................................... $80,064,000
Fort Bragg...................................... $130,422,000
Seymour Johnson AFB............................. $55,450,000
Pennsylvania.................................. DEF Distribution Depot New Cumberland........... $17,400,000
South Carolina................................ Shaw AFB........................................ $57,200,000
Texas......................................... Red River Army Depot............................ $16,715,000
Virginia...................................... Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek - Story... $11,132,000
Norfolk......................................... $8,500,000
Washington.................................... Fort Lewis...................................... $50,520,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2403 and available
for military construction projects outside the United States as
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of
Defense may acquire real property and carry out military construction
projects for the installations or locations outside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Defense Agencies: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Belgium...................................... Brussels...................................... $26,969,000
Germany...................................... Stuttgart-Patch Barracks...................... $2,413,000
Vogelweh...................................... $61,415,000
Weisbaden..................................... $52,178,000
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba......................... Guantanamo Bay................................ $40,200,000
Japan........................................ Camp Zama..................................... $13,273,000
Kadena AB..................................... $143,545,000
Sasebo........................................ $35,733,000
Zukeran....................................... $79,036,000
Korea........................................ Kunsan AB..................................... $13,000,000
Osan AB....................................... $77,292,000
Romania...................................... Deveselu...................................... $157,900,000
United Kingdom............................... Menwith Hill Station.......................... $50,283,000
RAF Feltwell.................................. $30,811,000
RAF Mildenhall................................ $6,490,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2402. AUTHORIZED ENERGY CONSERVATION PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2403 and available for energy conservation
projects as specified in the funding table in 4601, the Secretary of
Defense may carry out energy conservation projects under chapter 173 of
title 10, United States Code, in the amount of $150,000,000.
SEC. 2403. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, DEFENSE AGENCIES.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2012, for military construction, land
acquisition, and military family housing functions of the Department of
Defense (other than the military departments), as specified in the
funding table in 4601, including incremental funding for the following
projects in the following amounts:
(1) For the construction of increment 7 of the Army Medical
Research Institute of Infectious Diseases Stage I at Fort
Detrick, Maryland, authorized by section 2401(a) of the
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007
(division B of Public Law 109-364; 120 Stat. 2457),
$19,000,000.
(2) For the construction of increment 4 of a National
Security Agency data center at Camp Williams, Utah, authorized
as a Military Construction, Defense-Wide project by title X of
the Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2009 (Public Law 111-32;
123 Stat. 1888), $191,414,000.
(3) For the construction of increment 4 of the hospital at
Fort Bliss, Texas, authorized by section 2401(a) of the
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010
(division B of Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2642),
$107,400,000.
(4) For the construction of increment 2 of the high
performance computing center at Fort Meade, Maryland,
authorized by section 2401(a) of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (division B of Public
Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1672), as amended by section 2405(a) of
this Act, $225,521,000.
(5) For the construction of increment 2 of the ambulatory
care center phase 3 at Joint Base San Antonio, Texas,
authorized by section 2401(a) of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (division B of Public
Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1672), $80,700,000.
(6) For the construction of increment 2 of the medical
center replacement at Rhine Ordnance Barracks, Germany,
authorized by section 2401(b) of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (division B of Public
Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1673), $127,000,000.
SEC. 2404. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATION OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2010
PROJECT.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (division B of
Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2627), authorizations set forth in the
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2401(a) of that Act
(123 Stat. 2640), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2013, or the
date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military
construction for fiscal year 2014, whichever is later:
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:
Washington Headquarters Services: Extension of 2010 Project Authorization
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Virginia.............................. Pentagon Reservation.... Pentagon electrical upgrade...... $19,272,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2405. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2012 PROJECT.
The table in section 2401(a) of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (division B of Public Law 112-
81; 125 Stat. 1672), is amended in the item relating to Fort Meade,
Maryland, by striking ``$29,640,000'' in the amount column and
inserting ``$792,200,000''.
SEC. 2406. ADDITIONAL AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2013
PROJECT.
(a) Project Authorization.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out
a military construction project to construct an Upgrade Fuel Pipeline
at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, in the amount of $67,500,000.
(b) Limitation.--No funds may be obligated or expended for the
project described in subsection (a) until the Commander of the United
States Pacific Command provides to the congressional defense committees
a report, with classified annex if necessary, detailing the strategic
and operational requirements satisfied by the construction of this
project and a certification that this project is a bona fide need for
meeting national security objectives for fiscal year 2013.
(c) Use of Unobligated Prior-year Military Construction Funds.--The
Secretary of Defense shall use available, unobligated military
construction funds appropriated for a fiscal year before fiscal year
2013 for the project described in subsection (a).
(d) Congressional Notification.--The Secretary of Defense shall
provide information in accordance with section 2851(c) of title 10,
United States Code, regarding the project described in subsection (a).
If it becomes necessary to exceed the estimated project cost, the
Secretary shall utilize the authority provided by section 2853 of such
title regarding authorized cost and scope of work variations.
Subtitle B--Chemical Demilitarization Authorizations
SEC. 2411. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, CHEMICAL DEMILITARIZATION
CONSTRUCTION, DEFENSE-WIDE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2012, for military construction and land
acquisition for chemical demilitarization, as specified in the funding
table in section 4601, including incremental funding for the following
projects in the following amounts:
(1) For the construction of phase 14 of a chemical
munitions demilitarization facility at Pueblo Chemical
Activity, Colorado, authorized by section 2401(a) of the
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1997
(division B of Public Law 104-201; 110 Stat. 2775), as amended
by section 2406 of the Military Construction Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2000 (division B of Public Law 106-65; 113
Stat. 839), section 2407 of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2003 (division B of Public
Law 107-314; 116 Stat. 2698), and section 2413 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (division B
of Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4697), $36,000,000.
(2) For the construction of phase 13 of a munitions
demilitarization facility at Blue Grass Army Depot, Kentucky,
authorized by section 2401(a) of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 (division B of Public
Law 106-65; 113 Stat. 835), as amended by section 2405 of the
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002
(division B of Public Law 107-107; 115 Stat. 1298), section
2405 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2003 (division B of Public Law 107-314; 116 Stat. 2698),
section 2414 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2009 (division B of Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat.
4697), and section 2412 of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (division B Public Law
111-383; 124 Stat. 4450), $115,000,000.
SEC. 2412. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
1997 PROJECT.
(a) Modifications.--The table in section 2401(a) of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1997 (division B of
Public Law 104-201; 110 Stat. 2775), as amended by section 2406 of the
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 (division
B of Public Law 106-65; 113 Stat. 839), section 2407 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2003 (division B of
Public Law 107-314; 116 Stat. 2699), and section 2413 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (division B of
Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4697), is amended--
(1) under the agency heading relating to Chemical
Demilitarization Program, in the item relating to Pueblo Army
Depot, Colorado, by striking ``$484,000,000'' in the amount
column and inserting ``$520,000,000''; and
(2) by striking the amount identified as the total in the
amount column and inserting ``$866,454,000''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 2406(b)(2) of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1997 (110 Stat. 2779),
as so amended, is further amended by striking ``$484,000,000'' and
inserting ``$520,000,000''.
TITLE XXV--NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION SECURITY INVESTMENT
PROGRAM
SEC. 2501. AUTHORIZED NATO CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
The Secretary of Defense may make contributions for the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment Program as provided in
section 2806 of title 10, United States Code, in an amount not to
exceed the sum of the amount authorized to be appropriated for this
purpose in section 2502 and the amount collected from the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization as a result of construction previously
financed by the United States.
SEC. 2502. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NATO.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2012, for contributions by the Secretary
of Defense under section 2806 of title 10, United States Code, for the
share of the United States of the cost of projects for the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment Program authorized by
section 2501, as specified in the funding table in section 4601.
TITLE XXVI--GUARD AND RESERVE FORCES FACILITIES
Subtitle A--Project Authorizations and Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 2601. AUTHORIZED ARMY NATIONAL GUARD CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2606 and available
for the National Guard and Reserve as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Army may acquire real property and
carry out military construction projects for the Army National Guard
locations inside the United States, and in the amounts, set forth in
the following table:
Army National Guard: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama..................................... Fort McClellan................................... $5,400,000
Arkansas.................................... Searcy........................................... $6,800,000
California.................................. Fort Irwin....................................... $25,000,000
Connecticut................................. Camp Hartell..................................... $32,000,000
Delaware.................................... Bethany Beach.................................... $5,500,000
Florida..................................... Camp Blanding.................................... $9,000,000
Miramar.......................................... $20,000,000
Hawaii...................................... Kapolei.......................................... $28,000,000
Idaho....................................... Orchard Training Area............................ $40,000,000
Indiana..................................... South Bend....................................... $21,000,000
Terre Haute...................................... $9,000,000
Iowa........................................ Camp Dodge....................................... $3,000,000
Kansas...................................... Topeka........................................... $9,500,000
Kentucky.................................... Frankfort........................................ $32,000,000
Massachusetts............................... Camp Edwards..................................... $22,000,000
Minnesota................................... Camp Ripley...................................... $17,000,000
St. Paul......................................... $17,000,000
Missouri.................................... Fort Leonard Wood................................ $18,000,000
Kansas City...................................... $1,900,000
Monett........................................... $820,000
Perryville....................................... $700,000
Montana..................................... Miles City....................................... $11,000,000
New Jersey.................................. Sea Girt......................................... $34,000,000
New York.................................... Stormville....................................... $24,000,000
Ohio........................................ Chillicothe...................................... $3,100,000
Delaware......................................... $12,000,000
Oklahoma.................................... Camp Gruber...................................... $25,000,000
Utah........................................ Camp Williams.................................... $36,000,000
Washington.................................. Fort Lewis....................................... $35,000,000
West Virginia............................... Logan............................................ $14,200,000
Wisconsin................................... Wausau........................................... $10,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2606 and available
for the National Guard and Reserve as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of the Army may acquire real property and
carry out military construction projects for the Army National Guard
locations outside the United States, and in the amounts, set forth in
the following table:
Army National Guard: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guam.......................................... Barrigada...................................... $8,500,000
Puerto Rico................................... Camp Santiago.................................. $3,800,000
Ceiba.......................................... $2,200,000
Guaynabo....................................... $15,000,000
Gurabo......................................... $14,700,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2602. AUTHORIZED ARMY RESERVE CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION
PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National Guard and
Reserve as specified in the funding table in section 4601, the
Secretary of the Army may acquire real property and carry out military
construction projects for the Army Reserve locations inside the United
States, and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Army Reserve
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California.................................... Fort Hunter Liggett............................ $68,300,000
Tustin......................................... $27,000,000
Illinois...................................... Fort Sheridan.................................. $28,000,000
Maryland...................................... Aberdeen Proving Ground........................ $21,000,000
Baltimore...................................... $10,000,000
Massachusetts................................. Devens Reserve Forces Training Area............ $8,500,000
Nevada........................................ Las Vegas...................................... $21,000,000
New Jersey.................................... Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst............... $7,400,000
Washington.................................... Joint Base Lewis-McChord....................... $40,000,000
Wisconsin..................................... Fort McCoy..................................... $47,800,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2603. AUTHORIZED NAVY RESERVE AND MARINE CORPS RESERVE
CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National Guard and
Reserve as specified in the funding table in section 4601, the
Secretary of the Navy may acquire real property and carry out military
construction projects for the Navy Reserve and Marine Corps Reserve
locations inside the United States, and in the amounts, set forth in
the following table:
Navy Reserve Marine Corps Reserve
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arizona....................................... Yuma........................................... $5,379,000
Iowa.......................................... Fort Des Moines................................ $19,162,000
Louisiana..................................... New Orleans.................................... $7,187,000
New York...................................... Brooklyn....................................... $4,430,000
Texas......................................... Fort Worth..................................... $11,256,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2604. AUTHORIZED AIR NATIONAL GUARD CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National Guard and
Reserve as specified in the funding table in section 4601, the
Secretary of the Air Force may acquire real property and carry out
military construction projects for the Air National Guard locations
inside the United States, and in the amounts, set forth in the
following table:
Air National Guard
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California.................................... Fresno Yosemite IAP ANG........................ $11,000,000
Hawaii........................................ Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam................. $6,500,000
New Mexico.................................... Kirtland AFB................................... $8,500,000
Wyoming....................................... Cheyenne MAP................................... $6,486,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2605. AUTHORIZED AIR FORCE RESERVE CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of
appropriations in section 2606 and available for the National Guard and
Reserve as specified in the funding table in section 4601, the
Secretary of the Air Force may acquire real property and carry out
military construction projects for the Air Force Reserve locations
inside the United States, and in the amounts, set forth in the
following table:
Air Force Reserve
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
New York...................................... Niagara Falls IAP.............................. $6,100,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2606. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NATIONAL GUARD AND RESERVE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2012, for the costs of acquisition,
architectural and engineering services, and construction of facilities
for the Guard and Reserve Forces, and for contributions therefor, under
chapter 1803 of title 10, United States Code (including the cost of
acquisition of land for those facilities), as specified in the funding
table in section 4601.
Subtitle B--Other Matters
SEC. 2611. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATION OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2009
PROJECT.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (division B of
Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4658), the authorization set forth in the
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2604 of that Act (122
Stat. 4706), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2013, or the date
of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military construction
for fiscal year 2014, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:
Air National Guard: Extension of 2009 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mississippi............................ Gulfport-Biloxi Airport.... Relocate Munitions $3,400,000
Complex.................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2612. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATION OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2010
PROJECTS.
(a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (division B of
Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2627), the authorizations set forth in the
tables in subsection (b), as provided in sections 2602 and 2604 of that
Act (123 Stat. 2649, 2651), shall remain in effect until October 1,
2013, or the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for
military construction for fiscal year 2014, whichever is later.
(b) Table.--The tables referred to in subsection (a) are as
follows:
Army Reserve: Extension of 2010 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California............................. Camp Pendleton............. Army Reserve Center...... $19,500,000
Connecticut............................ Bridgeport................. Army Reserve Center/Land. $18,500,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Air National Guard: Extension of 2010 Project Authorization
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Project Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mississippi............................ Gulfport-Biloxi Airport.... Relocate Base Entrance... $6,500,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XXVII--BASE REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE ACTIVITIES
SEC. 2701. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR BASE REALIGNMENT AND
CLOSURE ACTIVITIES FUNDED THROUGH DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
BASE CLOSURE ACCOUNT 1990.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2012, for base realignment and closure
activities, including real property acquisition and military
construction projects, as authorized by the Defense Base Closure and
Realignment Act of 1990 (part A of title XXIX of Public Law 101-510; 10
U.S.C. 2687 note) and funded through the Department of Defense Base
Closure Account 1990 established by section 2906 of such Act, as
specified in the funding table in section 4601.
SEC. 2702. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR BASE REALIGNMENT AND
CLOSURE ACTIVITIES FUNDED THROUGH DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
BASE CLOSURE ACCOUNT 2005.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2012, for base realignment and closure
activities, including real property acquisition and military
construction projects, as authorized by the Defense Base Closure and
Realignment Act of 1990 (part A of title XXIX of Public Law 101-510; 10
U.S.C. 2687 note) and funded through the Department of Defense Base
Closure Account 2005 established by section 2906A of such Act, as
specified in the funding table in section 4601.
SEC. 2703. TECHNICAL AMENDMENTS TO SECTION 2702 OF FISCAL YEAR 2012
ACT.
(a) Correction.--Section 2702 of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (division B of Public Law 112-
81; 125 Stat. 1681) is amended by striking ``Using amounts'' and all
that follows through ``may carry out'' and inserting ``Funds are hereby
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after
September 30, 2011, for''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--The heading of such section is amended
by striking ``authorized'' and inserting ``authorization of
appropriations for''.
SEC. 2704. CRITERIA FOR DECISIONS INVOLVING CERTAIN BASE CLOSURE AND
REALIGNMENT ACTIVITIES.
(a) Criteria.--Not later than March 31, 2013, the Comptroller
General of the United States shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report including objective criteria to be used by the
Department of Defense to make decisions relating to realignments of
units employed at military installations that are not covered by the
requirements of section 2687 of title 10, United States Code, and
closures of military installations that are not covered by such
requirements.
(b) One-year Moratorium on Certain Actions Resulting in Personnel
Reductions.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), no
action may be taken before October 1, 2013, that would result
in a military installation covered under paragraph (1) of
section 2687(a) of title 10, United States Code, to no longer
be covered by such paragraph.
(2) National security waiver.--The Secretary of Defense may
waive the prohibition under paragraph (1) if the Secretary
certifies to the congressional defense committees that is in
the national security interests of the United States.
TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Military Construction Program and Military Family Housing
Changes
SEC. 2801. AUTHORIZED COST AND SCOPE VARIATIONS.
Section 2853 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``was approved
originally'' and inserting ``was authorized'';
(2) in subsection (b)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by adding at the end the
following: ``Any reduction in scope of work for a
military construction project shall not result in a
facility or item of infrastructure that is not complete
and useable or does not fully meet the mission
requirement contained in the justification data
provided to Congress as part of the request for
authorization of the project, construction,
improvement, or acquisition.''; and
(B) by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(3) In this subsection, the term `scope of work' refers to the
function, size, or quantity of the primary facility, any associated
facility, or item of complete and useable infrastructure contained in
the justification data provided to Congress as part of the request for
authorization of the project, construction, improvement, or
acquisition.'';
(3) in subsection (c)(1)(A), by striking ``and the reasons
therefor, including a description'' and inserting ``, the
reasons therefor, a certification that the mission requirement
identified in the justification data provided to Congress can
be still be met with the reduced scope, and a description'';
and
(4) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(e) Notwithstanding the authority under subsections (a) through
(d), the Secretary concerned shall ensure compliance of contracts for
military construction projects and for the construction, improvement,
and acquisition of military family housing projects with section 1341
of title 31, United States Code (commonly referred to as the `Anti-
Deficiency Act').''.
SEC. 2802. COMPTROLLER GENERAL REPORT ON IN-KIND PAYMENTS.
(a) Reports Required.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than 180 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General of the
United States shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on the construction or renovation of
Department of Defense facilities with in-kind payments. The
report shall cover construction or renovation projects begun
during the preceding two years.
(2) Updates.--Not later than one year after submitting the
report required under paragraph (1), and annually thereafter
for 3 years, the Comptroller General shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report covering projects
begun since the most recent report.
(b) Content.--Each report required under subsection (a) shall
include the following elements:
(1) A listing of each facility constructed or renovated for
the Department of Defense as payment in kind.
(2) The value in United States dollars of that construction
or renovation.
(3) The source of the in-kind payment.
(4) The agreement pursuant to which the in-kind payment was
made.
(5) A description of the purpose and need for the
construction or renovation.
SEC. 2803. EXTENSION OF TEMPORARY, LIMITED AUTHORITY TO USE OPERATION
AND MAINTENANCE FUNDS FOR CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS IN
CERTAIN AREAS OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES.
Section 2808 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2004 (division B of Public Law 108-136; 117 Stat. 1723), as
most recently amended by section 2804 of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (division B of Public Law 112-
81; 125 Stat. 1685), is further amended--
(1) in subsection (c)--
(A) by striking paragraph (2);
(B) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph
(2); and
(C) in paragraph (2), as so redesignated, by
striking the second sentence; and
(2) in subsection (h)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``September 30,
2012'' and inserting ``September 30, 2013''; and
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``fiscal year
2013'' and inserting ``fiscal year 2014''.
Subtitle B--Real Property and Facilities Administration
SEC. 2811. AUTHORITY TO ACCEPT AS CONSIDERATION FOR LEASES OF NON-
EXCESS PROPERTY OF MILITARY DEPARTMENTS AND DEFENSE
AGENCIES REAL PROPERTY INTERESTS AND NATURAL RESOURCE
MANAGEMENT SERVICES RELATED TO AGREEMENTS TO LIMIT
ENCROACHMENT.
Section 2667 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (c)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by adding at the end the
following new subparagraph:
``(G) Provision of interests in real property for the
purposes specified in section 2684a of this title and provision
of natural resource management services on such real
property.''; and
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``accepted at any
property or facilities'' and inserting ``accepted at or
for the benefit of any property or facilities''; and
(2) in subsection (e)(1)(C), by adding at the end the
following new clause:
``(vi) Provision of funds pursuant to an agreement under
section 2684a of this title.''.
SEC. 2812. CLARIFICATION OF PARTIES WITH WHOM DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE MAY
CONDUCT EXCHANGES OF REAL PROPERTY AT MILITARY
INSTALLATIONS.
Section 2869(a)(1) of title 10, United States Code is amended--
(1) by striking ``eligible''; and
(2) by striking ``entity'' both places it appears and
inserting ``person''.
Subtitle C--Energy Security
SEC. 2821. GUIDANCE ON FINANCING FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY PROJECTS.
(a) Guidance on Use of Available Financing Approaches.--Not later
than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics and the Deputy Under
Secretary of Defense for Installations and Environment, shall issue
guidance about the use of available financing approaches for financing
renewable energy projects and direct the Secretaries of the military
departments to update their guidance accordingly. The guidance should
describe the requirements and restrictions applicable to the underlying
authorities and any Department of Defense-specific guidelines for using
appropriated funds and alternative-financing approaches for renewable
energy projects.
(b) Guidance on Use of Business Case Analyses.--Not later than 180
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of
Defense, in consultation with the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics, the Deputy Under Secretary of
Defense for Installations and Environment, and the Secretaries of the
military departments, shall issue guidance that establishes and clearly
describes the processes used by the military departments to select
financing approaches for renewable energy projects to ensure that
business case analyses are completed to maximize benefits and mitigate
drawbacks and risks associated with different financing approaches.
(c) Information Sharing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation
with the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and
Logistics and the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Installations
and Environment, shall develop a formalized communications process,
such as a shared Internet website, that will enable officials at
military installations to have timely access on an ongoing basis to
information related to financing renewable energy projects on other
installations, including best practices and lessons that officials at
other installations have learned from their experiences in financing
renewable energy projects.
SEC. 2822. CONTINUATION OF LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR LEADERSHIP IN
ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN (LEED) GOLD OR PLATINUM
CERTIFICATION.
Section 2830(b)(1) of the Military Construction Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2012 (division B of Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1695)
is amended--
(1) by striking ``authorized to be appropriated by this
Act'' and inserting ``authorized to be appropriated''; and
(2) by inserting before the period at the end the
following: ``until the date that is six months after the date
of the submittal to the congressional defense committees of the
report required by subsection (a)''.
SEC. 2823. PROHIBITION ON BIOFUEL REFINERY CONSTRUCTION.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, neither the Secretary
of Defense nor any other official of the Department of Defense may
enter into a contract to plan, design, refurbish, or construct a
biofuels refinery or any other facility or infrastructure used to
refine biofuels unless such planning, design, refurbishment, or
construction is specifically authorized by law.
Subtitle D--Land Conveyances
SEC. 2831. LAND CONVEYANCE, LOCAL TRAINING AREA FOR BROWNING ARMY
RESERVE CENTER, UTAH.
(a) Conveyance Authorized.--The Secretary of the Army may convey,
without consideration, to the Department of Veterans Affairs (in this
section referred to as the ``Department'') all right, title, and
interest of the United States in and to a parcel of unimproved real
property consisting of approximately 5 acres of the Local Training Area
for the Browning Army Reserve Center, Utah, for the purpose of
constructing and operating a Community Based Outpatient Clinic adjacent
to the George E. Wahlen Veterans Home in Ogden, Utah.
(b) Payment of Costs of Conveyance.--
(1) Payment required.--The Secretary may require the
Department to cover costs to be incurred by the Secretary, or
to reimburse the Secretary for costs incurred by the Secretary,
to carry out the conveyance under subsection (a), including
survey costs, costs related to environmental documentation, and
other administrative costs related to the conveyance. If
amounts paid to the Secretary in advance exceed the costs
actually incurred by the Secretary to carry out the conveyance,
the Secretary shall refund the excess amount to the Department.
(2) Treatment of amounts received.--Amounts received as
reimbursement under paragraph (1) shall be credited to the fund
or account that was used to cover the costs incurred by the
Department. Amounts so credited shall be merged with amounts in
such fund or account, and shall be available for the same
purposes, and subject to the same conditions and limitations,
as amounts in such fund or account.
(c) Description of Property.--The exact acreage and legal
description of the real property to be conveyed under subsection (a)
shall be determined by a survey satisfactory to the Secretary.
(d) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary may require
such additional terms and conditions in connection with the conveyance
under subsection (a) as the Secretary considers appropriate to protect
the interests of the United States.
SEC. 2832. USE OF PROCEEDS, LAND CONVEYANCE, TYNDALL AIR FORCE BASE,
FLORIDA.
Section 2862(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2000 (Public Law 106-65; 113 Stat. 868) is amended--
(1) by striking ``and to improve'' and inserting ``, to
improve''; and
(2) by inserting before the period at the end the
following: ``, or for other purposes, subject to the
limitations described in section 2667(e) of title 10, United
States Code''.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
SEC. 2841. CLARIFICATION OF AUTHORITY OF SECRETARY TO ASSIST WITH
DEVELOPMENT OF PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE IN CONNECTION WITH
THE ESTABLISHMENT OR EXPANSION OF A MILITARY
INSTALLATION.
Section 2391 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively;
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new
subsection:
``(d) Authorization Requirement.--If the Secretary of Defense
determines that any grant, cooperative agreement, or supplement of
funds available under Federal programs administered by agencies other
than the Department of Defense provided under this section will result
in the development (including repair, replacement, renovation,
conversion, improvement, expansion, or construction) of public
infrastructure, such grant, cooperative agreement, or supplemental
funding shall be specifically authorized by law.''; and
(3) in subsection (e), as redesignated by paragraph (1), by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) The term `public infrastructure' means any utility,
road, method of transportation, or facility under the control
of a State or local government or a private entity that is used
by, or constructed for the benefit of, the general public.''.
SEC. 2842. PETERSBURG NATIONAL BATTLEFIELD BOUNDARY MODIFICATION.
(a) In General.--The boundary of Petersburg National Battlefield is
modified to include the properties as generally depicted on the map
titled ``Petersburg National Battlefield Boundary Expansion'', numbered
325/80,080, and dated June 2007. The map shall be on file and available
for inspection in the appropriate offices of the National Park Service.
(b) Acquisition of Properties.--The Secretary of the Interior
(referred to in this section as the ``Secretary'') is authorized to
acquire the lands or interests in land, described in subsection (a),
from willing sellers only by donation, purchase with donated or
appropriated funds, exchange, or transfer.
(c) Administration.--The Secretary shall administer any land or
interests in land acquired under subsection (b) as part of the
Petersburg National Battlefield in accordance with applicable laws and
regulations.
(d) Administrative Jurisdiction Transfer.--
(1) In general.--There is transferred--
(A) from the Secretary to the Secretary of the Army
administrative jurisdiction over the approximately
1.170-acre parcel of land depicted as ``Area to be
transferred to Fort Lee Military Reservation'' on the
map described in paragraph (2)(A); and
(B) from the Secretary of the Army to the Secretary
administrative jurisdiction over the approximately
1.171-acre parcel of land depicted as ``Area to be
transferred to Petersburg National Battlefield'' on the
map described in paragraph (2)(A).
(2) Map.--
(A) In general.--The land to be transferred under
paragraph (1) is depicted on the map entitled
``Petersburg National Battlefield Proposed Transfer of
Administrative Jurisdiction'', numbered 325/081A, and
dated May 2011.
(B) Availability.--The map described in
subparagraph (A) shall be available for public
inspection in the appropriate offices of the National
Park Service.
(3) Conditions of transfer.--The transfer of administrative
jurisdiction authorized in paragraph (1) shall be subject to
the following conditions:
(A) No reimbursement or consideration.--The
transfer shall occur without reimbursement or
consideration.
(B) Management.--The land conveyed to the Secretary
under paragraph (1) shall be included within the
boundary of the Petersburg National Battlefield and
shall be administered as part of the park in accordance
with applicable laws and regulations.
SEC. 2843. CONGRESSIONAL NOTIFICATION WITH RESPECT TO OVERSIGHT AND
MAINTENANCE OF BASE CEMETERIES FOLLOWING CLOSURE OF
OVERSEAS MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.
(a) Notification Requirement.--Not later than 30 days after closure
of a United States military installation overseas, the Secretary of
Defense shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees a
report that details a plan to ensure the oversight and continued
maintenance of the cemetery located on the military installation. The
plan shall clearly detail which Federal agency or private entity will
assume responsibility for the operation and maintenance of the cemetery
following the closure of the installation and what information with
regard to the cemetery has been provided to the responsible agency or
private entity.
(b) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means the Committees
on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives.
DIVISION C--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY AUTHORIZATIONS AND
OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE XXXI--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
Subtitle A--National Security Programs Authorizations
SEC. 3101. NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized
to be appropriated to the Department of Energy for fiscal year 2013 for
the activities of the National Nuclear Security Administration in
carrying out programs as specified in the funding table in section
4601.
(b) Authorization of New Plant Projects.--From funds referred to in
subsection (a) that are available for carrying out plant projects, the
Secretary of Energy may carry out the following new plant projects for
the National Nuclear Security Administration:
Project 13-D-301, Electrical Infrastructure Upgrades,
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory/Los Alamos National
Laboratory, $23,000,000.
Project 13-D-903, Kesselring Site Prototype Staff Building,
Kesselring Site, West Milton, New York, $14,000,000.
Project 13-D-904, Kesselring Site Radiological Work and
Storage Building, Kesselring Site, West Milton, New York,
$2,000,000.
Project 13-D-905, Remote-Handled Low-Level Waste Disposal
Project, Idaho National Laboratory, Idaho, $8,900,000.
SEC. 3102. DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Department of
Energy for fiscal year 2013 for defense environmental cleanup
activities in carrying out programs as specified in the funding table
in section 4601.
SEC. 3103. OTHER DEFENSE ACTIVITIES.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Department of
Energy for fiscal year 2013 for other defense activities in carrying
out programs as specified in the funding table in section 4601.
Subtitle B--Program Authorizations, Restrictions, and Limitations
SEC. 3111. REPLACEMENT PROJECT FOR CHEMISTRY AND METALLURGY RESEARCH
BUILDING, LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY, NEW MEXICO.
(a) Project Required.--
(1) In general.--Subtitle A of title XLII of the Atomic
Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2521 et seq.) is amended by
adding at the end the following new section:
``SEC. 4215. REPLACEMENT PROJECT FOR CHEMISTRY AND METALLURGY RESEARCH
BUILDING, LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY, NEW MEXICO.
``(a) Replacement Building Required.--The Secretary of Energy shall
construct at Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico a building to
replace the functions of the existing Chemistry and Metallurgy Research
building at Los Alamos National Laboratory associated with Department
of Energy Hazard Category 2 special nuclear material operations.
``(b) Limitation on Cost.--The cost of the building constructed
under subsection (a) may not exceed $3,700,000,000.
``(c) Project Basis.--The construction authorized by subsection (a)
shall use as it basis the facility project in the Department of Energy
Readiness and Technical Base designated 04-D-125 (chemistry and
metallurgy facility replacement project at Los Alamos National
Laboratory).
``(d) Deadline for Commencement of Operations.--The building
constructed under subsection (a) shall commence operations not later
than December 31, 2024.''.
(2) Clerical and technical amendment.--The table of
contents in section 4001(b) of such Act is amended by inserting
after the item relating to 4213 the following new items:
``Sec. 4214. Plan for transformation of National Nuclear Security
Administration nuclear weapons complex.
``Sec. 4215. Replacement project for Chemistry and Metallurgy Research
Building, Los Alamos National Laboratory,
New Mexico.''.
(b) Funding.--
(1) Fiscal year 2013 funds.--
(A) In general.--Except as provided in subparagraph
(B), of the amounts authorized to be appropriated by
this division for fiscal year 2013 for the National
Nuclear Security Administration, $150,000,000 shall be
available for the construction of the building
authorized by section 4215 of the Atomic Energy Defense
Act (as added by subsection (a)).
(B) Exception.--The following amounts authorized to
be appropriated by this division for fiscal year 2013
for the National Nuclear Security Administration shall
not be available for the construction of the building:
(i) Amounts available for Directed
Stockpile Work.
(ii) Amounts available for Naval Reactors.
(iii) Amounts available for the facility
project in the Department of Energy Readiness
and Technical Base designated 06-D-141.
(2) Prior fiscal year funds.--Amounts authorized to be
appropriated for the Department of Energy for a fiscal year
before fiscal year 2013 and available for the facility project
in the Department of Energy Readiness and Technical Base
designated 04-D-125 (chemistry and metallurgy facility
replacement project at Los Alamos National Laboratory, New
Mexico) shall be available for the construction of the building
authorized by section 4215 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (as
so added).
SEC. 3112. SUBMITTAL TO CONGRESS OF SELECTED ACQUISITION REPORTS AND
INDEPENDENT COST ESTIMATES ON NUCLEAR WEAPON SYSTEMS
UNDERGOING LIFE EXTENSION.
(a) Submittal Required.--Subtitle A of title XLII of the Atomic
Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2521 et seq.), as amended by section 3111
of this Act, is further amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``SEC. 4216. SELECTED ACQUISITION REPORTS AND INDEPENDENT COST
ESTIMATES ON NUCLEAR WEAPON SYSTEMS UNDERGOING LIFE
EXTENSION.
``(a) Selected Acquisition Reports.--(1) The Secretary of Energy
shall, acting through the Administrator of the National Nuclear
Security Administration, submit to the congressional defense committees
at the end of each fiscal-year quarter a report on each nuclear weapon
system undergoing life extension. The reports shall be known as
Selected Acquisition Reports for the weapon system concerned.
``(2) The information contained in the Selected Acquisition Report
for a fiscal-year quarter for a nuclear weapon system shall be the
information contained in the Selected Acquisition Report for such
fiscal-year quarter for a major defense acquisition program under
section 2432 of title 10, United States Code, expressed in terms of the
nuclear weapon system.
``(b) Independent Cost Estimates.--(1) The Secretary of Energy
shall, acting through the Administrator of the National Nuclear
Security Administration, submit to the congressional defense committees
a cost estimate on each nuclear weapon system undergoing life extension
at the times in production as follows:
``(A) At the completion of phase 6.2A, relating to design
definition and cost study.
``(B) Before initiation of phase 6.5, relating to first
production.
``(2) A cost estimate for purposes of this subsection may not be
prepared by the Department of Energy or the National Nuclear Security
Administration.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents in section 4001(b)
of such Act, as so amended, is further amended by inserting after the
item relating to 4215 the following new item:
``Sec. 4216. Selected Acquisition Reports and independent cost
estimates on nuclear weapon systems
undergoing life extension.''.
SEC. 3113. TWO-YEAR EXTENSION OF SCHEDULE FOR DISPOSITION OF WEAPONS-
USABLE PLUTONIUM AT SAVANNAH RIVER SITE, AIKEN, SOUTH
CAROLINA.
Section 4306 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2566) is
amended--
(1) in subsection (a)(3)--
(A) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``2012'' and
inserting ``2014''; and
(B) in subparagraph (D), by striking ``2017'' and
inserting ``2019'';
(2) in subsection (b)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``by January 1,
2012''; and
(B) in paragraph (5), by striking ``2012'' and
inserting ``2014'';
(3) in subsection (c)--
(A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by
striking ``2012'' and inserting ``2014'';
(B) in paragraph (1), by striking ``2014'' and
inserting ``2016''; and
(C) in paragraph (2), by striking ``2020'' each
place it appears and inserting ``2022'';
(4) in subsection (d)--
(A) in paragraph (1)--
(i) by striking ``2014'' and inserting
``2016''; and
(ii) by striking ``2019'' and inserting
``2021''; and
(B) in paragraph (2)(A), by striking ``2020'' each
place it appears and inserting ``2022''; and
(5) in subsection (e), by striking ``2023'' and inserting
``2025''.
SEC. 3114. PROGRAM ON SCIENTIFIC ENGAGEMENT FOR NONPROLIFERATION.
(a) Program Required.--
(1) In general.--Title XLIII of the Atomic Energy Defense
Act (50 U.S.C. 2562 et seq.) is amended by adding at the end
the following new section:
``SEC. 4309. PROGRAM ON SCIENTIFIC ENGAGEMENT FOR NONPROLIFERATION.
``(a) Program Required.--(1) The Secretary of Energy shall, acting
through the Administrator of the National Nuclear Security
Administration, carry out a program on scientific engagement in
countries selected by the Secretary for purposes of the program in
order to advance global nonproliferation and nuclear security efforts.
``(2) The program required by this section shall be a distinct
program from the Global Initiatives for Proliferation Prevention
program.
``(b) Elements.--The program shall include the elements as follows:
``(1) Training and capacity-building to strengthen
nonproliferation and security best practices.
``(2) Engagement of United States scientists with foreign
counterparts to advance nonproliferation goals.
``(c) Report on Commencement of Program.--Funds may not be expended
under the program required by this section until the Administrator
submits to the congressional defense committees a report setting forth
the following:
``(1) For each country selected for the program as of the
date of such report--
``(A) a proliferation threat assessment prepared by
the Director of National Intelligence; and
``(B) metrics for evaluating the success of the
program.
``(2) Accounting standards for the conduct of the program
approved by the Comptroller General of the United States.
``(d) Reports on Modification of Program.--Before making any
modification in the program (whether selecting a new country for the
program, ceasing the selection of a country for the program, or
modifying an element of the program), the Administrator shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report on the modification. If
the modification consists of the selection for the program of a country
not previously selected for the program, the report shall include the
matters specified in subsection (c)(1) for the country.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents in section
4001(b) of such Act (division D of Public Law 107-314) is
amended by inserting after the item relating to section 4308
the following new item:
``Sec. 4309. Program on scientific engagement for nonproliferation.''.
(b) Report on Coordination With Other United States
Nonproliferation Programs.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Administrator of the National Nuclear
Security Administration shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report describing the manner in which the program on
scientific engagement for nonproliferation under section 4309 of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (as added by subsection (a)) coordinates with
and complements, but does not duplicate, other nonproliferation
programs of the United States Government.
(c) Comptroller General of the United States Report.--Not later
than two years after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the program on scientific
engagement for nonproliferation under section 4309 of the Atomic Energy
Defense Act (as so added). The report shall include an assessment by
the Comptroller General of the success of the program, as determined in
accordance with the metrics for evaluating the success of the program
under subsection (c)(1)(B) of such section 4309, and such other matters
on the program as the Comptroller General considers appropriate.
SEC. 3115. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT FOR ANNUAL UPDATE OF DEPARTMENT OF
ENERGY DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES WORKFORCE RESTRUCTURING
PLAN.
Section 4604 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2704) is
amended--
(1) in subsection (b)(1), by striking ``and any updates of
the plan under subsection (e)'';
(2) by striking subsection (e);
(3) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively; and
(4) in subsection (e), as redesignated by paragraph (3)--
(A) by striking ``(1)'' before ``The Secretary'';
and
(B) by striking paragraph (2).
SEC. 3116. QUARTERLY REPORTS TO CONGRESS ON FINANCIAL BALANCES FOR
ATOMIC ENERGY DEFENSE ACTIVITIES.
(a) Reports Required.--Subtitle C of title XLVII of the Atomic
Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2771 et seq.) is amended by adding at the
end the following new section:
``SEC. 4732. QUARTERLY REPORTS ON FINANCIAL BALANCES FOR ATOMIC ENERGY
DEFENSE ACTIVITIES.
``(a) Reports Required.--Not later than 15 days after the end of
each fiscal year quarter, the Secretary of Energy shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the financial balances for
each atomic energy defense program at the budget control levels used in
the report accompanying the most current Act appropriating funds for
energy and water development.
``(b) Elements.--Each report under subsection (a) shall set forth,
for each program covered by such report, the following as of the end of
the fiscal year quarter covered by such report:
``(1) The total amount authorized to be appropriated,
including amounts authorized to be appropriated in the current
fiscal year and amounts authorized to be appropriated for prior
fiscal years.
``(2) The amount unobligated.
``(3) The amount unobligated but committed.
``(4) The amount obligated, but uncosted.
``(c) Presentation.--Each report under subsection (a) shall present
information as follows:
``(1) For each program, in summary form and by fiscal year.
``(2) With financial balances in connection with funding
under recurring DoE national security authorizations (as that
term is defined in section 4701(1)) presented separately from
balances in connection with funding under any other provisions
of law.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents in section 4001(b)
of such Act is amended by inserting after the item relating to section
4731 the following new item:
``Sec. 4732. Quarterly reports on financial balances for atomic energy
defense activities.''.
SEC. 3117. TRANSPARENCY IN CONTRACTOR PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS BY THE
NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION LEADING TO AWARD
FEES.
(a) Publication Required.--
(1) In general.--Subtitle A of title XLVIII of the Atomic
Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2781 et seq.) is amended by
adding at the end the following new section:
``SEC. 4805. PUBLICATION OF CONTRACTOR PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS BY THE
NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION LEADING TO AWARD
FEES.
``(a) In General.--The Administrator of the National Nuclear
Security Administration shall take appropriate actions to make
available, to the maximum extent practicable, to the public each
contractor performance evaluation conducted by the Administration of a
national laboratory, production plant, or single user facility under
the management responsibility of the Administration that results in the
award of an award fee to the contractor concerned.
``(b) Format.--Performance evaluations shall be made public under
this section in a common format that facilitates comparisons of
performance evaluations between and among similar management
contracts.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents in section
4001(b) of that Act is amended by inserting after the item
relating to section 4804 the following new item:
``Sec. 4805. Publication of contractor performance evaluations by the
National Nuclear Security Administration
leading to award fees.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall
take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and shall apply
with respect to contractor performance evaluations conducted by the
National Nuclear Security Administration on or after that date.
SEC. 3118. EXPANSION OF AUTHORITY TO ESTABLISH CERTAIN SCIENTIFIC,
ENGINEERING, AND TECHNICAL POSITIONS.
(a) Number of Positions.--Section 3241 of the National Nuclear
Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2441) is amended by striking
``300'' and inserting ``700''.
(b) Extension to Contracting Positions.--Such section is further
amended by inserting ``contracting,'' before ``scientific''.
(c) Conforming Amendment.--The heading of such section is amended
to read as follows:
``SEC. 3241. AUTHORITY TO ESTABLISH CERTAIN CONTRACTING, SCIENTIFIC,
ENGINEERING, AND TECHNICAL POSITIONS.''.
(d) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents for the National
Nuclear Security Administration Act is amended by striking the item
relating to section 3241 and inserting the following new item:
``Sec. 3241. Authority to establish certain contracting, scientific,
engineering, and technical positions.''.
SEC. 3119. MODIFICATION AND EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY ON ACCEPTANCE OF
CONTRIBUTIONS FOR ACCELERATION OF REMOVAL OR SECURITY OF
FISSILE MATERIALS, RADIOLOGICAL MATERIALS, AND RELATED
EQUIPMENT AT VULNERABLE SITES WORLDWIDE.
(a) Programs for Which Funds May Be Accepted.--Paragraph (2) of
section 3132(f) of the Ronald W. Reagan National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2005 (50 U.S.C. 2569(f)) is amended to read as
follows:
``(2) Programs covered.--The programs described in this
paragraph are any programs within the Office of Defense Nuclear
Nonproliferation of the National Nuclear Security
Administration.''.
(b) Extension.--Paragraph (7) of such section is amended by
striking ``December 31, 2013'' and inserting ``December 31, 2018''.
SEC. 3120. COST CONTAINMENT FOR Y-12 URANIUM PROCESSING FACILITY, Y-12
NATIONAL SECURITY COMPLEX, OAK RIDGE, TENNESSEE.
(a) Execution Phases for Project.--Project 06-D-141 for the Y-12
Uranium Processing Facility, Y-12 National Security Complex, Oak Ridge,
Tennessee, shall be broken into separate execution phases as follows
(1) Phase I, which shall consist of processes associated
with building 9212, including uranium casting and uranium
chemical processing.
(2) Phase II, which shall consist of processes associated
with buildings 9215 and 9998, including uranium metal working,
machining, and inspection.
(3) Phase III, which shall consist of processes associated
with building 9204-2E. including radiography, assembly,
disassembly, quality evaluation, and production certification
operations of nuclear weapon secondaries.
(b) Budgeting and Authorization for Each Phase.--
(1) Budgeting for each phase required.--The Secretary of
Energy shall budget separately for each phase under subsection
(a) of the project referred to in that subsection.
(2) Funding pursuant to separate authorizations of
appropriations.--The Secretary may not proceed with a phase
under subsection (a) of the project referred to in that
subsection except with funds expressly authorized to be
appropriated for that phase by law.
(c) Compliance of Phases With DoE Order on Program and Project
Management.--Each phase under subsection (a) of the project referred to
in that subsection shall comply with Department of Energy Order 413.3,
relating to Program Management and Project Management for the
Acquisition of Capital Assets.
(d) Limitation on Cost of Phase I.--The total cost of Phase I under
subsection (a) of the project referred to in that subsection may not
exceed $4,200,000,000.
SEC. 3121. AUTHORITY TO RESTORE CERTAIN FORMERLY RESTRICTED DATA TO THE
RESTRICTED DATA CATEGORY.
(a) In General.--Section 142 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42
U.S.C. 2162) is amended--
(1) in subsection d.--
(A) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``The Commission'';
and
(B) by adding at the end the following new
paragraphs:
``(2) The Commission may restore to the Restricted Data category
any information related to the design of nuclear weapons removed under
paragraph (1) if the Commission and the Department of Defense jointly
determine that--
``(A) the programmatic requirements that caused the
information to be removed from the Restricted Data category are
no longer applicable or have diminished;
``(B) the information would be more appropriately protected
as Restricted Data; and
``(C) restoring the information to the Restricted Data
category is in the interest of national security.
``(3) Information related to the design of nuclear weapons shall be
restored to the Restricted Data category under paragraph (2) in
accordance with regulations prescribed by the Commission for purposes
of that paragraph.''; and
(2) in subsection e.--
(A) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``The Commission'';
and
(B) by adding at the end the following new
paragraphs:
``(2) The Commission may restore to the Restricted Data category
any information concerning atomic energy programs of other nations
removed under paragraph (1) if the Commission and the Director of
National Intelligence jointly determine that--
``(A) the programmatic requirements that caused the
information to be removed from the Restricted Data category are
no longer applicable or have diminished;
``(B) the information would be more appropriately protected
as Restricted Data; and
``(C) restoring the information to the Restricted Data
category is in the interest of national security.
``(3) Information concerning atomic energy programs of other
nations shall be restored to the Restricted Data category under
paragraph (2) in accordance with regulations prescribed by the
Commission for purposes of that paragraph.''.
(b) Technical Amendment.--Paragraph (1) of subsection (e) of such
section, as designated by subsection (a)(2)(A) of this section, is
further amended by striking ``Director of Central Intelligence'' and
inserting ``Director of National Intelligence''.
Subtitle C--Reports
SEC. 3131. REPORT ON ACTIONS REQUIRED FOR TRANSITION OF REGULATION OF
NON-NUCLEAR ACTIVITIES OF THE NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY
ADMINISTRATION TO OTHER FEDERAL AGENCIES.
Not later than February 28, 2013, the Secretary of Energy shall,
acting through the Administrator of the National Nuclear Security
Administration, submit to Congress a report on the actions required to
transition, to the maximum extent practicable, the regulation of the
non-nuclear activities of the National Nuclear Security Administration
to other appropriate agencies of the Federal Government by not later
than October 1, 2017.
SEC. 3132. REPORT ON CONSOLIDATION OF FACILITIES OF THE NATIONAL
NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Nuclear Weapons Council shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report setting forth the assessment
of the Council as to the feasibility of consolidating facilities and
functions of the National Nuclear Security Administration in order to
reduce costs.
(b) Process for Consolidation.--If the assessment of the Council in
the report under subsection (a) is that excess facilities exist and the
consolidation of facilities and functions of the Administration is
feasible and would reduce cost, the report shall include
recommendations for a process to determine the manner in which the
consolidation should be accomplished, including an estimate of the time
to be required to complete the process.
(c) Limitation on Availability of Certain Funds Pending Report.--
Amounts authorized to be appropriated by this title and available for
the facility projects in the Department of Energy Readiness and
Technical Base designated 04-D-125 and 06-D-141 may not be obligated or
expended for CD-3, Start of Construction (as found in Department of
Energy Order 413.3 B Program and Project Management for the Acquisition
of Capital Assets,) until the submittal under subsection (a) of the
report required by that subsection.
SEC. 3133. REGIONAL RADIOLOGICAL SECURITY ZONES.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) A terrorist attack using high-activity radiological
materials, such as in a dirty bomb, could inflict billions of
dollars of economic costs and considerable societal and
economic dislocation, with effects and costs possibly lasting
for years.
(2) It may be easier for terrorists to obtain the materials
for, and to fabricate, a dirty bomb than an improvised nuclear
device.
(3) Radiological materials are in widespread use worldwide,
with estimates of the number of radiological sources ranging
from 100,000 to millions.
(4) Many nations have a security and regulatory regime for
their radiological sources that is much less developed than
that of the United States.
(5) Radiological materials are used at many civilian sites
including hospitals, industrial sites, and other locations that
have little security, placing these materials at risk of theft.
(6) Many radiological materials have become lost, disused,
unwanted, or abandoned, with the Global Threat Reduction
Initiative of the National Nuclear Security Administration
having recovered more than 30,000 radioactive sources in the
United States, repatriated more than 2,400 United States-origin
sources from other countries, and helped recover more than
13,000 radioactive sources and radioisotope thermoelectric
generators in other countries.
(7) High-activity radiological materials can be used in a
dirty bomb.
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that United
States and global nonproliferation efforts should place a high priority
on programs to secure high-activity radiological sources to reduce the
threat of radiological terrorism.
(c) Study.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Administrator of the National
Nuclear Security Administration shall submit to the appropriate
committees of Congress a study in accordance with paragraph
(3).
(2) Consultation.--The Administrator may, in conducting the
study required under paragraph (1), consult with the Secretary
of Homeland Security, the Secretary of State, the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, and such other departments and agencies
of the United States Government as the Administrator considers
appropriate.
(3) Matters included.--The study under paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) An assessment of the radioactive isotopes and
associated activity levels that present the greatest
risk to national and international security.
(B) A review of current United States Government
efforts to secure radiological materials abroad,
including coordination with foreign governments, the
European Union, the International Atomic Energy Agency,
other international programs, and nongovernmental
organizations that identify, register, secure, remove,
and provide for the disposition of high-risk
radiological materials worldwide.
(C) A review of current United States Government
efforts to secure radiological materials domestically
at civilian sites, including hospitals, industrial
sites, and other locations.
(D) A definition of regional radiological security
zones, including the subset of the materials of concern
to be the immediate focus and the security best
practices required to achieve that goal.
(E) An assessment of the feasibility, cost,
desirability, and added benefit of establishing
regional radiological security zones in high priority
areas worldwide in order to facilitate regional
collaboration in--
(i) identifying and inventorying high-
activity radiological sources at high-risk
sites;
(ii) reviewing national level regulations,
inspections, transportation security, and
security upgrade options; and
(iii) assessing opportunities for the
harmonization of regulations and security
practices among the nations of the region.
(F) An assessment of the feasibility, cost,
desirability, and added benefit of establishing remote
regional monitoring centers that would receive real-
time data from radiological security sites, would be
staffed by trained personnel from the countries in the
region, and would alert local law enforcement in the
event of a potential or actual terrorist incident or
other emergency.
(G) A list and assessment of the best practices
used in the United States that are most critical in
enhancing domestic radiological material security and
could be used to enhance radiological security
worldwide.
(H) An assessment of the United States entity or
entities that would be best suited to lead efforts to
establish a radiological security zone program.
(I) An estimate of the costs associated with the
implementation of a radiological security zone program.
(J) An assessment of the known locations outside
the United States housing high-risk radiological
materials in excess of 1,000 curies.
(4) Form.--The study required under paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
(d) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, and the Committee
on Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Homeland Security, and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the
House of Representatives.
SEC. 3134. REPORT ON LEGACY URANIUM MINES.
(a) Report.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Energy shall undertake a
review of, and prepare a report on, abandoned uranium mines at
which uranium ore was mined for the weapons program of the
United States (hereinafter referred to as ``legacy uranium
mines'').
(2) Matters to be addressed.--The report shall describe and
analyze--
(A) the location of the legacy uranium mines on
Federal, State, tribal, and private land, taking into
account any existing inventories undertaken by Federal
agencies, States, and Indian tribes, and any additional
information available to the Secretary;
(B) the extent to which the legacy uranium mines--
(i) may pose a potential and significant
radiation health hazard to the public;
(ii) may pose some other threat to public
health and safety hazard;
(iii) have caused, or may cause,
degradation of water quality; and
(iv) have caused, or may cause,
environmental degradation;
(C) a ranking of priority by category for the
remediation and reclamation of the legacy uranium
mines;
(D) the potential cost and feasibility of
remediating and reclaiming, in accordance with
applicable Federal law, each category of legacy uranium
mines; and
(E) the status of any efforts to remediate and
reclaim legacy uranium mines.
(b) Recommendations.--The report shall--
(1) make recommendations as to how to ensure most feasibly
and effectively and expeditiously that the public health and
safety, water resources, and the environment will be protected
from the adverse effects of legacy uranium mines; and
(2) make recommendations on changes, if any, to Federal law
to address the remediation and reclamation of legacy uranium
mines.
(c) Consultation.--In preparing the report, the Secretary of Energy
shall consult with any other relevant Federal agencies, affected States
and Indian tribes, and interested members of the public.
(d) Report to Congress.--Not later than 18 months after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Energy shall submit to the
Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Energy and Natural
Resources of the Senate and the appropriate Committees of the House of
Representatives--
(1) the report; and
(2) the plan and timeframe of the Secretary of Energy for
implementing those recommendations of the report that do not
require legislation.
SEC. 3135. COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES REVIEW OF PROJECTS
CARRIED OUT BY OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY PURSUANT TO THE AMERICAN RECOVERY
AND REINVESTMENT ACT OF 2009.
Section 3134 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2713) is amended--
(1) in subsection (c)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``The Comptroller
General shall conduct a review during the period
described in paragraph (2), of the following:'' and
inserting ``Beginning on the date of the submittal of
the report required under subsection (b)(2), the
Comptroller General shall conduct a review of the
following:'';
(B) by striking paragraph (2);
(C) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph
(2); and
(D) in paragraph (2), as redesignated by
subparagraph (C), by striking ``the end of the period
described in paragraph (2)'' and inserting ``August 30,
2012''; and
(2) in subsection (d)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``Beginning on
the date on which the Comptroller General submits the
last report required under subsection (c)(3), the
Comptroller General shall conduct a review of the
following:'' and inserting ``Following the submittal of
the final report required under subsection (c)(2), the
Comptroller General shall conduct a review of the
following:''; and
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``Not later than
90 days after submitting the last report required under
subsection (c)(3)'' and inserting ``Within seven months
after receiving notification that all American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act funds have been expended, but not
later than April 30, 2016''.
TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD
SEC. 3201. AUTHORIZATION.
There are authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2013,
$29,415,000 for the operation of the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety
Board under chapter 21 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2286
et seq.).
TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION
SEC. 3501. MARITIME ADMINISTRATION.
Section 109 of title 49, United States Code, is amended to read as
follows:
``Sec. 109. Maritime administration
``(a) Organization.--The Maritime Administration is an
administration in the Department of Transportation.
``(b) Maritime Administrator.--The head of the Maritime
Administration is the Maritime Administrator, who is appointed by the
President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The
Administrator shall report directly to the Secretary of Transportation
and carry out the duties prescribed by the Secretary.
``(c) Deputy Maritime Administrator.--The Maritime Administration
shall have a Deputy Maritime Administrator, who is appointed in the
competitive service by the Secretary, after consultation with the
Administrator. The Deputy Administrator shall carry out the duties
prescribed by the Administrator. The Deputy Administrator shall be
Acting Administrator during the absence or disability of the
Administrator and, unless the Secretary designates another individual,
during a vacancy in the office of Administrator.
``(d) Duties and Powers Vested in Secretary.--All duties and powers
of the Maritime Administration are vested in the Secretary.
``(e) Regional Offices.--The Maritime Administration shall have
regional offices for the Atlantic, Gulf, Great Lakes, and Pacific port
ranges, and may have other regional offices as necessary. The Secretary
shall appoint a qualified individual as Director of each regional
office. The Secretary shall carry out appropriate activities and
programs of the Maritime Administration through the regional offices.
``(f) Interagency and Industry Relations.--The Secretary shall
establish and maintain liaison with other agencies, and with
representative trade organizations throughout the United States,
concerned with the transportation of commodities by water in the export
and import foreign commerce of the United States, for the purpose of
securing preference to vessels of the United States for the
transportation of those commodities.
``(g) Detailing Officers From Armed Forces.--To assist the
Secretary in carrying out duties and powers relating to the Maritime
Administration, not more than five officers of the armed forces may be
detailed to the Secretary at any one time, in addition to details
authorized by any other law. During the period of a detail, the
Secretary shall pay the officer an amount that, when added to the
officer's pay and allowances as an officer in the armed forces, makes
the officer's total pay and allowances equal to the amount that would
be paid to an individual performing work the Secretary considers to be
of similar importance, difficulty, and responsibility as that performed
by the officer during the detail.
``(h) Contracts, Cooperative Agreements, and Audits.--
``(1) Contracts and cooperative agreements.--In the same
manner that a private corporation may make a contract within
the scope of its authority under its charter, the Secretary may
make contracts and cooperative agreements for the United States
Government and disburse amounts to--
``(A) carry out the Secretary's duties and powers
under this section, subtitle V of title 46, and all
other Maritime Administration programs; and
``(B) protect, preserve, and improve collateral
held by the Secretary to secure indebtedness.
``(2) Audits.--The financial transactions of the Secretary
under paragraph (1) shall be audited by the Comptroller
General. The Comptroller General shall allow credit for an
expenditure shown to be necessary because of the nature of the
business activities authorized by this section or subtitle V of
title 46. At least once a year, the Comptroller General shall
report to Congress any departure by the Secretary from this
section or subtitle V of title 46.
``(i) Grant Administrative Expenses.--Except as otherwise provided
by law, the administrative and related expenses for the administration
of any grant programs by the Maritime Administrator may not exceed 3
percent.
``(j) Authorization of Appropriations.--
``(1) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in this
subsection, there are authorized to be appropriated such
amounts as may be necessary to carry out the duties and powers
of the Secretary relating to the Maritime Administration.
``(2) Limitations.--Only those amounts specifically
authorized by law may be appropriated for the use of the
Maritime Administration for--
``(A) acquisition, construction, or reconstruction
of vessels;
``(B) construction-differential subsidies incident
to the construction, reconstruction, or reconditioning
of vessels;
``(C) costs of national defense features;
``(D) payments of obligations incurred for
operating-differential subsidies;
``(E) expenses necessary for research and
development activities, including reimbursement of the
Vessel Operations Revolving Fund for losses resulting
from expenses of experimental vessel operations;
``(F) the Vessel Operations Revolving Fund;
``(G) National Defense Reserve Fleet expenses;
``(H) expenses necessary to carry out part B of
subtitle V of title 46; and
``(I) other operations and training expenses
related to the development of waterborne transportation
systems, the use of waterborne transportation systems,
and general administration.
``(3) Training vessels.--Amounts may not be appropriated
for the purchase or construction of training vessels for State
maritime academies unless the Secretary has approved a plan for
sharing training vessels between State maritime academies.''.
DIVISION D--FUNDING TABLES
SEC. 4001. AUTHORIZATION OF AMOUNTS IN FUNDING TABLES.
(a) In General.--Whenever a funding table in this division
specifies a dollar amount authorized for a project, program, or
activity, the obligation and expenditure of the specified dollar amount
for the project, program, or activity is hereby authorized, subject to
the availability of appropriations.
(b) Merit-based Decisions.--Decisions by agency heads to commit,
obligate, or expend funds with or to a specific entity on the basis of
a dollar amount authorized pursuant to subsection (a) shall be based on
authorized, transparent, statutory criteria, or merit-based selection
procedures in accordance with the requirements of sections 2304(k) and
2374 of title 10, United States Code, and other applicable provisions
of law.
(c) Relationship to Transfer and Programming Authority.--An amount
specified in the funding tables in this division may be transferred or
reprogrammed under a transfer or reprogramming authority provided by
another provision of this Act or by other law. The transfer or
reprogramming of an amount specified in such funding tables shall not
count against a ceiling on such transfers or reprogrammings under
section 1001 of this Act or any other provision of law, unless such
transfer or reprogramming would move funds between appropriation
accounts.
(d) Oral and Written Communications.--No oral or written
communication concerning any amount specified in the funding tables in
this division shall supercede the requirements of this section.
TITLE XLI--PROCUREMENT
SEC. 4101. PROCUREMENT.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4101. PROCUREMENT (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
ARMY
FIXED WING
001 UTILITY F/W AIRCRAFT. 18,639 18,639
002 C-12 CARGO AIRPLANE.. 0 0
003 MQ-1 UAV............. 518,088 518,088
004 RQ-11 (RAVEN)........ 25,798 25,798
005 BCT UNMANNED AERIAL 0 0
VEH (UAVS) INCR 1.
ROTARY
006 HELICOPTER, LIGHT 271,983 271,983
UTILITY (LUH).
007 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK 577,115 577,115
IIIA REMAN.
008 ADVANCE 107,707 107,707
PROCUREMENT (CY).
009 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK 153,993 153,993
IIIB NEW BUILD.
010 ADVANCE 146,121 146,121
PROCUREMENT (CY).
011 AH-64 BLOCK II/WRA... 0 0
012 KIOWA WARRIOR (OH- 0 0
58F) WRA.
013 UH-60 BLACKHAWK M 1,107,087 1,107,087
MODEL (MYP).
014 ADVANCE 115,113 115,113
PROCUREMENT (CY).
015 CH-47 HELICOPTER..... 1,076,036 1,076,036
016 ADVANCE 83,346 83,346
PROCUREMENT (CY).
MODIFICATION OF
AIRCRAFT
017 C12 AIRCRAFT MODS.... 0 0
018 MQ-1 PAYLOAD--UAS.... 231,508 231,508
019 MQ-1 WEAPONIZATION-- 0 0
UAS.
020 GUARDRAIL MODS (MIP). 16,272 16,272
021 MULTI SENSOR ABN 4,294 4,294
RECON (MIP).
022 AH-64 MODS........... 178,805 178,805
023 CH-47 CARGO 39,135 39,135
HELICOPTER MODS
(MYP).
024 UTILITY/CARGO 24,842 24,842
AIRPLANE MODS.
025 AIRCRAFT LONG RANGE 0 0
MODS.
026 UTILITY HELICOPTER 73,804 73,804
MODS.
027 KIOWA WARRIOR MODS... 192,484 192,484
028 AIRBORNE AVIONICS.... 0 0
029 NETWORK AND MISSION 190,789 190,789
PLAN.
030 COMMS, NAV 133,191 89,191
SURVEILLANCE.
JTRS integration [-44,000]
delayed.
031 GATM ROLLUP.......... 87,280 87,280
032 RQ-7 UAV MODS........ 104,339 104,339
SPARES AND REPAIR
PARTS
033 SPARE PARTS (AIR).... 0 0
GROUND SUPPORT
AVIONICS
034 AIRCRAFT 34,037 34,037
SURVIVABILITY
EQUIPMENT.
035 SURVIVABILITY CM..... 0 0
036 CMWS................. 127,751 127,751
OTHER SUPPORT
037 AVIONICS SUPPORT 4,886 4,886
EQUIPMENT.
038 COMMON GROUND 82,511 82,511
EQUIPMENT.
039 AIRCREW INTEGRATED 77,381 77,381
SYSTEMS.
040 AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL.. 47,235 47,235
041 INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES 1,643 1,643
042 LAUNCHER, 2.75 ROCKET 516 516
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT 5,853,729 5,809,729
PROCUREMENT, ARMY.
MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
ARMY
SURFACE-TO-AIR
MISSILE SYSTEM
001 PATRIOT SYSTEM 646,590 646,590
SUMMARY.
002 MSE MISSILE.......... 12,850 12,850
003 SURFACE-LAUNCHED 0 0
AMRAAM SYSTEM
SUMMARY.
004 HELLFIRE SYS SUMMARY. 1,401 1,401
005 JAVELIN (AAWS-M) 81,121 81,121
SYSTEM SUMMARY.
006 TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY. 64,712 64,712
007 ADVANCE 19,931 19,931
PROCUREMENT (CY).
008 GUIDED MLRS ROCKET 218,679 218,679
(GMLRS).
009 MLRS REDUCED RANGE 18,767 18,767
PRACTICE ROCKETS
(RRPR).
010 HIGH MOBILITY 12,051 12,051
ARTILLERY ROCKET
SYSTEM.
011 PATRIOT MODS......... 199,565 199,565
012 ITAS/TOW MODS........ 0 0
013 MLRS MODS............ 2,466 2,466
014 HIMARS MODIFICATIONS. 6,068 6,068
015 HELLFIRE 0 0
MODIFICATIONS.
016 SPARES AND REPAIR 7,864 7,864
PARTS.
017 AIR DEFENSE TARGETS.. 3,864 3,864
018 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 1,560 1,560
MILLION (MISSILES).
019 PRODUCTION BASE 5,200 5,200
SUPPORT.
TOTAL, MISSILE 1,302,689 1,302,689
PROCUREMENT, ARMY.
PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV,
ARMY
TRACKED COMBAT
VEHICLES
001 STRYKER VEHICLE...... 286,818 286,818
002 FCS SPIN OUTS........ 0 0
MODIFICATION OF
TRACKED COMBAT
VEHICLES
003 STRYKER (MOD)........ 60,881 60,881
004 FIST VEHICLE (MOD)... 57,257 57,257
005 BRADLEY PROGRAM (MOD) 148,193 148,193
006 HOWITZER, MED SP FT 10,341 10,341
155MM M109A6 (MOD).
007 PALADIN PIM MOD IN 206,101 206,101
SERVICE.
008 IMPROVED RECOVERY 107,909 230,909
VEHICLE (M88A2
HERCULES).
Increased [123,000]
production.
009 ASSAULT BREACHER 50,039 50,039
VEHICLE.
010 M88 FOV MODS......... 29,930 29,930
011 M1 ABRAMS TANK (MOD). 129,090 129,090
012 ABRAMS UPGRADE 74,433 74,433
PROGRAM.
012A ADVANCE 91,000
PROCUREMENT (CY).
Advanced [91,000]
procurement Abrams
upgrade program.
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
FACILITIES
013 PRODUCTION BASE 1,145 1,145
SUPPORT (TCV-WTCV).
WEAPONS & OTHER
COMBAT VEHICLES
014 INTEGRATED AIR BURST 506 506
WEAPON SYSTEM FAMILY.
015 M240 MEDIUM MACHINE 0 0
GUN (7.62MM).
016 MACHINE GUN, CAL .50 0 0
M2 ROLL.
017 LIGHTWEIGHT .50 25,183 0
CALIBER MACHINE GUN.
Program [-25,183]
termination.
018 MK-19 GRENADE MACHINE 0 0
GUN (40MM).
019 MORTAR SYSTEMS....... 8,104 8,104
020 M107, CAL. 50, SNIPER 0 0
RIFLE.
021 XM320 GRENADE 14,096 14,096
LAUNCHER MODULE
(GLM).
022 M110 SEMI-AUTOMATIC 0 0
SNIPER SYSTEM (SASS).
023 M4 CARBINE........... 0 0
024 CARBINE.............. 21,272 21,272
025 SHOTGUN, MODULAR 6,598 6,598
ACCESSORY SYSTEM
(MASS).
026 COMMON REMOTELY 56,725 56,725
OPERATED WEAPONS
STATION.
027 HOWITZER LT WT 155MM 13,827 13,827
(T).
MOD OF WEAPONS AND
OTHER COMBAT VEH
028 MK-19 GRENADE MACHINE 0 0
GUN MODS.
029 M777 MODS............ 26,843 26,843
030 M4 CARBINE MODS...... 27,243 27,243
031 M2 50 CAL MACHINE GUN 39,974 39,974
MODS.
032 M249 SAW MACHINE GUN 4,996 4,996
MODS.
033 M240 MEDIUM MACHINE 6,806 6,806
GUN MODS.
034 SNIPER RIFLES 14,113 14,113
MODIFICATIONS.
035 M119 MODIFICATIONS... 20,727 20,727
036 M16 RIFLE MODS....... 3,306 3,306
037 MODIFICATIONS LESS 3,072 3,072
THAN $5.0M (WOCV-
WTCV).
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
FACILITIES
038 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 2,026 2,026
MILLION (WOCV-WTCV).
039 PRODUCTION BASE 10,115 10,115
SUPPORT (WOCV-WTCV).
040 INDUSTRIAL 442 442
PREPAREDNESS.
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
FACILITIES
041 SMALL ARMS EQUIPMENT 2,378 2,378
(SOLDIER ENH PROG).
SPARES
042 SPARES AND REPAIR 31,217 31,217
PARTS (WTCV).
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF 1,501,706 1,690,523
W&TCV, ARMY.
PROCUREMENT OF
AMMUNITION, ARMY
SMALL/MEDIUM CAL
AMMUNITION
001 CTG, 5.56MM, ALL 158,313 158,313
TYPES.
002 CTG, 7.62MM, ALL 91,438 91,438
TYPES.
003 CTG, HANDGUN, ALL 8,954 8,954
TYPES.
004 CTG, .50 CAL, ALL 109,604 109,604
TYPES.
005 CTG, 20MM, ALL TYPES. 4,041 4,041
006 CTG, 25MM, ALL TYPES. 12,654 12,654
007 CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES. 72,154 35,154
Decrease for [-37,000]
excess.
008 CTG, 40MM, ALL TYPES. 60,138 0
Decrease for [-60,138]
excess.
MORTAR AMMUNITION
009 60MM MORTAR, ALL 44,375 44,375
TYPES.
010 81MM MORTAR, ALL 27,471 27,471
TYPES.
011 120MM MORTAR, ALL 87,811 87,811
TYPES.
TANK AMMUNITION
012 CARTRIDGES, TANK, 112,380 112,380
105MM AND 120MM, ALL
TYPES.
ARTILLERY AMMUNITION
013 ARTILLERY CARTRIDGES, 50,861 50,861
75MM AND 105MM, ALL
TYP.
014 ARTILLERY PROJECTILE, 26,227 26,227
155MM, ALL TYPES.
015 PROJ 155MM EXTENDED 110,329 55,329
RANGE XM982.
Excalibur I-b [-55,000]
round schedule
delay.
016 ARTILLERY 43,924 43,924
PROPELLANTS, FUZES
AND PRIMERS, ALL.
MINES
017 MINES & CLEARING 3,775 3,775
CHARGES, ALL TYPES.
NETWORKED MUNITIONS
018 SPIDER NETWORK 17,408 3,108
MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES.
Program decrease.. [-14,300]
ROCKETS
019 SHOULDER LAUNCHED 1,005 1,005
MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES.
020 ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL 123,433 123,433
TYPES.
OTHER AMMUNITION
021 DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, 35,189 35,189
ALL TYPES.
022 GRENADES, ALL TYPES.. 33,477 33,477
023 SIGNALS, ALL TYPES... 9,991 9,991
024 SIMULATORS, ALL TYPES 10,388 10,388
MISCELLANEOUS
025 AMMO COMPONENTS, ALL 19,383 19,383
TYPES.
026 NON-LETHAL 7,336 7,336
AMMUNITION, ALL
TYPES.
027 CAD/PAD ALL TYPES.... 6,641 6,641
028 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 15,092 15,092
MILLION.
029 AMMUNITION PECULIAR 15,692 15,692
EQUIPMENT.
030 FIRST DESTINATION 14,107 14,107
TRANSPORTATION
(AMMO).
031 CLOSEOUT LIABILITIES. 106 106
PRODUCTION BASE
SUPPORT
032 PROVISION OF 220,171 220,171
INDUSTRIAL
FACILITIES.
033 CONVENTIONAL 182,461 182,461
MUNITIONS
DEMILITARIZATION,
ALL.
034 ARMS INITIATIVE...... 3,377 3,377
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF 1,739,706 1,573,268
AMMUNITION, ARMY.
OTHER PROCUREMENT,
ARMY
TACTICAL VEHICLES
001 SEMITRAILERS, FLATBED 7,097 7,097
002 FAMILY OF MEDIUM 346,115 396,115
TACTICAL VEH (FMTV).
Program increase [50,000]
for USAR.
003 FIRETRUCKS & 19,292 19,292
ASSOCIATED
FIREFIGHTING EQUIP.
004 FAMILY OF HEAVY 52,933 52,933
TACTICAL VEHICLES
(FHTV).
005 PLS ESP.............. 18,035 18,035
006 ARMORED SECURITY 0 0
VEHICLES (ASV).
007 MINE PROTECTION 0 0
VEHICLE FAMILY.
008 FAMILY OF MINE 0 0
RESISTANT AMBUSH
PROTEC (MRAP).
009 TRUCK, TRACTOR, LINE 3,619 3,619
HAUL, M915/M916.
010 HVY EXPANDED MOBILE 26,859 26,859
TACTICAL TRUCK EXT
SERV.
011 HMMWV 0 0
RECAPITALIZATION
PROGRAM.
012 TACTICAL WHEELED 69,163 69,163
VEHICLE PROTECTION
KITS.
013 MODIFICATION OF IN 91,754 91,754
SVC EQUIP.
014 MINE-RESISTANT AMBUSH- 0 0
PROTECTED (MRAP)
MODS.
015 TOWING DEVICE-FIFTH 0 0
WHEEL.
016 AMC CRITICAL ITEMS, 0 0
OPA1.
NON-TACTICAL VEHICLES
017 HEAVY ARMORED SEDAN.. 0 0
018 PASSENGER CARRYING 2,548 2,548
VEHICLES.
019 NONTACTICAL VEHICLES, 16,791 16,791
OTHER.
COMM--JOINT
COMMUNICATIONS
020 JOINT COMBAT 10,061 10,061
IDENTIFICATION
MARKING SYSTEM.
021 WIN-T--GROUND FORCES 892,635 892,635
TACTICAL NETWORK.
022 SIGNAL MODERNIZATION 45,626 45,626
PROGRAM.
023 JCSE EQUIPMENT 5,143 5,143
(USREDCOM).
COMM--SATELLITE
COMMUNICATIONS
024 DEFENSE ENTERPRISE 151,636 151,636
WIDEBAND SATCOM
SYSTEMS.
025 TRANSPORTABLE 6,822 6,822
TACTICAL COMMAND
COMMUNICATIONS.
026 SHF TERM............. 9,108 9,108
027 SAT TERM, EMUT 0 0
(SPACE).
028 NAVSTAR GLOBAL 27,353 27,353
POSITIONING SYSTEM
(SPACE).
029 SMART-T (SPACE)...... 98,656 98,656
030 SCAMP (SPACE)........ 0 0
031 GLOBAL BRDCST SVC-- 47,131 47,131
GBS.
032 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP 23,281 23,281
(TAC SAT).
COMM--COMBAT SUPPORT
COMM
033 MOD-IN-SERVICE 0 0
PROFILER.
COMM--C3 SYSTEM
034 ARMY GLOBAL CMD & 10,848 10,848
CONTROL SYS (AGCCS).
COMM--COMBAT
COMMUNICATIONS
035 ARMY DATA 979 979
DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM
(DATA RADIO).
036 JOINT TACTICAL RADIO 556,250 526,250
SYSTEM.
AMF integration [-30,000]
ahead of need.
037 MID-TIER NETWORKING 86,219 86,219
VEHICULAR RADIO
(MNVR).
038 RADIO TERMINAL SET, 7,798 7,798
MIDS LVT(2).
039 SINCGARS FAMILY...... 9,001 9,001
040 AMC CRITICAL ITEMS-- 24,601 24,601
OPA2.
041 TRACTOR DESK......... 7,779 7,779
042 CMMS-ELEC EQUIP 0 0
FIELDING.
043 SPIDER APLA REMOTE 34,365 13,365
CONTROL UNIT.
Funding ahead of [-21,000]
need.
044 SOLDIER ENHANCEMENT 1,833 1,833
PROGRAM COMM/
ELECTRONICS.
045 TACTICAL 12,984 12,984
COMMUNICATIONS AND
PROTECTIVE SYSTEM.
046 COMBAT SURVIVOR 0 0
EVADER LOCATOR
(CSEL).
047 GUNSHOT DETECTION 2,332 2,332
SYSTEM (GDS).
048 RADIO, IMPROVED HF 1,132 1,132
(COTS) FAMILY.
049 MEDICAL COMM FOR CBT 22,899 22,899
CASUALTY CARE (MC4).
COMM--INTELLIGENCE
COMM
051 CI AUTOMATION 1,564 1,564
ARCHITECTURE.
052 RESERVE CA/MISO GPF 28,781 28,781
EQUIPMENT.
INFORMATION SECURITY
053 TSEC--ARMY KEY MGT 23,432 23,432
SYS (AKMS).
054 INFORMATION SYSTEM 43,897 43,897
SECURITY PROGRAM-
ISSP.
055 BIOMETRICS ENTERPRISE 0 0
COMM--LONG HAUL
COMMUNICATIONS
056 TERRESTRIAL 2,891 2,891
TRANSMISSION.
057 BASE SUPPORT 13,872 13,872
COMMUNICATIONS.
058 WW TECH CON IMP PROG 9,595 9,595
(WWTCIP).
COMM--BASE
COMMUNICATIONS
059 INFORMATION SYSTEMS.. 142,133 142,133
060 DEFENSE MESSAGE 0 0
SYSTEM (DMS).
061 INSTALLATION INFO 57,727 57,727
INFRASTRUCTURE MOD
PROGRAM.
062 PENTAGON INFORMATION 5,000 5,000
MGT AND TELECOM.
ELECT EQUIP--TACT INT
REL ACT (TIARA)
065 JTT/CIBS-M........... 1,641 1,641
066 PROPHET GROUND....... 48,797 48,797
067 DIGITAL TOPOGRAPHIC 0 0
SPT SYS (DTSS).
068 DRUG INTERDICTION 0 0
PROGRAM (DIP)
(TIARA).
069 DCGS-A (MIP)......... 184,007 184,007
070 JOINT TACTICAL GROUND 2,680 2,680
STATION (JTAGS).
071 TROJAN (MIP)......... 21,483 21,483
072 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP 2,412 2,412
(INTEL SPT) (MIP).
073 CI HUMINT AUTO 7,077 7,077
REPRINTING AND
COLLECTION.
074 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 0 0
MILLION (MIP).
ELECT EQUIP--
ELECTRONIC WARFARE
(EW)
075 LIGHTWEIGHT COUNTER 72,594 72,594
MORTAR RADAR.
076 CREW................. 15,446 15,446
077 FMLY OF PERSISTENT 0 0
SURVEILLANCE
CAPABILITIES.
078 COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/ 1,470 1,470
SECURITY
COUNTERMEASURES.
079 CI MODERNIZATION..... 1,368 1,368
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
SURV. (TAC SURV)
080 FAAD GBS............. 7,980 7,980
081 SENTINEL MODS........ 33,444 33,444
082 SENSE THROUGH THE 6,212 0
WALL (STTW).
Slow execution of [-6,212]
prior years
appropriations.
083 NIGHT VISION DEVICES. 166,516 166,516
084 LONG RANGE ADVANCED 0 0
SCOUT SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM.
085 NIGHT VISION, THERMAL 82,162 82,162
WPN SIGHT.
086 SMALL TACTICAL 20,717 20,717
OPTICAL RIFLE
MOUNTED MLRF.
087 COUNTER-ROCKET, 0 0
ARTILLERY & MORTAR
(C-RAM).
088 BASE EXPEDITIARY 0 0
TARGETING AND SURV
SYS.
089 GREEN LASER 1,014 1,014
INTERDICTION SYSTEM
(GLIS).
090 INDIRECT FIRE 29,881 29,881
PROTECTION FAMILY OF
SYSTEMS.
091 PROFILER............. 12,482 12,482
092 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP 3,075 3,075
(FIREFINDER RADARS).
093 FORCE XXI BATTLE CMD 0 0
BRIGADE & BELOW
(FBCB2).
094 JOINT BATTLE COMMAND-- 141,385 141,385
PLATFORM (JBC-P).
095 LIGHTWEIGHT LASER 0 0
DESIGNATOR/
RANGEFINDER.
096 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP 22,403 22,403
(LLDR).
097 COMPUTER BALLISTICS: 0 0
LHMBC XM32.
098 MORTAR FIRE CONTROL 29,505 29,505
SYSTEM.
099 COUNTERFIRE RADARS... 244,409 244,409
100 ENHANCED SENSOR & 2,426 2,426
MONITORING SYSTEM
(WMD).
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
C2 SYSTEMS
101 TACTICAL OPERATIONS 30,196 30,196
CENTERS.
102 FIRE SUPPORT C2 58,903 58,903
FAMILY.
103 BATTLE COMMAND 8,111 8,111
SUSTAINMENT SUPPORT
SYSTEM.
104 FAAD C2.............. 5,031 5,031
105 AIR & MSL DEFENSE 64,144 64,144
PLANNING & CONTROL
SYS.
106 KNIGHT FAMILY........ 11,999 11,999
107 LIFE CYCLE SOFTWARE 1,853 1,853
SUPPORT (LCSS).
108 AUTOMATIC 14,377 14,377
IDENTIFICATION
TECHNOLOGY.
109 TC AIMS II........... 0 0
110 TACTICAL INTERNET 0 0
MANAGER.
111 NETWORK MANAGEMENT 59,821 59,821
INITIALIZATION AND
SERVICE.
112 MANEUVER CONTROL 51,228 51,228
SYSTEM (MCS).
113 SINGLE ARMY LOGISTICS 176,901 176,901
ENTERPRISE (SALE).
114 RECONNAISSANCE AND 15,209 15,209
SURVEYING INSTRUMENT
SET.
ELECT EQUIP--
AUTOMATION
115 ARMY TRAINING 8,866 8,866
MODERNIZATION.
116 AUTOMATED DATA 129,438 129,438
PROCESSING EQUIP.
117 GENERAL FUND 9,184 9,184
ENTERPRISE BUSINESS
SYS FAM.
118 CSS COMMUNICATIONS... 20,639 20,639
119 RESERVE COMPONENT 35,493 35,493
AUTOMATION SYS
(RCAS).
ELECT EQUIP--AUDIO
VISUAL SYS (A/V)
120 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 8,467 8,467
MILLION (A/V).
121 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 5,309 5,309
MILLION.
ELECT EQUIP--SUPPORT
122 PRODUCTION BASE 586 586
SUPPORT (C-E).
123 BCT NETWORK.......... 0 0
124 DEFENSE RAPID 0 0
INNOVATION PROGRAM.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
124A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 3,435 3,435
CHEMICAL DEFENSIVE
EQUIPMENT
125 PROTECTIVE SYSTEMS... 0 0
126 FAMILY OF NON-LETHAL 3,960 3,960
EQUIPMENT (FNLE).
127 BASE DEFENSE SYSTEMS 4,374 4,374
(BDS).
128 CBRN SOLDIER 9,259 9,259
PROTECTION.
129 SMOKE & OBSCURANT 0 0
FAMILY: SOF (NON AAO
ITEM).
BRIDGING EQUIPMENT
130 TACTICAL BRIDGING.... 35,499 35,499
131 TACTICAL BRIDGE, 32,893 32,893
FLOAT-RIBBON.
ENGINEER (NON-
CONSTRUCTION)
EQUIPMENT
132 HANDHELD STANDOFF 0 0
MINEFIELD DETECTION
SYS-HST.
133 GRND STANDOFF MINE 0 0
DETECTN SYSM
(GSTAMIDS).
134 ROBOTIC COMBAT 29,106 29,106
SUPPORT SYSTEM
(RCSS).
135 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE 25,459 25,459
DISPOSAL EQPMT (EOD
EQPMT).
136 REMOTE DEMOLITION 8,044 8,044
SYSTEMS.
137 <$5M, COUNTERMINE 3,698 3,698
EQUIPMENT.
COMBAT SERVICE
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
138 HEATERS AND ECU'S.... 12,210 12,210
139 SOLDIER ENHANCEMENT.. 6,522 6,522
140 PERSONNEL RECOVERY 11,222 11,222
SUPPORT SYSTEM
(PRSS).
141 GROUND SOLDIER SYSTEM 103,317 103,317
142 MOUNTED SOLDIER 0 0
SYSTEM.
143 FORCE PROVIDER....... 0 0
144 FIELD FEEDING 27,417 27,417
EQUIPMENT.
145 CARGO AERIAL DEL & 52,065 52,065
PERSONNEL PARACHUTE
SYSTEM.
146 MORTUARY AFFAIRS 2,358 2,358
SYSTEMS.
147 FAMILY OF ENGR COMBAT 31,573 31,573
AND CONSTRUCTION
SETS.
148 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 14,093 14,093
MILLION.
PETROLEUM EQUIPMENT
149 DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS, 36,266 36,266
PETROLEUM & WATER.
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
150 COMBAT SUPPORT 34,101 34,101
MEDICAL.
151 MEDEVAC MISSON 20,540 20,540
EQUIPMENT PACKAGE
(MEP).
MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT
152 MOBILE MAINTENANCE 2,495 2,495
EQUIPMENT SYSTEMS.
153 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 0 0
MILLION (MAINT EQ).
CONSTRUCTION
EQUIPMENT
154 GRADER, ROAD MTZD, 2,028 2,028
HVY, 6X4 (CCE).
155 SKID STEER LOADER 0 0
(SSL) FAMILY OF
SYSTEM.
156 SCRAPERS, EARTHMOVING 6,146 6,146
157 MISSION MODULES-- 31,200 31,200
ENGINEERING.
158 COMPACTOR............ 0 0
159 LOADERS.............. 0 0
160 HYDRAULIC EXCAVATOR.. 0 0
161 TRACTOR, FULL TRACKED 20,867 20,867
162 ALL TERRAIN CRANES... 4,003 4,003
163 PLANT, ASPHALT MIXING 3,679 3,679
164 HIGH MOBILITY 30,042 30,042
ENGINEER EXCAVATOR
(HMEE).
165 ENHANCED RAPID 13,725 13,725
AIRFIELD
CONSTRUCTION CAPA.
166 CONST EQUIP ESP...... 13,351 13,351
167 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 9,134 9,134
MILLION (CONST
EQUIP).
RAIL FLOAT
CONTAINERIZATION
EQUIPMENT
168 JOINT HIGH SPEED 0 0
VESSEL (JHSV).
169 HARBORMASTER COMMAND 0 0
AND CONTROL CENTER.
170 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 10,552 10,552
MILLION (FLOAT/RAIL).
GENERATORS
171 GENERATORS AND 60,302 60,302
ASSOCIATED EQUIP.
MATERIAL HANDLING
EQUIPMENT
172 ROUGH TERRAIN 0 0
CONTAINER HANDLER
(RTCH).
173 FAMILY OF FORKLIFTS.. 5,895 5,895
174 ALL TERRAIN LIFTING 0 0
ARMY SYSTEM.
TRAINING EQUIPMENT
175 COMBAT TRAINING 104,649 104,649
CENTERS SUPPORT.
176 TRAINING DEVICES, 125,251 125,251
NONSYSTEM.
177 CLOSE COMBAT TACTICAL 19,984 19,984
TRAINER.
178 AVIATION COMBINED 10,977 10,977
ARMS TACTICAL
TRAINER.
179 GAMING TECHNOLOGY IN 4,056 4,056
SUPPORT OF ARMY
TRAINING.
TEST MEASURE AND DIG
EQUIPMENT (TMD)
180 CALIBRATION SETS 10,494 10,494
EQUIPMENT.
181 INTEGRATED FAMILY OF 45,508 45,508
TEST EQUIPMENT
(IFTE).
182 TEST EQUIPMENT 24,334 24,334
MODERNIZATION
(TEMOD).
OTHER SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
183 RAPID EQUIPPING 5,078 5,078
SOLDIER SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT.
184 PHYSICAL SECURITY 46,301 46,301
SYSTEMS (OPA3).
185 BASE LEVEL COMMON 1,373 1,373
EQUIPMENT.
186 MODIFICATION OF IN- 59,141 59,141
SVC EQUIPMENT (OPA-
3).
187 PRODUCTION BASE 2,446 2,446
SUPPORT (OTH).
188 SPECIAL EQUIPMENT FOR 12,920 12,920
USER TESTING.
189 AMC CRITICAL ITEMS 19,180 19,180
OPA3.
190 TRACTOR YARD......... 7,368 7,368
191 UNMANNED GROUND 83,937 71,937
VEHICLE.
Transfer to PE [-12,000]
0604641A at Army
request.
192 TRAINING LOGISTICS 0 0
MANAGEMENT.
OPA2
193 INITIAL SPARES--C&E.. 64,507 64,507
TOTAL, OTHER 6,326,245 6,307,033
PROCUREMENT, ARMY.
JOINT IMPR EXPLOSIVE
DEV DEFEAT FUND
NETWORK ATTACK
001 ATTACK THE NETWORK... 0 0
JIEDDO DEVICE DEFEAT
002 DEFEAT THE DEVICE.... 0 0
FORCE TRAINING
003 TRAIN THE FORCE...... 0 0
STAFF AND
INFRASTRUCTURE
004 OPERATIONS........... 227,414 0
Transfer to OCO... [-227,414]
TOTAL, JOINT IMPR 227,414 0
EXPLOSIVE DEV DEFEAT
FUND.
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
NAVY
COMBAT AIRCRAFT
001 EA-18G............... 1,027,443 1,027,443
002 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
003 F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER) 2,035,131 2,035,131
HORNET.
004 ADVANCE 30,296 90,296
PROCUREMENT (CY).
Retain option for [60,000]
additional FY 14
aircraft.
005 JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER 1,007,632 1,007,632
CV.
006 ADVANCE 65,180 65,180
PROCUREMENT (CY).
007 JSF STOVL............ 1,404,737 1,404,737
008 ADVANCE 106,199 106,199
PROCUREMENT (CY).
009 V-22 (MEDIUM LIFT)... 1,303,120 1,303,120
010 ADVANCE 154,202 154,202
PROCUREMENT (CY).
011 H-1 UPGRADES (UH-1Y/ 720,933 720,933
AH-1Z).
012 ADVANCE 69,658 69,658
PROCUREMENT (CY).
013 MH-60S (MYP)......... 384,792 384,792
014 ADVANCE 69,277 69,277
PROCUREMENT (CY).
015 MH-60R (MYP)......... 656,866 656,866
016 ADVANCE 185,896 185,896
PROCUREMENT (CY).
017 P-8A POSEIDON........ 2,420,755 2,420,755
018 ADVANCE 325,679 325,679
PROCUREMENT (CY).
019 E-2D ADV HAWKEYE..... 861,498 861,498
020 ADVANCE 123,179 123,179
PROCUREMENT (CY).
AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT
021 C-40A................ 0 0
TRAINER AIRCRAFT
022 JPATS................ 278,884 278,884
OTHER AIRCRAFT
023 KC-130J.............. 3,000 3,000
024 ADVANCE 22,995 22,995
PROCUREMENT (CY).
025 ADVANCE 51,124 51,124
PROCUREMENT (CY).
026 MQ-8 UAV............. 124,573 124,573
027 STUASL0 UAV.......... 9,593 9,593
MODIFICATION OF
AIRCRAFT
028 EA-6 SERIES.......... 30,062 30,062
029 AEA SYSTEMS.......... 49,999 49,999
030 AV-8 SERIES.......... 38,703 38,703
031 ADVERSARY............ 4,289 4,289
032 F-18 SERIES.......... 647,306 647,306
033 H-46 SERIES.......... 2,343 2,343
034 AH-1W SERIES......... 8,721 8,721
035 H-53 SERIES.......... 45,567 45,567
036 SH-60 SERIES......... 83,527 83,527
037 H-1 SERIES........... 6,508 6,508
038 EP-3 SERIES.......... 66,374 66,374
039 P-3 SERIES........... 148,405 148,405
040 E-2 SERIES........... 16,322 16,322
041 TRAINER A/C SERIES... 34,284 34,284
042 C-2A................. 4,743 4,743
043 C-130 SERIES......... 60,302 60,302
044 FEWSG................ 670 670
045 CARGO/TRANSPORT A/C 26,311 26,311
SERIES.
046 E-6 SERIES........... 158,332 158,332
047 EXECUTIVE HELICOPTERS 58,163 58,163
SERIES.
048 SPECIAL PROJECT 12,421 12,421
AIRCRAFT.
049 T-45 SERIES.......... 64,488 64,488
050 POWER PLANT CHANGES.. 21,569 21,569
051 JPATS SERIES......... 1,552 1,552
052 AVIATION LIFE SUPPORT 2,473 2,473
MODS.
053 COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT. 114,690 114,690
054 COMMON AVIONICS 96,183 96,183
CHANGES.
055 COMMON DEFENSIVE 0 0
WEAPON SYSTEM.
056 ID SYSTEMS........... 39,846 39,846
057 P-8 SERIES........... 5,302 5,302
058 MAGTF EW FOR AVIATION 34,127 34,127
059 RQ-7 SERIES.......... 49,324 49,324
060 V-22 (TILT/ROTOR 95,856 95,856
ACFT) OSPREY.
AIRCRAFT SPARES AND
REPAIR PARTS
061 SPARES AND REPAIR 1,166,430 1,166,430
PARTS.
AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
EQUIP & FACILITIES
062 COMMON GROUND 387,195 387,195
EQUIPMENT.
063 AIRCRAFT INDUSTRIAL 23,469 23,469
FACILITIES.
064 WAR CONSUMABLES...... 43,383 43,383
065 OTHER PRODUCTION 3,399 3,399
CHARGES.
066 SPECIAL SUPPORT 32,274 32,274
EQUIPMENT.
067 FIRST DESTINATION 1,742 1,742
TRANSPORTATION.
068 CANCELLED ACCOUNT 0 0
ADJUSTMENTS.
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT 17,129,296 17,189,296
PROCUREMENT, NAVY.
WEAPONS PROCUREMENT,
NAVY
MODIFICATION OF
MISSILES
001 TRIDENT II MODS...... 1,224,683 1,224,683
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
FACILITIES
002 MISSILE INDUSTRIAL 5,553 5,553
FACILITIES.
STRATEGIC MISSILES
003 TOMAHAWK............. 308,970 308,970
TACTICAL MISSILES
004 AMRAAM............... 102,683 102,683
005 SIDEWINDER........... 80,226 80,226
006 JSOW................. 127,609 127,609
007 STANDARD MISSILE..... 399,482 399,482
008 RAM.................. 66,769 66,769
009 HELLFIRE............. 74,501 74,501
010 STAND OFF PRECISION 0 0
GUIDED MUNITIONS
(SOPGM).
011 AERIAL TARGETS....... 61,518 61,518
012 OTHER MISSILE SUPPORT 3,585 3,585
MODIFICATION OF
MISSILES
013 ESSM................. 58,194 58,194
014 HARM MODS............ 86,721 86,721
015 STANDARD MISSILES 0 0
MODS.
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
FACILITIES
016 WEAPONS INDUSTRIAL 2,014 2,014
FACILITIES.
017 FLEET SATELLITE COMM 21,454 21,454
FOLLOW-ON.
ORDNANCE SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
018 ORDNANCE SUPPORT 54,945 54,945
EQUIPMENT.
TORPEDOES AND RELATED
EQUIP
019 SSTD................. 2,700 2,700
020 ASW TARGETS.......... 10,385 10,385
MOD OF TORPEDOES AND
RELATED EQUIP
021 MK-54 TORPEDO MODS... 74,487 74,487
022 MK-48 TORPEDO ADCAP 54,281 54,281
MODS.
023 QUICKSTRIKE MINE..... 6,852 6,852
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
024 TORPEDO SUPPORT 46,402 46,402
EQUIPMENT.
025 ASW RANGE SUPPORT.... 11,927 11,927
DESTINATION
TRANSPORTATION
026 FIRST DESTINATION 3,614 3,614
TRANSPORTATION.
GUNS AND GUN MOUNTS
027 SMALL ARMS AND 12,594 12,594
WEAPONS.
MODIFICATION OF GUNS
AND GUN MOUNTS
028 CIWS MODS............ 59,303 67,003
Buy additional [7,700]
ordnance
alteration kits.
029 COAST GUARD WEAPONS.. 19,072 19,072
030 GUN MOUNT MODS....... 54,706 54,706
031 CRUISER MODERNIZATION 1,591 1,591
WEAPONS.
032 AIRBORNE MINE 20,607 20,607
NEUTRALIZATION
SYSTEMS.
OTHER
033 CANCELLED ACCOUNT 0 0
ADJUSTMENTS.
SPARES AND REPAIR
PARTS
034 SPARES AND REPAIR 60,150 60,150
PARTS.
TOTAL, WEAPONS 3,117,578 3,125,278
PROCUREMENT, NAVY.
PROCUREMENT OF AMMO,
NAVY & MC
NAVY AMMUNITION
001 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS 27,024 27,024
002 AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL 56,575 56,575
TYPES.
003 MACHINE GUN 21,266 21,266
AMMUNITION.
004 PRACTICE BOMBS....... 34,319 34,319
005 CARTRIDGES & CART 53,755 53,755
ACTUATED DEVICES.
006 AIR EXPENDABLE 61,693 61,693
COUNTERMEASURES.
007 JATOS................ 2,776 2,776
008 LRLAP 6" LONG RANGE 7,102 7,102
ATTACK PROJECTILE.
009 5 INCH/54 GUN 48,320 48,320
AMMUNITION.
010 INTERMEDIATE CALIBER 25,544 25,544
GUN AMMUNITION.
011 OTHER SHIP GUN 41,624 41,624
AMMUNITION.
012 SMALL ARMS & LANDING 65,893 65,893
PARTY AMMO.
013 PYROTECHNIC AND 11,176 11,176
DEMOLITION.
014 AMMUNITION LESS THAN 4,116 4,116
$5 MILLION.
MARINE CORPS
AMMUNITION
015 SMALL ARMS AMMUNITION 83,733 83,733
016 LINEAR CHARGES, ALL 24,645 24,645
TYPES.
017 40MM, ALL TYPES...... 16,201 16,201
018 60MM, ALL TYPES...... 0 0
019 81MM, ALL TYPES...... 13,711 3,711
Decrease for [-10,000]
excess.
020 120MM, ALL TYPES..... 12,557 12,557
021 CTG 25MM, ALL TYPES.. 0 0
022 GRENADES, ALL TYPES.. 7,634 7,134
Decrease for [-500]
excess.
023 ROCKETS, ALL TYPES... 27,528 27,528
024 ARTILLERY, ALL TYPES. 93,065 93,065
025 DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, 2,047 47
ALL TYPES.
Decrease for [-2,000]
excess.
026 FUZE, ALL TYPES...... 5,297 5,297
027 NON LETHALS.......... 1,362 1,362
028 AMMO MODERNIZATION... 4,566 4,566
029 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 6,010 6,010
MILLION.
PRIOR YEAR SAVINGS
029B PRIOR YEAR SAVINGS... -88,300
Ammunition change [-88,300]
in requirements.
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF 759,539 658,739
AMMO, NAVY & MC.
SHIPBUILDING &
CONVERSION, NAVY
OTHER WARSHIPS
001 CARRIER REPLACEMENT 608,195 608,195
PROGRAM.
002 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
003 VIRGINIA CLASS 3,217,601 3,217,601
SUBMARINE.
004 ADVANCE 874,878 1,652,557
PROCUREMENT (CY).
Advance [777,679]
procurement for
2nd SSN in FY 14.
005 CVN REFUELING 1,613,392 1,613,392
OVERHAULS.
006 ADVANCE 70,010 70,010
PROCUREMENT (CY).
007 SSBN ERO............. 0 0
008 DDG 1000............. 669,222 669,222
009 DDG-51............... 3,048,658 3,048,658
010 ADVANCE 466,283 466,283
PROCUREMENT (CY).
011 LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP. 1,784,959 1,784,959
012 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
AMPHIBIOUS SHIPS
013 LPD-17............... 0 0
014 LHA REPLACEMENT...... 0 0
015 JOINT HIGH SPEED 189,196 189,196
VESSEL.
AUXILIARIES, CRAFT
AND PRIOR YR PROGRAM
COST
016 OCEANOGRAPHIC SHIPS.. 0 0
017 ADVANCE 307,300 307,300
PROCUREMENT (CY).
018 OUTFITTING........... 309,648 309,648
019 SERVICE CRAFT........ 0 0
020 LCAC SLEP............ 47,930 47,930
021 COMPLETION OF PY 372,573 372,573
SHIPBUILDING
PROGRAMS.
TOTAL, SHIPBUILDING & 13,579,845 14,357,524
CONVERSION, NAVY.
OTHER PROCUREMENT,
NAVY
SHIP PROPULSION
EQUIPMENT
001 LM-2500 GAS TURBINE.. 10,658 10,658
002 ALLISON 501K GAS 8,469 8,469
TURBINE.
NAVIGATION EQUIPMENT
003 OTHER NAVIGATION 23,392 23,392
EQUIPMENT.
PERISCOPES
004 SUB PERISCOPES & 53,809 53,809
IMAGING EQUIP.
OTHER SHIPBOARD
EQUIPMENT
005 DDG MOD.............. 452,371 452,371
006 FIREFIGHTING 16,958 16,958
EQUIPMENT.
007 COMMAND AND CONTROL 2,492 2,492
SWITCHBOARD.
008 POLLUTION CONTROL 20,707 20,707
EQUIPMENT.
009 SUBMARINE SUPPORT 12,046 12,046
EQUIPMENT.
010 VIRGINIA CLASS 79,870 79,870
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
011 LCS CLASS SUPPORT 19,865 19,865
EQUIPMENT.
012 SUBMARINE BATTERIES.. 41,522 41,522
013 LPD CLASS SUPPORT 30,543 30,543
EQUIPMENT.
014 STRATEGIC PLATFORM 16,257 16,257
SUPPORT EQUIP.
015 DSSP EQUIPMENT....... 3,630 3,630
016 CG MODERNIZATION..... 101,000 101,000
017 LCAC................. 16,645 16,645
018 UNDERWATER EOD 35,446 35,446
PROGRAMS.
019 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 65,998 65,998
MILLION.
020 CHEMICAL WARFARE 4,359 4,359
DETECTORS.
021 SUBMARINE LIFE 10,218 10,218
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
REACTOR PLANT
EQUIPMENT
022 REACTOR POWER UNITS.. 286,859 286,859
023 REACTOR COMPONENTS... 278,503 278,503
OCEAN ENGINEERING
024 DIVING AND SALVAGE 8,998 8,998
EQUIPMENT.
SMALL BOATS
025 STANDARD BOATS....... 30,131 30,131
TRAINING EQUIPMENT
026 OTHER SHIPS TRAINING 29,772 29,772
EQUIPMENT.
PRODUCTION FACILITIES
EQUIPMENT
027 OPERATING FORCES IPE. 64,346 64,346
OTHER SHIP SUPPORT
028 NUCLEAR ALTERATIONS.. 154,652 154,652
029 LCS COMMON MISSION 31,319 31,319
MODULES EQUIPMENT.
030 LCS MCM MISSION 38,392 38,392
MODULES.
031 LCS SUW MISSION 32,897 32,897
MODULES.
LOGISTIC SUPPORT
032 LSD MIDLIFE.......... 49,758 49,758
SHIP RADARS
033 RADAR SUPPORT........ 0 0
034 SPQ-9B RADAR......... 19,777 19,777
035 AN/SQQ-89 SURF ASW 89,201 89,201
COMBAT SYSTEM.
036 SSN ACOUSTICS........ 190,874 190,874
037 UNDERSEA WARFARE 17,035 17,035
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
038 SONAR SWITCHES AND 13,410 13,410
TRANSDUCERS.
039 ELECTRONIC WARFARE 0 0
MILDEC.
ASW ELECTRONIC
EQUIPMENT
040 SUBMARINE ACOUSTIC 21,489 21,489
WARFARE SYSTEM.
041 SSTD................. 10,716 10,716
042 FIXED SURVEILLANCE 98,896 98,896
SYSTEM.
043 SURTASS.............. 2,774 2,774
044 MARITIME PATROL AND 18,428 18,428
RECONNAISSANCE FORCE.
ELECTRONIC WARFARE
EQUIPMENT
045 AN/SLQ-32............ 92,270 92,270
RECONNAISSANCE
EQUIPMENT
046 SHIPBOARD IW EXPLOIT. 107,060 107,060
047 AUTOMATED 914 914
IDENTIFICATION
SYSTEM (AIS).
SUBMARINE
SURVEILLANCE
EQUIPMENT
048 SUBMARINE SUPPORT 34,050 34,050
EQUIPMENT PROG.
OTHER SHIP ELECTRONIC
EQUIPMENT
049 COOPERATIVE 27,881 27,881
ENGAGEMENT
CAPABILITY.
050 TRUSTED INFORMATION 448 448
SYSTEM (TIS).
051 NAVAL TACTICAL 35,732 35,732
COMMAND SUPPORT
SYSTEM (NTCSS).
052 ATDLS................ 0 0
053 NAVY COMMAND AND 9,533 9,533
CONTROL SYSTEM
(NCCS).
054 MINESWEEPING SYSTEM 60,111 60,111
REPLACEMENT.
055 SHALLOW WATER MCM.... 6,950 6,950
056 NAVSTAR GPS RECEIVERS 9,089 9,089
(SPACE).
057 AMERICAN FORCES RADIO 7,768 7,768
AND TV SERVICE.
058 STRATEGIC PLATFORM 3,614 3,614
SUPPORT EQUIP.
TRAINING EQUIPMENT
059 OTHER TRAINING 42,911 42,911
EQUIPMENT.
AVIATION ELECTRONIC
EQUIPMENT
060 MATCALS.............. 5,861 5,861
061 SHIPBOARD AIR TRAFFIC 8,362 8,362
CONTROL.
062 AUTOMATIC CARRIER 15,685 15,685
LANDING SYSTEM.
063 NATIONAL AIR SPACE 16,919 16,919
SYSTEM.
064 FLEET AIR TRAFFIC 6,828 6,828
CONTROL SYSTEMS.
065 LANDING SYSTEMS...... 7,646 7,646
066 ID SYSTEMS........... 35,474 35,474
067 NAVAL MISSION 9,958 9,958
PLANNING SYSTEMS.
OTHER SHORE
ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
068 DEPLOYABLE JOINT 9,064 9,064
COMMAND AND CONT.
069 MARITIME INTEGRATED 16,026 16,026
BROADCAST SYSTEM.
070 TACTICAL/MOBILE C4I 11,886 11,886
SYSTEMS.
071 DCGS-N............... 11,887 11,887
072 CANES................ 341,398 341,398
073 RADIAC............... 8,083 8,083
074 CANES-INTELL......... 79,427 79,427
075 GPETE................ 6,083 6,083
076 INTEG COMBAT SYSTEM 4,495 4,495
TEST FACILITY.
077 EMI CONTROL 4,767 4,767
INSTRUMENTATION.
078 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 81,755 81,755
MILLION.
SHIPBOARD
COMMUNICATIONS
079 SHIPBOARD TACTICAL 0 0
COMMUNICATIONS.
080 SHIP COMMUNICATIONS 56,870 56,870
AUTOMATION.
081 MARITIME DOMAIN 1,063 1,063
AWARENESS (MDA).
082 COMMUNICATIONS ITEMS 28,522 28,522
UNDER $5M.
083 SUBMARINE BROADCAST 4,183 4,183
SUPPORT.
084 SUBMARINE 69,025 69,025
COMMUNICATION
EQUIPMENT.
SATELLITE
COMMUNICATIONS
085 SATELLITE 49,294 49,294
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS.
086 NAVY MULTIBAND 184,825 184,825
TERMINAL (NMT).
SHORE COMMUNICATIONS
087 JCS COMMUNICATIONS 2,180 2,180
EQUIPMENT.
088 ELECTRICAL POWER 1,354 1,354
SYSTEMS.
089 NAVAL SHORE 0 0
COMMUNICATIONS.
CRYPTOGRAPHIC
EQUIPMENT
090 INFO SYSTEMS SECURITY 144,104 144,104
PROGRAM (ISSP).
CRYPTOLOGIC EQUIPMENT
091 CRYPTOLOGIC 12,604 12,604
COMMUNICATIONS EQUIP.
OTHER ELECTRONIC
SUPPORT
092 COAST GUARD EQUIPMENT 6,680 6,680
093 DEFENSE RAPID 0 0
INNOVATION PROGRAM.
DRUG INTERDICTION
SUPPORT
094 OTHER DRUG 0 0
INTERDICTION SUPPORT.
SONOBUOYS
095 SONOBUOYS--ALL TYPES. 104,677 104,677
AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
096 WEAPONS RANGE SUPPORT 70,753 70,753
EQUIPMENT.
097 EXPEDITIONARY 8,678 8,678
AIRFIELDS.
098 AIRCRAFT REARMING 11,349 11,349
EQUIPMENT.
099 AIRCRAFT LAUNCH & 82,618 82,618
RECOVERY EQUIPMENT.
100 METEOROLOGICAL 18,339 18,339
EQUIPMENT.
101 DCRS/DPL............. 1,414 1,414
102 AVIATION LIFE SUPPORT 40,475 40,475
103 AIRBORNE MINE 61,552 61,552
COUNTERMEASURES.
104 LAMPS MK III 18,771 18,771
SHIPBOARD EQUIPMENT.
105 PORTABLE ELECTRONIC 7,954 7,954
MAINTENANCE AIDS.
106 OTHER AVIATION 10,023 10,023
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
107 AUTONOMIC LOGISTICS 3,826 3,826
INFORMATION SYSTEM
(ALIS).
SHIP GUN SYSTEM
EQUIPMENT
108 NAVAL FIRES CONTROL 3,472 3,472
SYSTEM.
109 GUN FIRE CONTROL 4,528 4,528
EQUIPMENT.
SHIP MISSILE SYSTEMS
EQUIPMENT
110 NATO SEASPARROW...... 8,960 8,960
111 RAM GMLS............. 1,185 1,185
112 SHIP SELF DEFENSE 55,371 55,371
SYSTEM.
113 AEGIS SUPPORT 81,614 81,614
EQUIPMENT.
114 TOMAHAWK SUPPORT 77,767 77,767
EQUIPMENT.
115 VERTICAL LAUNCH 754 754
SYSTEMS.
116 MARITIME INTEGRATED 4,965 4,965
PLANNING SYSTEM--
MIPS.
FBM SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
117 STRATEGIC MISSILE 181,049 181,049
SYSTEMS EQUIP.
118 SSN COMBAT CONTROL 71,316 71,316
SYSTEMS.
119 SUBMARINE ASW SUPPORT 4,018 4,018
EQUIPMENT.
120 SURFACE ASW SUPPORT 6,465 6,465
EQUIPMENT.
121 ASW RANGE SUPPORT 47,930 47,930
EQUIPMENT.
OTHER ORDNANCE
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
122 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE 3,579 3,579
DISPOSAL EQUIP.
123 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 3,125 3,125
MILLION.
OTHER EXPENDABLE
ORDNANCE
124 ANTI-SHIP MISSILE 31,743 31,743
DECOY SYSTEM.
125 SURFACE TRAINING 34,174 34,174
DEVICE MODS.
126 SUBMARINE TRAINING 23,450 23,450
DEVICE MODS.
CIVIL ENGINEERING
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
127 PASSENGER CARRYING 7,158 7,158
VEHICLES.
128 GENERAL PURPOSE 3,325 3,325
TRUCKS.
129 CONSTRUCTION & 8,692 8,692
MAINTENANCE EQUIP.
130 FIRE FIGHTING 14,533 14,533
EQUIPMENT.
131 TACTICAL VEHICLES.... 15,330 15,330
132 AMPHIBIOUS EQUIPMENT. 10,803 10,803
133 POLLUTION CONTROL 7,265 7,265
EQUIPMENT.
134 ITEMS UNDER $5 15,252 15,252
MILLION.
135 PHYSICAL SECURITY 1,161 1,161
VEHICLES.
SUPPLY SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
136 MATERIALS HANDLING 15,204 15,204
EQUIPMENT.
137 OTHER SUPPLY SUPPORT 6,330 6,330
EQUIPMENT.
138 FIRST DESTINATION 6,539 6,539
TRANSPORTATION.
139 SPECIAL PURPOSE 34,804 34,804
SUPPLY SYSTEMS.
TRAINING DEVICES
140 TRAINING SUPPORT 25,444 25,444
EQUIPMENT.
COMMAND SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
141 COMMAND SUPPORT 43,165 43,165
EQUIPMENT.
142 EDUCATION SUPPORT 2,251 2,251
EQUIPMENT.
143 MEDICAL SUPPORT 3,148 3,148
EQUIPMENT.
146 NAVAL MIP SUPPORT 3,502 3,502
EQUIPMENT.
148 OPERATING FORCES 15,696 15,696
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
149 C4ISR EQUIPMENT...... 4,344 4,344
150 ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT 19,492 19,492
EQUIPMENT.
151 PHYSICAL SECURITY 177,149 177,149
EQUIPMENT.
152 ENTERPRISE 183,995 183,995
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
152A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 13,063 13,063
SPARES AND REPAIR
PARTS
153 SPARES AND REPAIR 250,718 250,718
PARTS.
TOTAL, OTHER 6,169,378 6,169,378
PROCUREMENT, NAVY.
PROCUREMENT, MARINE
CORPS
TRACKED COMBAT
VEHICLES
001 AAV7A1 PIP........... 16,089 16,089
002 LAV PIP.............. 186,216 46,216
LAV procurement [-140,000]
acquisition
objective change.
ARTILLERY AND OTHER
WEAPONS
003 EXPEDITIONARY FIRE 2,502 2,502
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
004 155MM LIGHTWEIGHT 17,913 17,913
TOWED HOWITZER.
005 HIGH MOBILITY 47,999 47,999
ARTILLERY ROCKET
SYSTEM.
006 WEAPONS AND COMBAT 17,706 17,706
VEHICLES UNDER $5
MILLION.
OTHER SUPPORT
007 MODIFICATION KITS.... 48,040 48,040
008 WEAPONS ENHANCEMENT 4,537 4,537
PROGRAM.
GUIDED MISSILES
009 GROUND BASED AIR 11,054 11,054
DEFENSE.
010 JAVELIN.............. 0 0
011 FOLLOW ON TO SMAW.... 19,650 19,650
012 ANTI-ARMOR WEAPONS 20,708 20,708
SYSTEM-HEAVY (AAWS-
H).
OTHER SUPPORT
013 MODIFICATION KITS.... 0 0
COMMAND AND CONTROL
SYSTEMS
014 UNIT OPERATIONS 1,420 1,420
CENTER.
REPAIR AND TEST
EQUIPMENT
015 REPAIR AND TEST 25,127 25,127
EQUIPMENT.
OTHER SUPPORT (TEL)
016 COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM 25,822 25,822
017 MODIFICATION KITS.... 2,831 2,831
COMMAND AND CONTROL
SYSTEM (NON-TEL)
018 ITEMS UNDER $5 5,498 5,498
MILLION (COMM &
ELEC).
019 AIR OPERATIONS C2 11,290 11,290
SYSTEMS.
RADAR + EQUIPMENT
(NON-TEL)
020 RADAR SYSTEMS........ 128,079 128,079
021 RQ-21 UAS............ 27,619 27,619
INTELL/COMM EQUIPMENT
(NON-TEL)
022 FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM.. 7,319 7,319
023 INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT 7,466 7,466
EQUIPMENT.
025 RQ-11 UAV............ 2,318 2,318
026 DCGS-MC.............. 18,291 18,291
OTHER COMM/ELEC
EQUIPMENT (NON-TEL)
029 NIGHT VISION 48,084 48,084
EQUIPMENT.
OTHER SUPPORT (NON-
TEL)
030 COMMON COMPUTER 206,708 206,708
RESOURCES.
031 COMMAND POST SYSTEMS. 35,190 35,190
032 RADIO SYSTEMS........ 89,059 89,059
033 COMM SWITCHING & 22,500 22,500
CONTROL SYSTEMS.
034 COMM & ELEC 42,625 42,625
INFRASTRUCTURE
SUPPORT.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
035A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 2,290 2,290
ADMINISTRATIVE
VEHICLES
035 COMMERCIAL PASSENGER 2,877 2,877
VEHICLES.
036 COMMERCIAL CARGO 13,960 13,960
VEHICLES.
TACTICAL VEHICLES
037 5/4T TRUCK HMMWV 8,052 8,052
(MYP).
038 MOTOR TRANSPORT 50,269 50,269
MODIFICATIONS.
039 MEDIUM TACTICAL 0 0
VEHICLE REPLACEMENT.
040 LOGISTICS VEHICLE 37,262 37,262
SYSTEM REP.
041 FAMILY OF TACTICAL 48,160 48,160
TRAILERS.
042 TRAILERS............. 0 0
OTHER SUPPORT
043 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 6,705 6,705
MILLION.
ENGINEER AND OTHER
EQUIPMENT
044 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL 13,576 13,576
EQUIP ASSORT.
045 BULK LIQUID EQUIPMENT 16,869 16,869
046 TACTICAL FUEL SYSTEMS 19,108 19,108
047 POWER EQUIPMENT 56,253 56,253
ASSORTED.
048 AMPHIBIOUS SUPPORT 13,089 13,089
EQUIPMENT.
049 EOD SYSTEMS.......... 73,699 73,699
MATERIALS HANDLING
EQUIPMENT
050 PHYSICAL SECURITY 3,510 3,510
EQUIPMENT.
051 GARRISON MOBILE 11,490 11,490
ENGINEER EQUIPMENT
(GMEE).
052 MATERIAL HANDLING 20,659 20,659
EQUIP.
053 FIRST DESTINATION 132 132
TRANSPORTATION.
GENERAL PROPERTY
054 FIELD MEDICAL 31,068 31,068
EQUIPMENT.
055 TRAINING DEVICES..... 45,895 45,895
056 CONTAINER FAMILY..... 5,801 5,801
057 FAMILY OF 23,939 23,939
CONSTRUCTION
EQUIPMENT.
058 FAMILY OF INTERNALLY 0 0
TRANSPORTABLE VEH
(ITV).
059 BRIDGE BOATS......... 0 0
060 RAPID DEPLOYABLE 8,365 8,365
KITCHEN.
OTHER SUPPORT
061 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 7,077 7,077
MILLION.
SPARES AND REPAIR
PARTS
062 SPARES AND REPAIR 3,190 3,190
PARTS.
PRIOR YEAR SAVINGS
062A PRIOR YEAR SAVINGS... -135,200
LAV procurement [-135,200]
acquisition
objective change
PY.
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT, 1,622,955 1,347,755
MARINE CORPS.
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
AIR FORCE
TACTICAL FORCES
001 F-35................. 3,124,302 3,124,302
002 ADVANCE 293,400 293,400
PROCUREMENT (CY).
003 F-22A................ 0 0
004 C-17A (MYP).......... 0 0
OTHER AIRLIFT
005 C-130J............... 68,373 68,373
006 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
007 HC-130J.............. 152,212 152,212
008 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
009 MC-130J.............. 374,866 374,866
010 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
011 HC/MC-130 RECAP...... 0 0
012 C-27J................ 0 0
UPT TRAINERS
013 LIGHT MOBILITY 0 0
AIRCRAFT.
014 USAFA POWERED FLIGHT 0 0
PROGRAM.
HELICOPTERS
015 HH-60 LOSS 60,596 60,596
REPLACEMENT/RECAP.
016 COMMON VERTICAL LIFT 0 0
SUPPORT PLATFORM
(CVLSP).
017 CV-22 (MYP).......... 294,220 294,220
018 ADVANCE 15,000 15,000
PROCUREMENT (CY).
MISSION SUPPORT
AIRCRAFT
019 CIVIL AIR PATROL A/C. 2,498 2,498
020 LIGHT ATTACK ARMED 0 0
RECON ACFT.
021 RQ-11................ 0 0
022 STUASL0.............. 0 0
OTHER AIRCRAFT
023 INTERIM GATEWAY...... 0 0
024 TARGET DRONES........ 129,866 129,866
025 C-37A................ 0 0
026 RQ-4................. 75,000 75,000
027 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
028 AC-130J.............. 163,970 163,970
029 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
030 MQ-9................. 553,530 553,530
031 RQ-4 BLOCK 40 PROC... 11,654 11,654
STRATEGIC AIRCRAFT
032 B-2A................. 82,296 82,296
033 B-1B................. 149,756 149,756
034 B-52................. 9,781 9,781
035 LARGE AIRCRAFT 28,800 28,800
INFRARED
COUNTERMEASURES.
TACTICAL AIRCRAFT
036 A-10................. 89,919 89,919
037 F-15................. 148,378 148,378
038 F-16................. 6,896 6,896
039 F-22A................ 283,871 283,871
040 F-35 MODIFICATIONS... 147,995 147,995
AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT
041 C-5.................. 6,967 6,967
042 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
043 C-5M................. 944,819 944,819
044 ADVANCE 175,800 175,800
PROCUREMENT (CY).
045 C-9C................. 0 0
046 C-17A................ 205,079 205,079
047 C-21................. 199 199
048 C-32A................ 1,750 1,750
049 C-37A................ 445 445
050 C-130 AMP............ 0 0
TRAINER AIRCRAFT
051 GLIDER MODS.......... 126 126
052 T-6.................. 15,494 15,494
053 T-1.................. 272 272
054 T-38................. 20,455 20,455
OTHER AIRCRAFT
055 U-2 MODS............. 0 0
056 U-2 MODS............. 44,477 44,477
057 KC-10A (ATCA)........ 46,921 46,921
058 C-12................. 1,876 1,876
059 MC-12W............... 17,054 17,054
060 C-20 MODS............ 243 243
061 VC-25A MOD........... 11,185 11,185
062 C-40................. 243 243
063 C-130................ 67,853 67,853
064 C-130 INTEL.......... 0 0
065 C-130J MODS.......... 70,555 70,555
066 C-135................ 46,707 46,707
067 COMPASS CALL MODS.... 50,024 50,024
068 RC-135............... 165,237 165,237
069 E-3.................. 193,099 193,099
070 E-4.................. 47,616 47,616
071 E-8.................. 59,320 71,320
Restart production [12,000]
line for the
JSTARS re-engining
program.
072 H-1.................. 5,449 5,449
073 H-60................. 26,227 26,227
074 RQ-4 MODS............ 9,257 9,257
075 HC/MC-130 22,326 22,326
MODIFICATIONS.
076 OTHER AIRCRAFT....... 18,832 18,832
077 MQ-1 MODS............ 30,861 30,861
078 MQ-9 MODS............ 238,360 238,360
079 MQ-9 UAS PAYLOADS.... 93,461 93,461
080 CV-22 MODS........... 23,881 23,881
AIRCRAFT SPARES AND
REPAIR PARTS
081 INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR 729,691 729,691
PARTS.
COMMON SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
082 AIRCRAFT REPLACEMENT 56,542 56,542
SUPPORT EQUIP.
POST PRODUCTION
SUPPORT
083 A-10................. 5,100 5,100
084 B-1.................. 965 965
085 B-2A................. 0 0
086 B-2A................. 47,580 47,580
087 C-5.................. 0 0
088 KC-10A (ATCA)........ 13,100 13,100
089 C-17A................ 181,703 181,703
090 C-130................ 31,830 31,830
091 C-135................ 13,434 13,434
092 F-15................. 2,363 2,363
093 F-16................. 8,506 8,506
094 HH-60 PPS............ 0 0
095 T-6.................. 0 0
096 OTHER AIRCRAFT....... 9,522 9,522
INDUSTRIAL
PREPAREDNESS
097 INDUSTRIAL 20,731 20,731
RESPONSIVENESS.
WAR CONSUMABLES
098 WAR CONSUMABLES...... 89,727 89,727
OTHER PRODUCTION
CHARGES
099 OTHER PRODUCTION 842,392 842,392
CHARGES.
DARP
103 U-2.................. 0 0
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
103A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 20,164 20,164
PRIOR YEAR SAVINGS
103B PRIOR YEAR SAVINGS... -920,748
Light attack armed [-115,049]
reconnaissance
(LAAR)
cancellation.
Light mobiilty [-65,296]
aircraft
cancellation.
Common vertical [-52,800]
lift support
platform (CVLSP)
cancellation.
C-130 AMP [-207,163]
cancellation.
RQ-4 Global Hawk [-480,440]
Block 30
cancellation.
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT 11,002,999 10,094,251
PROCUREMENT, AIR
FORCE.
MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
AIR FORCE
MISSILE REPLACEMENT
EQUIPMENT--BALLISTIC
001 MISSILE REPLACEMENT 56,906 56,906
EQ-BALLISTIC.
TACTICAL
002 JASSM................ 240,399 240,399
003 SIDEWINDER (AIM-9X).. 88,020 88,020
004 AMRAAM............... 229,637 229,637
005 PREDATOR HELLFIRE 47,675 47,675
MISSILE.
006 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB.. 42,000 42,000
INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES
007 INDUSTR'L PREPAREDNS/ 744 744
POL PREVENTION.
CLASS IV
008 ADVANCED CRUISE 0 0
MISSILE.
009 MM III MODIFICATIONS. 54,794 54,794
010 AGM-65D MAVERICK..... 271 271
011 AGM-88A HARM......... 23,240 23,240
012 AIR LAUNCH CRUISE 13,620 13,620
MISSILE (ALCM).
013 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB.. 5,000 5,000
MISSILE SPARES AND
REPAIR PARTS
014 INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR 74,373 74,373
PARTS.
SPACE PROGRAMS
015 ADVANCED EHF......... 557,205 557,205
016 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
017 WIDEBAND GAPFILLER 36,835 36,835
SATELLITES(SPACE).
018 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
019 GPS III SPACE SEGMENT 410,294 410,294
020 ADVANCE 82,616 82,616
PROCUREMENT (CY).
021 SPACEBORNE EQUIP 10,554 10,554
(COMSEC).
022 GLOBAL POSITIONING 58,147 58,147
(SPACE).
023 DEF METEOROLOGICAL 89,022 89,022
SAT PROG(SPACE).
024 EVOLVED EXPENDABLE 1,679,856 1,679,856
LAUNCH VEH(SPACE).
025 SBIR HIGH (SPACE).... 454,251 454,251
026 ADVANCE 0 0
PROCUREMENT (CY).
SPECIAL PROGRAMS
028 DEFENSE SPACE RECONN 0 0
PROGRAM.
030 SPECIAL UPDATE 138,904 138,904
PROGRAMS.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
030A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 1,097,483 1,097,483
TOTAL, MISSILE 5,491,846 5,491,846
PROCUREMENT, AIR
FORCE.
PROCUREMENT OF
AMMUNITION, AIR
FORCE
ROCKETS
001 ROCKETS.............. 8,927 8,927
CARTRIDGES
002 CARTRIDGES........... 118,075 118,075
BOMBS
003 PRACTICE BOMBS....... 32,393 32,393
004 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS 163,467 163,467
005 JOINT DIRECT ATTACK 101,921 101,921
MUNITION.
FLARE, IR MJU-7B
006 CAD/PAD.............. 43,829 43,829
007 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE 7,515 7,515
DISPOSAL (EOD).
008 SPARES AND REPAIR 1,003 1,003
PARTS.
009 MODIFICATIONS........ 5,321 5,321
010 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 5,066 5,066
MILLION.
FUZES
011 FLARES............... 46,010 46,010
012 FUZES................ 36,444 36,444
SMALL ARMS
013 SMALL ARMS........... 29,223 29,223
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF 599,194 599,194
AMMUNITION, AIR
FORCE.
OTHER PROCUREMENT,
AIR FORCE
PASSENGER CARRYING
VEHICLES
001 PASSENGER CARRYING 1,905 1,905
VEHICLES.
CARGO AND UTILITY
VEHICLES
002 MEDIUM TACTICAL 18,547 18,547
VEHICLE.
003 CAP VEHICLES......... 932 932
004 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 1,699 1,699
MILLION.
SPECIAL PURPOSE
VEHICLES
005 SECURITY AND TACTICAL 10,850 10,850
VEHICLES.
006 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 9,246 9,246
MILLION.
FIRE FIGHTING
EQUIPMENT
007 FIRE FIGHTING/CRASH 23,148 23,148
RESCUE VEHICLES.
MATERIALS HANDLING
EQUIPMENT
008 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 18,323 18,323
MILLION.
BASE MAINTENANCE
SUPPORT
009 RUNWAY SNOW REMOV AND 1,685 1,685
CLEANING EQU.
010 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 17,014 17,014
MILLION.
CANCELLED ACCOUNT
ADJUSTMENTS
011 CANCELLED ACCOUNT 0 0
ADJUSTMENTS.
COMM SECURITY
EQUIPMENT(COMSEC)
012 COMSEC EQUIPMENT..... 166,559 166,559
013 MODIFICATIONS 1,133 1,133
(COMSEC).
INTELLIGENCE PROGRAMS
014 INTELLIGENCE TRAINING 2,749 2,749
EQUIPMENT.
015 INTELLIGENCE COMM 32,876 32,876
EQUIPMENT.
016 ADVANCE TECH SENSORS. 877 877
017 MISSION PLANNING 15,295 15,295
SYSTEMS.
ELECTRONICS PROGRAMS
018 AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL & 21,984 21,984
LANDING SYS.
019 NATIONAL AIRSPACE 30,698 30,698
SYSTEM.
020 BATTLE CONTROL 17,368 17,368
SYSTEM--FIXED.
021 THEATER AIR CONTROL 23,483 23,483
SYS IMPROVEMENTS.
022 WEATHER OBSERVATION 17,864 17,864
FORECAST.
023 STRATEGIC COMMAND AND 53,995 53,995
CONTROL.
024 CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN 14,578 14,578
COMPLEX.
025 TAC SIGINT SPT....... 208 208
026 DRUG INTERDICTION SPT 0 0
SPCL COMM-ELECTRONICS
PROJECTS
027 GENERAL INFORMATION 69,743 69,743
TECHNOLOGY.
028 AF GLOBAL COMMAND & 15,829 15,829
CONTROL SYS.
029 MOBILITY COMMAND AND 11,023 11,023
CONTROL.
030 AIR FORCE PHYSICAL 64,521 64,521
SECURITY SYSTEM.
031 COMBAT TRAINING 18,217 18,217
RANGES.
032 C3 COUNTERMEASURES... 11,899 11,899
033 GCSS-AF FOS.......... 13,920 13,920
034 THEATER BATTLE MGT C2 9,365 9,365
SYSTEM.
035 AIR & SPACE 33,907 33,907
OPERATIONS CTR-WPN
SYS.
AIR FORCE
COMMUNICATIONS
036 INFORMATION TRANSPORT 52,464 52,464
SYSTEMS.
037 BASE INFO 0 0
INFRASTRUCTURE.
038 AFNET................ 125,788 125,788
039 VOICE SYSTEMS........ 16,811 16,811
040 USCENTCOM............ 32,138 32,138
DISA PROGRAMS
041 SPACE BASED IR SENSOR 47,135 47,135
PGM SPACE.
042 NAVSTAR GPS SPACE.... 2,031 2,031
043 NUDET DETECTION SYS 5,564 5,564
SPACE.
044 AF SATELLITE CONTROL 44,219 44,219
NETWORK SPACE.
045 SPACELIFT RANGE 109,545 109,545
SYSTEM SPACE.
046 MILSATCOM SPACE...... 47,592 47,592
047 SPACE MODS SPACE..... 47,121 47,121
048 COUNTERSPACE SYSTEM.. 20,961 20,961
ORGANIZATION AND BASE
049 TACTICAL C-E 126,131 126,131
EQUIPMENT.
050 COMBAT SURVIVOR 23,707 23,707
EVADER LOCATER.
051 RADIO EQUIPMENT...... 12,757 12,757
052 CCTV/AUDIOVISUAL 10,716 10,716
EQUIPMENT.
053 BASE COMM 74,528 74,528
INFRASTRUCTURE.
MODIFICATIONS
054 COMM ELECT MODS...... 43,507 43,507
PERSONAL SAFETY &
RESCUE EQUIP
055 NIGHT VISION GOGGLES. 22,693 22,693
056 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 30,887 30,887
MILLION.
DEPOT PLANT+MTRLS
HANDLING EQ
057 MECHANIZED MATERIAL 2,850 2,850
HANDLING EQUIP.
BASE SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
058 BASE PROCURED 8,387 8,387
EQUIPMENT.
059 CONTINGENCY 10,358 10,358
OPERATIONS.
060 PRODUCTIVITY CAPITAL 3,473 3,473
INVESTMENT.
061 RAPID IMPROVEMENT 0 0
PROCUREMENT INOVAT.
062 MOBILITY EQUIPMENT... 14,471 14,471
063 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 1,894 1,894
MILLION.
SPECIAL SUPPORT
PROJECTS
065 DARP RC135........... 24,176 24,176
066 DCGS-AF.............. 142,928 142,928
068 SPECIAL UPDATE 479,446 479,446
PROGRAM.
069 DEFENSE SPACE 39,155 39,155
RECONNAISSANCE PROG..
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
069A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 14,331,312 14,331,312
SPARES AND REPAIR
PARTS
071 SPARES AND REPAIR 14,663 14,663
PARTS.
TOTAL, OTHER 16,720,848 16,720,848
PROCUREMENT, AIR
FORCE.
PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-
WIDE
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, BTA
001 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, BTA. 0 0
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DCAA
002 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 1,486 1,486
MILLION.
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DCMA
003 MAJOR EQUIPMENT...... 2,129 2,129
EQUIPMENT
004 EQUIPMENT............ 0 0
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DHRA
005 PERSONNEL 6,147 6,147
ADMINISTRATION.
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DISA
012 INFORMATION SYSTEMS 12,708 12,708
SECURITY.
013 GLOBAL COMMAND AND 0 0
CONTROL SYSTEM.
014 GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT 3,002 3,002
SYSTEM.
015 TELEPORT PROGRAM..... 46,992 46,992
016 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 108,462 108,462
MILLION.
017 NET CENTRIC 2,865 2,865
ENTERPRISE SERVICES
(NCES).
018 DEFENSE INFORMATION 116,906 116,906
SYSTEM NETWORK.
019 PUBLIC KEY 1,827 1,827
INFRASTRUCTURE.
020 DRUG INTERDICTION 0 0
SUPPORT.
021 CYBER SECURITY 10,319 10,319
INITIATIVE.
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DLA
022 MAJOR EQUIPMENT...... 9,575 9,575
MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
DMACT
023 MAJOR EQUIPMENT...... 15,179 15,179
MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
DODEA
024 AUTOMATION/ 1,458 1,458
EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT
& LOGISTICS.
MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
DEFENSE SECURITY
COOPERATION AGENCY
025 EQUIPMENT............ 0 0
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DSS
026 MAJOR EQUIPMENT...... 2,522 2,522
MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
DEFENSE THREAT
REDUCTION AGENCY
027 VEHICLES............. 50 50
028 OTHER MAJOR EQUIPMENT 13,096 13,096
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DTSA
029 MAJOR EQUIPMENT...... 0 0
MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
MISSILE DEFENSE
AGENCY
030 THAAD................ 460,728 560,728
THAAD Interceptors [100,000]
031 AEGIS BMD............ 389,626 389,626
032 BMDS AN/TPY-2 RADARS. 217,244 217,244
033 RADAR SPARES......... 10,177 10,177
034 IRON DOME............ 0 0
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, NSA
041 INFORMATION SYSTEMS 6,770 6,770
SECURITY PROGRAM
(ISSP).
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD
042 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD. 45,938 45,938
043 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, 17,582 17,582
INTELLIGENCE.
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS
044 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS. 21,878 21,878
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS
045 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS. 26,550 26,550
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
045A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 555,787 555,787
AVIATION PROGRAMS
046 ROTARY WING UPGRADES 74,832 74,832
AND SUSTAINMENT.
047 MH-47 SERVICE LIFE 0 0
EXTENSION PROGRAM.
048 MH-60 MODERNIZATION 126,780 126,780
PROGRAM.
049 NON-STANDARD AVIATION 99,776 37,000
Transfer to Line [-62,776]
51 at USSOCOM
request.
050 TANKER 0 0
RECAPITALIZATION.
051 U-28................. 7,530 116,906
Transfer from Line [62,776]
49 at USSOCOM
request.
USSOCOM UFR....... [46,600]
052 MH-47 CHINOOK........ 134,785 134,785
053 RQ-11 UNMANNED AERIAL 2,062 2,062
VEHICLE.
054 CV-22 MODIFICATION... 139,147 139,147
055 MQ-1 UNMANNED AERIAL 3,963 26,963
VEHICLE.
USSOCOM UFR....... [23,000]
056 MQ-9 UNMANNED AERIAL 3,952 39,352
VEHICLE.
USSOCOM UFR....... [35,400]
057 RQ-7 UNMANNED AERIAL 0 0
VEHICLE.
058 STUASL0.............. 12,945 12,945
059 PRECISION STRIKE 73,013 73,013
PACKAGE.
060 AC/MC-130J........... 51,484 51,484
061 MQ-8 UAV............. 0 0
062 C-130 MODIFICATIONS.. 25,248 25,248
063 AIRCRAFT SUPPORT..... 5,314 5,314
SHIPBUILDING
064 UNDERWATER SYSTEMS... 23,037 15,037
Transfer to RDDW [-8,000]
Line 272 at
USSOCOM request.
065 SEAL DELIVERY VEHICLE 0 0
AMMUNITION PROGRAMS
066 ORDNANCE 113,183 113,183
REPLENISHMENT.
067 ORDNANCE ACQUISITION. 36,981 36,981
OTHER PROCUREMENT
PROGRAMS
068 COMMUNICATIONS 99,838 103,738
EQUIPMENT AND
ELECTRONICS.
USSOCOM UFR....... [3,900]
069 INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS. 71,428 71,428
070 SMALL ARMS AND 27,108 27,108
WEAPONS.
071 DISTRIBUTED COMMON 12,767 15,967
GROUND/SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
USSOCOM UFR....... [3,200]
073 MARITIME EQUIPMENT 0 0
MODIFICATIONS.
074 COMBATANT CRAFT 42,348 42,348
SYSTEMS.
075 SPARES AND REPAIR 600 600
PARTS.
077 TACTICAL VEHICLES.... 37,421 37,421
078 MISSION TRAINING AND 36,949 41,949
PREPARATION SYSTEMS.
USSOCOM UFR....... [5,000]
079 COMBAT MISSION 20,255 20,255
REQUIREMENTS.
080 MILCON COLLATERAL 17,590 17,590
EQUIPMENT.
082 AUTOMATION SYSTEMS... 66,573 66,573
083 GLOBAL VIDEO 6,549 6,549
SURVEILLANCE
ACTIVITIES.
084 OPERATIONAL 32,335 32,335
ENHANCEMENTS
INTELLIGENCE.
085 SOLDIER PROTECTION 15,153 15,153
AND SURVIVAL SYSTEMS.
086 VISUAL AUGMENTATION 33,920 33,920
LASERS AND SENSOR
SYSTEMS.
087 TACTICAL RADIO 75,132 75,132
SYSTEMS.
088 MARITIME EQUIPMENT... 0 0
089 DRUG INTERDICTION.... 0 0
090 MISCELLANEOUS 6,667 6,667
EQUIPMENT.
091 OPERATIONAL 217,972 243,272
ENHANCEMENTS.
USSOCOM UFR....... [25,300]
092 MILITARY INFORMATION 27,417 27,417
SUPPORT OPERATIONS.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
092A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 0 0
CBDP
093 INSTALLATION FORCE 24,025 24,025
PROTECTION.
094 INDIVIDUAL PROTECTION 73,720 73,720
095 DECONTAMINATION...... 506 506
096 JOINT BIO DEFENSE 32,597 32,597
PROGRAM (MEDICAL).
097 COLLECTIVE PROTECTION 3,144 3,144
098 CONTAMINATION 164,886 164,886
AVOIDANCE.
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT, 4,187,935 4,422,335
DEFENSE-WIDE.
NATIONAL GUARD &
RESERVE EQUIPMENT
ARMY RESERVE
001 MISCELLANEOUS 0 0
EQUIPMENT.
NAVY RESERVE
002 MISCELLANEOUS 0 0
EQUIPMENT.
MARINE CORPS RESERVE
003 MISCELLANEOUS 0 0
EQUIPMENT.
AIR FORCE RESERVE
004 MISCELLANEOUS 0 0
EQUIPMENT.
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
005 MISCELLANEOUS 0 0
EQUIPMENT.
AIR NATIONAL GUARD
006 MISCELLANEOUS 0 0
EQUIPMENT.
NATIONAL GUARD
AIRCRAFT
007 MISCELLANEOUS 0 0
EQUIPMENT.
TOTAL, NATIONAL GUARD 0 0
& RESERVE EQUIPMENT.
JOINT URGENT
OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND
JOINT URGENT
OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND
001 JOINT URGENT 99,477 99,477
OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND.
TOTAL, JOINT URGENT 99,477 99,477
OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND.
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT... 97,432,379 96,959,163
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4102. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4102. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands
of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
ARMY
ROTARY
009 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK 71,000 0
IIIB NEW BUILD.
Funding ahead of [-71,000]
need.
012 KIOWA WARRIOR (OH- 183,900 183,900
58F) WRA.
015 CH-47 HELICOPTER..... 231,300 231,300
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT 486,200 415,200
PROCUREMENT, ARMY.
MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
ARMY
SURFACE-TO-AIR
MISSILE SYSTEM
004 HELLFIRE SYS SUMMARY. 29,100 29,100
008 GUIDED MLRS ROCKET 20,553 20,553
(GMLRS).
TOTAL, MISSILE 49,653 49,653
PROCUREMENT, ARMY.
PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV,
ARMY
MOD OF WEAPONS AND
OTHER COMBAT VEH
036 M16 RIFLE MODS....... 15,422 15,422
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF 15,422 15,422
W&TCV, ARMY.
PROCUREMENT OF
AMMUNITION, ARMY
SMALL/MEDIUM CAL
AMMUNITION
003 CTG, HANDGUN, ALL 1,500 1,500
TYPES.
004 CTG, .50 CAL, ALL 10,000 10,000
TYPES.
007 CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES. 80,000 80,000
MORTAR AMMUNITION
009 60MM MORTAR, ALL 14,000 14,000
TYPES.
010 81MM MORTAR, ALL 6,000 6,000
TYPES.
011 120MM MORTAR, ALL 56,000 56,000
TYPES.
ARTILLERY AMMUNITION
013 ARTILLERY CARTRIDGES, 29,956 29,956
75MM AND 105MM, ALL
TYP.
014 ARTILLERY PROJECTILE, 37,044 37,044
155MM, ALL TYPES.
015 PROJ 155MM EXTENDED 12,300 12,300
RANGE XM982.
016 ARTILLERY 17,000 17,000
PROPELLANTS, FUZES
AND PRIMERS, ALL.
MINES
017 MINES & CLEARING 12,000 12,000
CHARGES, ALL TYPES.
ROCKETS
020 ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL 63,635 63,635
TYPES.
OTHER AMMUNITION
023 SIGNALS, ALL TYPES... 16,858 16,858
MISCELLANEOUS
028 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 1,200 1,200
MILLION.
PRODUCTION BASE
SUPPORT
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF 357,493 357,493
AMMUNITION, ARMY.
OTHER PROCUREMENT,
ARMY
TACTICAL VEHICLES
002 FAMILY OF MEDIUM 28,247 28,247
TACTICAL VEH (FMTV).
004 FAMILY OF HEAVY 2,050 2,050
TACTICAL VEHICLES
(FHTV).
011 HMMWV 271,000 271,000
RECAPITALIZATION
PROGRAM.
014 MINE-RESISTANT AMBUSH- 927,400 927,400
PROTECTED (MRAP)
MODS.
COMM--INTELLIGENCE
COMM
052 RESERVE CA/MISO GPF 8,000 8,000
EQUIPMENT.
COMM--BASE
COMMUNICATIONS
061 INSTALLATION INFO 25,000 65,000
INFRASTRUCTURE MOD
PROGRAM(.
Transfer from OMA [40,000]
OCO at SOUTHCOM
request.
ELECT EQUIP--TACT INT
REL ACT (TIARA)
069 DCGS-A (MIP)......... 90,355 90,355
073 CI HUMINT AUTO 6,516 6,516
REPRINTING AND
COLLECTION.
ELECT EQUIP--
ELECTRONIC WARFARE
(EW)
075 LIGHTWEIGHT COUNTER 27,646 27,646
MORTAR RADAR.
077 FMLY OF PERSISTENT 52,000 52,000
SURVEILLANCE
CAPABILITIES.
078 COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/ 205,209 205,209
SECURITY
COUNTERMEASURES.
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
SURV. (TAC SURV)
092 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP 14,600 14,600
(FIREFINDER RADARS).
099 COUNTERFIRE RADARS... 54,585 54,585
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
C2 SYSTEMS
102 FIRE SUPPORT C2 22,430 22,430
FAMILY.
103 BATTLE COMMAND 2,400 2,400
SUSTAINMENT SUPPORT
SYSTEM.
112 MANEUVER CONTROL 6,400 6,400
SYSTEM (MCS).
113 SINGLE ARMY LOGISTICS 5,160 5,160
ENTERPRISE (SALE).
CHEMICAL DEFENSIVE
EQUIPMENT
126 FAMILY OF NON-LETHAL 15,000 15,000
EQUIPMENT (FNLE).
127 BASE DEFENSE SYSTEMS 66,100 66,100
(BDS).
ENGINEER (NON-
CONSTRUCTION)
EQUIPMENT
135 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE 3,565 3,565
DISPOSAL EQPMT (EOD
EQPMT).
COMBAT SERVICE
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
143 FORCE PROVIDER....... 39,700 39,700
145 CARGO AERIAL DEL & 650 650
PERSONNEL PARACHUTE
SYSTEM.
PETROLEUM EQUIPMENT
149 DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS, 2,119 2,119
PETROLEUM & WATER.
MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT
152 MOBILE MAINTENANCE 428 428
EQUIPMENT SYSTEMS.
153 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 30 30
MILLION (MAINT EQ).
TRAINING EQUIPMENT
175 COMBAT TRAINING 7,000 7,000
CENTERS SUPPORT.
176 TRAINING DEVICES, 27,250 27,250
NONSYSTEM.
178 AVIATION COMBINED 1,000 1,000
ARMS TACTICAL
TRAINER.
179 GAMING TECHNOLOGY IN 5,900 5,900
SUPPORT OF ARMY
TRAINING.
OTHER SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
183 RAPID EQUIPPING 98,167 91,167
SOLDIER SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT.
Slow execution of [-37,000]
prior years
appropriations.
Solar power units. [30,000]
TOTAL, OTHER 2,015,907 2,048,907
PROCUREMENT, ARMY.
JOINT IMPR EXPLOSIVE
DEV DEFEAT FUND
NETWORK ATTACK
001 ATTACK THE NETWORK... 950,500 850,500
Program decrease-- [-100,000]
under execution.
JIEDDO DEVICE DEFEAT
002 DEFEAT THE DEVICE.... 400,000 350,000
Program decrease-- [-50,000]
under execution &
program delays.
FORCE TRAINING
003 TRAIN THE FORCE...... 149,500 128,500
Program decrease-- [-21,000]
under execution &
program delays.
STAFF AND
INFRASTRUCTURE
004 OPERATIONS........... 175,400 373,814
Transfer from Base [227,414]
Program decrease-- [-29,000]
excessive
contractor service
support.
TOTAL, JOINT IMPR 1,675,400 1,702,814
EXPLOSIVE DEV DEFEAT
FUND.
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
NAVY
COMBAT AIRCRAFT
011 H-1 UPGRADES (UH-1Y/ 29,800 29,800
AH-1Z).
MODIFICATION OF
AIRCRAFT
030 AV-8 SERIES.......... 42,238 42,238
032 F-18 SERIES.......... 41,243 41,243
035 H-53 SERIES.......... 15,870 15,870
038 EP-3 SERIES.......... 13,030 13,030
043 C-130 SERIES......... 16,737 16,737
048 SPECIAL PROJECT 2,714 2,714
AIRCRAFT.
054 COMMON AVIONICS 570 570
CHANGES.
AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
EQUIP & FACILITIES
062 COMMON GROUND 2,380 2,380
EQUIPMENT.
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT 164,582 164,582
PROCUREMENT, NAVY.
WEAPONS PROCUREMENT,
NAVY
TACTICAL MISSILES
009 HELLFIRE............. 17,000 17,000
010 STAND OFF PRECISION 6,500 6,500
GUIDED MUNITIONS
(SOPGM).
TOTAL, WEAPONS 23,500 23,500
PROCUREMENT, NAVY.
PROCUREMENT OF AMMO,
NAVY & MC
NAVY AMMUNITION
001 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS 18,000 18,000
002 AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL 80,200 80,200
TYPES.
003 MACHINE GUN 21,500 21,500
AMMUNITION.
006 AIR EXPENDABLE 20,303 20,303
COUNTERMEASURES.
011 OTHER SHIP GUN 532 532
AMMUNITION.
012 SMALL ARMS & LANDING 2,643 2,643
PARTY AMMO.
013 PYROTECHNIC AND 2,322 2,322
DEMOLITION.
014 AMMUNITION LESS THAN 6,308 6,308
$5 MILLION.
MARINE CORPS
AMMUNITION
015 SMALL ARMS AMMUNITION 10,948 10,948
016 LINEAR CHARGES, ALL 9,940 9,940
TYPES.
017 40MM, ALL TYPES...... 5,963 5,963
020 120MM, ALL TYPES..... 11,605 11,605
021 CTG 25MM, ALL TYPES.. 2,831 2,831
022 GRENADES, ALL TYPES.. 2,359 2,359
023 ROCKETS, ALL TYPES... 3,051 3,051
024 ARTILLERY, ALL TYPES. 54,886 54,886
025 DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, 1,391 1,391
ALL TYPES.
026 FUZE, ALL TYPES...... 30,945 30,945
027 NON LETHALS.......... 8 8
029 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 12 12
MILLION.
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF 285,747 285,747
AMMO, NAVY & MC.
OTHER PROCUREMENT,
NAVY
OTHER SHORE
ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
070 TACTICAL/MOBILE C4I 3,603 3,603
SYSTEMS.
AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
097 EXPEDITIONARY 58,200 58,200
AIRFIELDS.
CIVIL ENGINEERING
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
127 PASSENGER CARRYING 3,901 3,901
VEHICLES.
128 GENERAL PURPOSE 852 852
TRUCKS.
129 CONSTRUCTION & 2,436 2,436
MAINTENANCE EQUIP.
130 FIRE FIGHTING 3,798 3,798
EQUIPMENT.
131 TACTICAL VEHICLES.... 13,394 13,394
134 ITEMS UNDER $5 375 375
MILLION.
COMMAND SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
149 C4ISR EQUIPMENT...... 3,000 3,000
151 PHYSICAL SECURITY 9,323 9,323
EQUIPMENT.
TOTAL, OTHER 98,882 98,882
PROCUREMENT, NAVY.
PROCUREMENT, MARINE
CORPS
TRACKED COMBAT
VEHICLES
002 LAV PIP.............. 10,000 10,000
ARTILLERY AND OTHER
WEAPONS
005 HIGH MOBILITY 108,860 108,860
ARTILLERY ROCKET
SYSTEM.
GUIDED MISSILES
010 JAVELIN.............. 29,158 29,158
OTHER SUPPORT
013 MODIFICATION KITS.... 41,602 41,602
REPAIR AND TEST
EQUIPMENT
015 REPAIR AND TEST 13,632 13,632
EQUIPMENT.
OTHER SUPPORT (TEL)
017 MODIFICATION KITS.... 2,831 2,831
COMMAND AND CONTROL
SYSTEM (NON-TEL)
019 AIR OPERATIONS C2 15,575 15,575
SYSTEMS.
RADAR + EQUIPMENT
(NON-TEL)
020 RADAR SYSTEMS........ 8,015 8,015
INTELL/COMM EQUIPMENT
(NON-TEL)
023 INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT 35,310 35,310
EQUIPMENT.
OTHER COMM/ELEC
EQUIPMENT (NON-TEL)
029 NIGHT VISION 652 652
EQUIPMENT.
OTHER SUPPORT (NON-
TEL)
030 COMMON COMPUTER 19,807 19,807
RESOURCES.
032 RADIO SYSTEMS........ 36,482 36,482
033 COMM SWITCHING & 41,295 41,295
CONTROL SYSTEMS.
TACTICAL VEHICLES
039 MEDIUM TACTICAL 10,466 10,466
VEHICLE REPLACEMENT.
041 FAMILY OF TACTICAL 7,642 7,642
TRAILERS.
ENGINEER AND OTHER
EQUIPMENT
045 BULK LIQUID EQUIPMENT 18,239 18,239
046 TACTICAL FUEL SYSTEMS 51,359 51,359
047 POWER EQUIPMENT 20,247 20,247
ASSORTED.
049 EOD SYSTEMS.......... 362,658 362,658
MATERIALS HANDLING
EQUIPMENT
050 PHYSICAL SECURITY 55,500 55,500
EQUIPMENT.
052 MATERIAL HANDLING 19,100 19,100
EQUIP.
GENERAL PROPERTY
054 FIELD MEDICAL 15,751 15,751
EQUIPMENT.
055 TRAINING DEVICES..... 3,602 3,602
057 FAMILY OF 15,900 15,900
CONSTRUCTION
EQUIPMENT.
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT, 943,683 943,683
MARINE CORPS.
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
AIR FORCE
STRATEGIC AIRCRAFT
035 LARGE AIRCRAFT 139,800 139,800
INFRARED
COUNTERMEASURES.
OTHER AIRCRAFT
055 U-2 MODS............. 46,800 46,800
063 C-130................ 11,400 11,400
067 COMPASS CALL MODS.... 14,000 14,000
068 RC-135............... 8,000 8,000
075 HC/MC-130 4,700 4,700
MODIFICATIONS.
AIRCRAFT SPARES AND
REPAIR PARTS
081 INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR 21,900 21,900
PARTS.
OTHER PRODUCTION
CHARGES
099 OTHER PRODUCTION 59,000 59,000
CHARGES.
TOTAL, AIRCRAFT 305,600 305,600
PROCUREMENT, AIR
FORCE.
MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
AIR FORCE
TACTICAL
005 PREDATOR HELLFIRE 34,350 34,350
MISSILE.
TOTAL, MISSILE 34,350 34,350
PROCUREMENT, AIR
FORCE.
PROCUREMENT OF
AMMUNITION, AIR
FORCE
CARTRIDGES
002 CARTRIDGES........... 13,592 13,592
BOMBS
004 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS 23,211 23,211
005 JOINT DIRECT ATTACK 53,923 53,923
MUNITION.
FLARE, IR MJU-7B
006 CAD/PAD.............. 2,638 2,638
010 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 2,600 2,600
MILLION.
FUZES
011 FLARES............... 11,726 11,726
012 FUZES................ 8,513 8,513
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT OF 116,203 116,203
AMMUNITION, AIR
FORCE.
OTHER PROCUREMENT,
AIR FORCE
CARGO AND UTILITY
VEHICLES
002 MEDIUM TACTICAL 2,010 2,010
VEHICLE.
004 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 2,675 2,675
MILLION.
SPECIAL PURPOSE
VEHICLES
006 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 2,557 2,557
MILLION.
MATERIALS HANDLING
EQUIPMENT
008 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 4,329 4,329
MILLION.
BASE MAINTENANCE
SUPPORT
009 RUNWAY SNOW REMOV AND 984 984
CLEANING EQU.
010 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 9,120 9,120
MILLION.
ELECTRONICS PROGRAMS
022 WEATHER OBSERVATION 5,600 5,600
FORECAST.
SPCL COMM-ELECTRONICS
PROJECTS
027 GENERAL INFORMATION 11,157 11,157
TECHNOLOGY.
ORGANIZATION AND BASE
049 TACTICAL C-E 7,000 7,000
EQUIPMENT.
053 BASE COMM 10,654 10,654
INFRASTRUCTURE.
MODIFICATIONS
054 COMM ELECT MODS...... 8,000 8,000
PERSONAL SAFETY &
RESCUE EQUIP
055 NIGHT VISION GOGGLES. 902 902
BASE SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
059 CONTINGENCY 60,090 60,090
OPERATIONS.
062 MOBILITY EQUIPMENT... 9,400 9,400
063 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 9,175 9,175
MILLION.
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
069A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 2,672,317 2,672,317
SPARES AND REPAIR
PARTS
071 SPARES AND REPAIR 2,300 2,300
PARTS.
TOTAL, OTHER 2,818,270 2,818,270
PROCUREMENT, AIR
FORCE.
PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-
WIDE
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DISA
015 TELEPORT PROGRAM..... 5,260 5,260
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
045A CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.. 126,201 126,201
AVIATION PROGRAMS
061 MQ-8 UAV............. 16,500 16,500
OTHER PROCUREMENT
PROGRAMS
068 COMMUNICATIONS 151 151
EQUIPMENT AND
ELECTRONICS.
069 INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS. 30,528 30,528
077 TACTICAL VEHICLES.... 1,843 1,843
082 AUTOMATION SYSTEMS... 1,000 1,000
086 VISUAL AUGMENTATION 108 108
LASERS AND SENSOR
SYSTEMS.
091 OPERATIONAL 14,758 14,758
ENHANCEMENTS.
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT, 196,349 196,349
DEFENSE-WIDE.
JOINT URGENT
OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND
001 JOINT URGENT 100,000 100,000
OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND.
TOTAL, JOINT URGENT 100,000 100,000
OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND.
TOTAL, PROCUREMENT... 9,687,241 9,676,655
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLII--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
SEC. 4201. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4201. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION (In Thousands of
Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Line Program Element Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
................ RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
ARMY
................ BASIC RESEARCH
001 0601101A IN-HOUSE 20,860 20,860
LABORATORY
INDEPENDENT
RESEARCH.......
002 0601102A DEFENSE RESEARCH 219,180 219,180
SCIENCES.......
003 0601103A UNIVERSITY 80,986 80,986
RESEARCH
INITIATIVES....
004 0601104A UNIVERSITY AND 123,045 123,045
INDUSTRY
RESEARCH
CENTERS........
................ SUBTOTAL, BASIC 444,071 444,071
RESEARCH.
................
................ APPLIED RESEARCH
005 0602105A MATERIALS 29,041 29,041
TECHNOLOGY.....
006 0602120A SENSORS AND 45,260 45,260
ELECTRONIC
SURVIVABILITY..
007 0602122A TRACTOR HIP..... 22,439 22,439
008 0602211A AVIATION 51,607 51,607
TECHNOLOGY.....
009 0602270A ELECTRONIC 15,068 15,068
WARFARE
TECHNOLOGY.....
010 0602303A MISSILE 49,383 49,383
TECHNOLOGY.....
011 0602307A ADVANCED WEAPONS 25,999 25,999
TECHNOLOGY.....
012 0602308A ADVANCED 23,507 23,507
CONCEPTS AND
SIMULATION.....
013 0602601A COMBAT VEHICLE 69,062 69,062
AND AUTOMOTIVE
TECHNOLOGY.....
014 0602618A BALLISTICS 60,823 60,823
TECHNOLOGY.....
015 0602622A CHEMICAL, SMOKE 4,465 4,465
AND EQUIPMENT
DEFEATING
TECHNOLOGY.....
016 0602623A JOINT SERVICE 7,169 7,169
SMALL ARMS
PROGRAM........
017 0602624A WEAPONS AND 35,218 35,218
MUNITIONS
TECHNOLOGY.....
018 0602705A ELECTRONICS AND 60,300 60,300
ELECTRONIC
DEVICES........
019 0602709A NIGHT VISION 53,244 53,244
TECHNOLOGY.....
020 0602712A COUNTERMINE 18,850 18,850
SYSTEMS........
021 0602716A HUMAN FACTORS 19,872 19,872
ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY.....
022 0602720A ENVIRONMENTAL 20,095 20,095
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY.....
023 0602782A COMMAND, 28,852 28,852
CONTROL,
COMMUNICATIONS
TECHNOLOGY.....
024 0602783A COMPUTER AND 9,830 9,830
SOFTWARE
TECHNOLOGY.....
025 0602784A MILITARY 70,693 70,693
ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY.....
026 0602785A MANPOWER/ 17,781 17,781
PERSONNEL/
TRAINING
TECHNOLOGY.....
027 0602786A WARFIGHTER 28,281 28,281
TECHNOLOGY.....
028 0602787A MEDICAL 107,891 107,891
TECHNOLOGY.....
................ SUBTOTAL, 874,730 874,730
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
................
................ ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
029 0603001A WARFIGHTER 39,359 39,359
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
030 0603002A MEDICAL ADVANCED 69,580 69,580
TECHNOLOGY.....
031 0603003A AVIATION 64,215 64,215
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
032 0603004A WEAPONS AND 67,613 67,613
MUNITIONS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
033 0603005A COMBAT VEHICLE 104,359 104,359
AND AUTOMOTIVE
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
034 0603006A COMMAND, 4,157 4,157
CONTROL,
COMMUNICATIONS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
035 0603007A MANPOWER, 9,856 9,856
PERSONNEL AND
TRAINING
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
036 0603008A ELECTRONIC 50,661 50,661
WARFARE
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
037 0603009A TRACTOR HIKE.... 9,126 9,126
038 0603015A NEXT GENERATION 17,257 17,257
TRAINING &
SIMULATION
SYSTEMS........
039 0603020A TRACTOR ROSE.... 9,925 9,925
040 0603105A MILITARY HIV 6,984 6,984
RESEARCH.......
041 0603125A COMBATING 9,716 9,716
TERRORISM--TECH
NOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
042 0603130A TRACTOR NAIL.... 3,487 3,487
043 0603131A TRACTOR EGGS.... 2,323 2,323
044 0603270A ELECTRONIC 21,683 21,683
WARFARE
TECHNOLOGY.....
045 0603313A MISSILE AND 71,111 71,111
ROCKET ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
046 0603322A TRACTOR CAGE.... 10,902 10,902
047 0603461A HIGH PERFORMANCE 180,582 180,582
COMPUTING
MODERNIZATION
PROGRAM........
048 0603606A LANDMINE WARFARE 27,204 27,204
AND BARRIER
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
049 0603607A JOINT SERVICE 6,095 6,095
SMALL ARMS
PROGRAM........
050 0603710A NIGHT VISION 37,217 37,217
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
051 0603728A ENVIRONMENTAL 13,626 13,626
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATIONS.
052 0603734A MILITARY 28,458 28,458
ENGINEERING
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
053 0603772A ADVANCED 25,226 25,226
TACTICAL
COMPUTER
SCIENCE AND
SENSOR
TECHNOLOGY.....
................ SUBTOTAL, 890,722 890,722
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
................
................ ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
054 0603305A ARMY MISSILE 14,505 14,505
DEFENSE SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION....
055 0603308A ARMY SPACE 9,876 9,876
SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION....
056 0603619A LANDMINE WARFARE 5,054 5,054
AND BARRIER--
ADV DEV........
057 0603627A SMOKE, OBSCURANT 2,725 2,725
AND TARGET
DEFEATING SYS--
ADV DEV........
058 0603639A TANK AND MEDIUM 30,560 30,560
CALIBER
AMMUNITION.....
059 0603653A ADVANCED TANK 14,347 14,347
ARMAMENT SYSTEM
(ATAS).........
060 0603747A SOLDIER SUPPORT 10,073 10,073
AND
SURVIVABILITY..
061 0603766A TACTICAL 8,660 8,660
ELECTRONIC
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM--ADV DEV
062 0603774A NIGHT VISION 10,715 10,715
SYSTEMS
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT....
063 0603779A ENVIRONMENTAL 4,631 4,631
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY--DEM/
VAL............
064 0603782A WARFIGHTER 278,018 278,018
INFORMATION
NETWORK-
TACTICAL--DEM/
VAL............
065 0603790A NATO RESEARCH 4,961 4,961
AND DEVELOPMENT
066 0603801A AVIATION--ADV 8,602 8,602
DEV............
067 0603804A LOGISTICS AND 14,605 14,605
ENGINEER
EQUIPMENT--ADV
DEV............
068 0603805A COMBAT SERVICE 5,054 5,054
SUPPORT CONTROL
SYSTEM
EVALUATION AND
ANALYSIS.......
069 0603807A MEDICAL SYSTEMS-- 24,384 24,384
ADV DEV........
070 0603827A SOLDIER SYSTEMS-- 32,050 32,050
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT....
071 0603850A INTEGRATED 96 96
BROADCAST
SERVICE........
072 0604115A TECHNOLOGY 24,868 24,868
MATURATION
INITIATIVES....
073 0604131A TRACTOR JUTE.... 59 59
074 0604284A JOINT 0 0
COOPERATIVE
TARGET
IDENTIFICATION-
-GROUND (JCTI-
G)/TECHNOLOGY
DEV............
075 0604319A INDIRECT FIRE 76,039 76,039
PROTECTION
CAPABILITY
INCREMENT 2-
INTERCEPT
(IFPC2)........
076 0604775A DEFENSE RAPID 0 0
INNOVATION
PROGRAM........
077 0604785A INTEGRATED BASE 4,043 4,043
DEFENSE (BUDGET
ACTIVITY 4)....
078 0305205A ENDURANCE UAVS.. 26,196 26,196
................ SUBTOTAL, 610,121 610,121
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.....
................
................ SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
079 0604201A AIRCRAFT 78,538 78,538
AVIONICS.......
080 0604220A ARMED, 90,494 90,494
DEPLOYABLE
HELOS..........
081 0604270A ELECTRONIC 181,347 181,347
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT....
082 0604280A JOINT TACTICAL 0 0
RADIO..........
083 0604290A MID-TIER 12,636 12,636
NETWORKING
VEHICULAR RADIO
(MNVR).........
084 0604321A ALL SOURCE 5,694 5,694
ANALYSIS SYSTEM
085 0604328A TRACTOR CAGE.... 32,095 32,095
086 0604601A INFANTRY SUPPORT 96,478 96,478
WEAPONS........
087 0604604A MEDIUM TACTICAL 3,006 3,006
VEHICLES.......
088 0604609A SMOKE, OBSCURANT 0 0
AND TARGET
DEFEATING SYS--
ENG DEV........
089 0604611A JAVELIN......... 5,040 5,040
090 0604622A FAMILY OF HEAVY 3,077 3,077
TACTICAL
VEHICLES.......
091 0604633A AIR TRAFFIC 9,769 9,769
CONTROL........
092 0604641A TACTICAL 13,141 25,141
UNMANNED GROUND
VEHICLE (TUGV).
................ Transfer from [12,000]
OPA line 191
at Army
request......
093 0604642A LIGHT TACTICAL 0 0
WHEELED
VEHICLES.......
094 0604661A FCS SYSTEMS OF 0 0
SYSTEMS ENGR &
PROGRAM MGMT...
095 0604662A FCS 0 0
RECONNAISSANCE
(UAV) PLATFORMS
096 0604663A FCS UNMANNED 0 0
GROUND VEHICLES
097 0604664A FCS UNATTENDED 0 0
GROUND SENSORS.
098 0604665A FCS SUSTAINMENT 0 0
& TRAINING R&D.
099 0604710A NIGHT VISION 32,621 32,621
SYSTEMS--ENG
DEV............
100 0604713A COMBAT FEEDING, 2,132 2,132
CLOTHING, AND
EQUIPMENT......
101 0604715A NON-SYSTEM 44,787 44,787
TRAINING
DEVICES--ENG
DEV............
102 0604716A TERRAIN 1,008 1,008
INFORMATION--EN
G DEV..........
103 0604741A AIR DEFENSE 73,333 73,333
COMMAND,
CONTROL AND
INTELLIGENCE--E
NG DEV.........
104 0604742A CONSTRUCTIVE 28,937 28,937
SIMULATION
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT....
105 0604746A AUTOMATIC TEST 10,815 10,815
EQUIPMENT
DEVELOPMENT....
106 0604760A DISTRIBUTIVE 13,926 13,926
INTERACTIVE
SIMULATIONS
(DIS)--ENG DEV.
107 0604780A COMBINED ARMS 17,797 17,797
TACTICAL
TRAINER (CATT)
CORE...........
108 0604798A BRIGADE 214,270 214,270
ANALYSIS,
INTEGRATION AND
EVALUATION.....
109 0604802A WEAPONS AND 14,581 14,581
MUNITIONS--ENG
DEV............
110 0604804A LOGISTICS AND 43,706 43,706
ENGINEER
EQUIPMENT--ENG
DEV............
111 0604805A COMMAND, 20,776 20,776
CONTROL,
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS--ENG
DEV............
112 0604807A MEDICAL MATERIEL/ 43,395 43,395
MEDICAL
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
EQUIPMENT--ENG
DEV............
113 0604808A LANDMINE WARFARE/ 104,983 104,983
BARRIER--ENG
DEV............
114 0604814A ARTILLERY 4,346 4,346
MUNITIONS--EMD.
115 0604817A COMBAT 0 0
IDENTIFICATION.
116 0604818A ARMY TACTICAL 77,223 77,223
COMMAND &
CONTROL
HARDWARE &
SOFTWARE.......
117 0604820A RADAR 3,486 3,486
DEVELOPMENT....
118 0604822A GENERAL FUND 9,963 27,163
ENTERPRISE
BUSINESS SYSTEM
(GFEBS)........
................ GFEBS [17,200]
realignment
per Army
request......
119 0604823A FIREFINDER...... 20,517 20,517
120 0604827A SOLDIER SYSTEMS-- 51,851 51,851
WARRIOR DEM/VAL
121 0604854A ARTILLERY 167,797 167,797
SYSTEMS--EMD...
122 0604869A PATRIOT/MEADS 400,861 0
COMBINED
AGGREGATE
PROGRAM (CAP)..
................ No funds [-400,861]
authorized...
123 0604870A NUCLEAR ARMS 7,922 7,922
CONTROL
MONITORING
SENSOR NETWORK.
124 0605013A INFORMATION 51,463 51,463
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
125 0605018A INTEGRATED 158,646 158,646
PERSONNEL AND
PAY SYSTEM-ARMY
(IPPS-A).......
126 0605450A JOINT AIR-TO- 10,000 10,000
GROUND MISSILE
(JAGM).........
127 0605455A SLAMRAAM........ 0 0
128 0605456A PAC-3/MSE 69,029 69,029
MISSILE........
129 0605457A ARMY INTEGRATED 277,374 277,374
AIR AND MISSILE
DEFENSE (AIAMD)
130 0605625A MANNED GROUND 639,874 639,874
VEHICLE........
131 0605626A AERIAL COMMON 47,426 47,426
SENSOR.........
132 0605812A JOINT LIGHT 72,295 72,295
TACTICAL
VEHICLE (JLTV)
ENGINEERING AND
MANUFACTURING
DEVELOPMENT PH.
133 0303032A TROJAN--RH12.... 4,232 4,232
134 0304270A ELECTRONIC 13,942 13,942
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT....
................ SUBTOTAL, SYSTEM 3,286,629 2,914,968
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION..
................
................ RDT&E MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
135 0604256A THREAT SIMULATOR 18,090 18,090
DEVELOPMENT....
136 0604258A TARGET SYSTEMS 14,034 14,034
DEVELOPMENT....
137 0604759A MAJOR T&E 37,394 37,394
INVESTMENT.....
138 0605103A RAND ARROYO 21,026 21,026
CENTER.........
139 0605301A ARMY KWAJALEIN 176,816 176,816
ATOLL..........
140 0605326A CONCEPTS 27,902 27,902
EXPERIMENTATION
PROGRAM........
141 0605502A SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATIVE
RESEARCH.......
142 0605601A ARMY TEST RANGES 369,900 369,900
AND FACILITIES.
143 0605602A ARMY TECHNICAL 69,183 69,183
TEST
INSTRUMENTATION
AND TARGETS....
144 0605604A SURVIVABILITY/ 44,753 44,753
LETHALITY
ANALYSIS.......
145 0605605A DOD HIGH ENERGY 0 0
LASER TEST
FACILITY.......
146 0605606A AIRCRAFT 5,762 5,762
CERTIFICATION..
147 0605702A METEOROLOGICAL 7,402 7,402
SUPPORT TO
RDT&E
ACTIVITIES.....
148 0605706A MATERIEL SYSTEMS 19,954 19,954
ANALYSIS.......
149 0605709A EXPLOITATION OF 5,535 5,535
FOREIGN ITEMS..
150 0605712A SUPPORT OF 67,789 67,789
OPERATIONAL
TESTING........
151 0605716A ARMY EVALUATION 62,765 62,765
CENTER.........
152 0605718A ARMY MODELING & 1,545 1,545
SIM X-CMD
COLLABORATION &
INTEG..........
153 0605801A PROGRAMWIDE 83,422 83,422
ACTIVITIES.....
154 0605803A TECHNICAL 50,820 50,820
INFORMATION
ACTIVITIES.....
155 0605805A MUNITIONS 46,763 46,763
STANDARDIZATION
, EFFECTIVENESS
AND SAFETY.....
156 0605857A ENVIRONMENTAL 4,601 4,601
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY MGMT
SUPPORT........
157 0605898A MANAGEMENT HQ-- 18,524 18,524
R&D............
158 0909999A FINANCING FOR 0 0
CANCELLED
ACCOUNT
ADJUSTMENTS....
................ SUBTOTAL, RDT&E 1,153,980 1,153,980
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
................
................ OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
159 0603778A MLRS PRODUCT 143,005 143,005
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM........
160 0607665A FAMILY OF 0 0
BIOMETRICS.....
161 0607865A PATRIOT PRODUCT 109,978 109,978
IMPROVEMENT....
162 0102419A AEROSTAT JOINT 190,422 190,422
PROJECT OFFICE.
163 0203347A INTELLIGENCE 0 0
SUPPORT TO
CYBER (ISC) MIP
164 0203726A ADV FIELD 32,556 32,556
ARTILLERY
TACTICAL DATA
SYSTEM.........
165 0203735A COMBAT VEHICLE 253,959 253,959
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.......
166 0203740A MANEUVER CONTROL 68,325 68,325
SYSTEM.........
167 0203744A AIRCRAFT 280,247 226,247
MODIFICATIONS/
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.......
................ Improved [-54,000]
turbine
engine
program delay
168 0203752A AIRCRAFT ENGINE 898 898
COMPONENT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM........
169 0203758A DIGITIZATION.... 35,180 35,180
170 0203759A FORCE XXI BATTLE 0 0
COMMAND,
BRIGADE AND
BELOW (FBCB2)..
171 0203801A MISSILE/AIR 20,733 20,733
DEFENSE PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM........
172 0203808A TRACTOR CARD.... 63,243 63,243
173 0208053A JOINT TACTICAL 31,738 31,738
GROUND SYSTEM..
174 0208058A JOINT HIGH SPEED 35 35
VESSEL (JHSV)..
176 0303028A SECURITY AND 7,591 7,591
INTELLIGENCE
ACTIVITIES.....
177 0303140A INFORMATION 15,961 15,961
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM........
178 0303141A GLOBAL COMBAT 120,927 120,927
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
179 0303142A SATCOM GROUND 15,756 15,756
ENVIRONMENT
(SPACE)........
180 0303150A WWMCCS/GLOBAL 14,443 14,443
COMMAND AND
CONTROL SYSTEM.
182 0305204A TACTICAL 31,303 31,303
UNMANNED AERIAL
VEHICLES.......
183 0305208A DISTRIBUTED 40,876 40,876
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE SYSTEMS
184 0305219A MQ-1 SKY WARRIOR 74,618 74,618
A UAV..........
185 0305232A RQ-11 UAV....... 4,039 4,039
186 0305233A RQ-7 UAV........ 31,158 31,158
187 0305235A VERTICAL UAS.... 2,387 2,387
188 0307665A BIOMETRICS 15,248 15,248
ENABLED
INTELLIGENCE...
189 0708045A END ITEM 59,908 59,908
INDUSTRIAL
PREPAREDNESS
ACTIVITIES.....
189A 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 4,628 4,628
PROGRAMS.......
................ SUBTOTAL, 1,669,162 1,615,162
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 8,929,415 8,503,754
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
ARMY...........
................
................ RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
NAVY
................ BASIC RESEARCH
001 0601103N UNIVERSITY 113,690 113,690
RESEARCH
INITIATIVES....
002 0601152N IN-HOUSE 18,261 18,261
LABORATORY
INDEPENDENT
RESEARCH.......
003 0601153N DEFENSE RESEARCH 473,070 473,070
SCIENCES.......
................ SUBTOTAL, BASIC 605,021 605,021
RESEARCH.
................
................ APPLIED RESEARCH
004 0602114N POWER PROJECTION 89,189 89,189
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
005 0602123N FORCE PROTECTION 143,301 143,301
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
006 0602131M MARINE CORPS 46,528 46,528
LANDING FORCE
TECHNOLOGY.....
007 0602235N COMMON PICTURE 41,696 41,696
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
008 0602236N WARFIGHTER 44,127 44,127
SUSTAINMENT
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
009 0602271N ELECTROMAGNETIC 78,228 78,228
SYSTEMS APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
010 0602435N OCEAN 49,635 49,635
WARFIGHTING
ENVIRONMENT
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
011 0602651M JOINT NON-LETHAL 5,973 5,973
WEAPONS APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
012 0602747N UNDERSEA WARFARE 96,814 96,814
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
013 0602750N FUTURE NAVAL 162,417 162,417
CAPABILITIES
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
014 0602782N MINE AND 32,394 32,394
EXPEDITIONARY
WARFARE APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
................ SUBTOTAL, 790,302 790,302
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
................
................ ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
015 0603114N POWER PROJECTION 56,543 56,543
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
016 0603123N FORCE PROTECTION 18,616 18,616
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
017 0603235N COMMON PICTURE 0 0
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
018 0603236N WARFIGHTER 0 0
SUSTAINMENT
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
019 0603271N ELECTROMAGNETIC 54,858 54,858
SYSTEMS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
020 0603640M USMC ADVANCED 130,598 130,598
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATION
(ATD)..........
021 0603651M JOINT NON-LETHAL 11,706 11,706
WEAPONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
022 0603673N FUTURE NAVAL 256,382 256,382
CAPABILITIES
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
023 0603729N WARFIGHTER 3,880 3,880
PROTECTION
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
024 0603747N UNDERSEA WARFARE 0 0
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
025 0603758N NAVY WARFIGHTING 51,819 51,819
EXPERIMENTS AND
DEMONSTRATIONS.
026 0603782N MINE AND 0 0
EXPEDITIONARY
WARFARE
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
................ SUBTOTAL, 584,402 584,402
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
................
................ ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
027 0603128N UNMANNED AERIAL 0 0
SYSTEM.........
028 0603207N AIR/OCEAN 34,085 34,085
TACTICAL
APPLICATIONS...
029 0603216N AVIATION 8,783 8,783
SURVIVABILITY..
030 0603237N DEPLOYABLE JOINT 3,773 3,773
COMMAND AND
CONTROL........
031 0603251N AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS 24,512 24,512
032 0603254N ASW SYSTEMS 8,090 8,090
DEVELOPMENT....
033 0603261N TACTICAL 5,301 5,301
AIRBORNE
RECONNAISSANCE.
034 0603382N ADVANCED COMBAT 1,506 1,506
SYSTEMS
TECHNOLOGY.....
035 0603502N SURFACE AND 190,622 190,622
SHALLOW WATER
MINE
COUNTERMEASURES
036 0603506N SURFACE SHIP 93,346 93,346
TORPEDO DEFENSE
037 0603512N CARRIER SYSTEMS 108,871 108,871
DEVELOPMENT....
038 0603513N SHIPBOARD SYSTEM 0 0
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT....
039 0603525N PILOT FISH...... 101,169 101,169
040 0603527N RETRACT LARCH... 74,312 74,312
041 0603536N RETRACT JUNIPER. 90,730 90,730
042 0603542N RADIOLOGICAL 777 777
CONTROL........
043 0603553N SURFACE ASW..... 6,704 6,704
044 0603561N ADVANCED 555,123 555,123
SUBMARINE
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT....
045 0603562N SUBMARINE 9,368 9,368
TACTICAL
WARFARE SYSTEMS
046 0603563N SHIP CONCEPT 24,609 24,609
ADVANCED DESIGN
047 0603564N SHIP PRELIMINARY 13,710 13,710
DESIGN &
FEASIBILITY
STUDIES........
048 0603570N ADVANCED NUCLEAR 249,748 249,748
POWER SYSTEMS..
049 0603573N ADVANCED SURFACE 29,897 29,897
MACHINERY
SYSTEMS........
050 0603576N CHALK EAGLE..... 509,988 509,988
051 0603581N LITTORAL COMBAT 429,420 429,420
SHIP (LCS).....
052 0603582N COMBAT SYSTEM 56,551 56,551
INTEGRATION....
053 0603609N CONVENTIONAL 7,342 7,342
MUNITIONS......
054 0603611M MARINE CORPS 95,182 95,182
ASSAULT
VEHICLES.......
055 0603635M MARINE CORPS 10,496 10,496
GROUND COMBAT/
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
056 0603654N JOINT SERVICE 52,331 52,331
EXPLOSIVE
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT....
057 0603658N COOPERATIVE 56,512 56,512
ENGAGEMENT.....
058 0603713N OCEAN 7,029 7,029
ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
059 0603721N ENVIRONMENTAL 21,080 21,080
PROTECTION.....
060 0603724N NAVY ENERGY 55,324 55,324
PROGRAM........
061 0603725N FACILITIES 3,401 3,401
IMPROVEMENT....
062 0603734N CHALK CORAL..... 45,966 45,966
063 0603739N NAVY LOGISTIC 3,811 3,811
PRODUCTIVITY...
064 0603746N RETRACT MAPLE... 341,305 341,305
065 0603748N LINK PLUMERIA... 181,220 181,220
066 0603751N RETRACT ELM..... 174,014 174,014
067 0603755N SHIP SELF 0 0
DEFENSE--DEM/
VAL............
068 0603764N LINK EVERGREEN.. 68,654 68,654
069 0603787N SPECIAL 44,487 44,487
PROCESSES......
070 0603790N NATO RESEARCH 9,389 9,389
AND DEVELOPMENT
071 0603795N LAND ATTACK 16,132 16,132
TECHNOLOGY.....
072 0603851M JOINT NON-LETHAL 44,994 44,994
WEAPONS TESTING
073 0603860N JOINT PRECISION 137,369 137,369
APPROACH AND
LANDING
SYSTEMS--DEM/
VAL............
074 0603889N COUNTERDRUG 0 0
RDT&E PROJECTS.
075 0603925N DIRECTED ENERGY 0 0
AND ELECTRIC
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
076 0604272N TACTICAL AIR 73,934 73,934
DIRECTIONAL
INFRARED
COUNTERMEASURES
(TADIRCM)......
077 0604279N ASE SELF- 711 711
PROTECTION
OPTIMIZATION...
078 0604653N JOINT COUNTER 71,300 71,300
RADIO
CONTROLLED IED
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE (JCREW)
079 0604659N PRECISION STRIKE 5,654 5,654
WEAPONS
DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAM........
080 0604707N SPACE AND 31,549 31,549
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE (SEW)
ARCHITECTURE/
ENGINEERING
SUPPORT........
081 0604775N DEFENSE RAPID 0 0
INNOVATION
PROGRAM........
082 0604786N OFFENSIVE ANTI- 86,801 86,801
SURFACE WARFARE
WEAPON
DEVELOPMENT....
083 0605812M JOINT LIGHT 44,500 44,500
TACTICAL
VEHICLE (JLTV)
ENGINEERING AND
MANUFACTURING
DEVELOPMENT PH.
084 0303354N ASW SYSTEMS 13,172 13,172
DEVELOPMENT--MI
P..............
085 0303562N SUBMARINE 0 0
TACTICAL
WARFARE
SYSTEMS--MIP...
086 0304270N ELECTRONIC 643 643
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT--MI
P..............
................ SUBTOTAL, 4,335,297 4,335,297
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.....
................
................ SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
087 0604212N OTHER HELO 33,978 33,978
DEVELOPMENT....
088 0604214N AV-8B AIRCRAFT-- 32,789 32,789
ENG DEV........
089 0604215N STANDARDS 84,988 84,988
DEVELOPMENT....
090 0604216N MULTI-MISSION 6,866 6,866
HELICOPTER
UPGRADE
DEVELOPMENT....
091 0604218N AIR/OCEAN 4,060 4,060
EQUIPMENT
ENGINEERING....
092 0604221N P-3 3,451 3,451
MODERNIZATION
PROGRAM........
093 0604230N WARFARE SUPPORT 13,071 13,071
SYSTEM.........
094 0604231N TACTICAL COMMAND 71,645 71,645
SYSTEM.........
095 0604234N ADVANCED HAWKEYE 119,065 119,065
096 0604245N H-1 UPGRADES.... 31,105 31,105
097 0604261N ACOUSTIC SEARCH 34,299 34,299
SENSORS........
098 0604262N V-22A........... 54,412 54,412
099 0604264N AIR CREW SYSTEMS 2,717 2,717
DEVELOPMENT....
100 0604269N EA-18........... 13,009 13,009
101 0604270N ELECTRONIC 51,304 51,304
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT....
102 0604273N VH-71A EXECUTIVE 61,163 61,163
HELO
DEVELOPMENT....
103 0604274N NEXT GENERATION 187,024 187,024
JAMMER (NGJ)...
104 0604280N JOINT TACTICAL 337,480 337,480
RADIO SYSTEM--
NAVY (JTRS-
NAVY)..........
105 0604307N SURFACE 260,616 260,616
COMBATANT
COMBAT SYSTEM
ENGINEERING....
106 0604311N LPD-17 CLASS 824 824
SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION....
107 0604329N SMALL DIAMETER 31,064 31,064
BOMB (SDB).....
108 0604366N STANDARD MISSILE 63,891 63,891
IMPROVEMENTS...
109 0604373N AIRBORNE MCM.... 73,246 73,246
110 0604376M MARINE AIR 10,568 10,568
GROUND TASK
FORCE (MAGTF)
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE (EW)
FOR AVIATION...
111 0604378N NAVAL INTEGRATED 39,974 39,974
FIRE CONTROL--
COUNTER AIR
SYSTEMS
ENGINEERING....
112 0604404N UNMANNED CARRIER 122,481 122,481
LAUNCHED
AIRBORNE
SURVEILLANCE
AND STRIKE
(UCLASS) SYSTEM
113 0604501N ADVANCED ABOVE 255,516 255,516
WATER SENSORS..
114 0604503N SSN-688 AND 82,620 82,620
TRIDENT
MODERNIZATION..
115 0604504N AIR CONTROL..... 5,633 5,633
116 0604512N SHIPBOARD 55,826 55,826
AVIATION
SYSTEMS........
117 0604518N COMBAT 918 918
INFORMATION
CENTER
CONVERSION.....
118 0604558N NEW DESIGN SSN.. 165,230 165,230
119 0604562N SUBMARINE 49,141 49,141
TACTICAL
WARFARE SYSTEM.
120 0604567N SHIP CONTRACT 196,737 196,737
DESIGN/ LIVE
FIRE T&E.......
121 0604574N NAVY TACTICAL 3,889 3,889
COMPUTER
RESOURCES......
122 0604601N MINE DEVELOPMENT 8,335 8,335
123 0604610N LIGHTWEIGHT 49,818 49,818
TORPEDO
DEVELOPMENT....
124 0604654N JOINT SERVICE 10,099 10,099
EXPLOSIVE
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT....
125 0604703N PERSONNEL, 7,348 7,348
TRAINING,
SIMULATION, AND
HUMAN FACTORS..
126 0604727N JOINT STANDOFF 5,518 5,518
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
127 0604755N SHIP SELF 87,662 87,662
DEFENSE (DETECT
& CONTROL).....
128 0604756N SHIP SELF 64,079 64,079
DEFENSE
(ENGAGE: HARD
KILL)..........
129 0604757N SHIP SELF 151,489 151,489
DEFENSE
(ENGAGE: SOFT
KILL/EW).......
130 0604761N INTELLIGENCE 0 0
ENGINEERING....
131 0604771N MEDICAL 12,707 12,707
DEVELOPMENT....
132 0604777N NAVIGATION/ID 47,764 47,764
SYSTEM.........
133 0604800M JOINT STRIKE 737,149 737,149
FIGHTER (JSF)--
EMD............
134 0604800N JOINT STRIKE 743,926 743,926
FIGHTER (JSF)--
EMD............
135 0605013M INFORMATION 12,143 12,143
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
136 0605013N INFORMATION 72,209 72,209
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
137 0605018N NAVY INTEGRATED 0 0
MILITARY HUMAN
RESOURCES
SYSTEM (N-
IMHRS).........
138 0605212N CH-53K RDTE..... 606,204 606,204
139 0605450N JOINT AIR-TO- 0 0
GROUND MISSILE
(JAGM).........
140 0605500N MULTI-MISSION 421,102 421,102
MARITIME
AIRCRAFT (MMA).
141 0204202N DDG-1000........ 124,655 124,655
142 0304231N TACTICAL COMMAND 1,170 1,170
SYSTEM--MIP....
143 0304503N SSN-688 AND 0 0
TRIDENT
MODERNIZATION--
MIP............
144 0304785N TACTICAL 23,255 23,255
CRYPTOLOGIC
SYSTEMS........
145 0305124N SPECIAL 0 0
APPLICATIONS
PROGRAM........
................ SUBTOTAL, SYSTEM 5,747,232 5,747,232
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION..
................
................ RDT&E MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
146 0604256N THREAT SIMULATOR 30,790 30,790
DEVELOPMENT....
147 0604258N TARGET SYSTEMS 59,221 59,221
DEVELOPMENT....
148 0604759N MAJOR T&E 35,894 35,894
INVESTMENT.....
149 0605126N JOINT THEATER 7,573 7,573
AIR AND MISSILE
DEFENSE
ORGANIZATION...
150 0605152N STUDIES AND 20,963 20,963
ANALYSIS
SUPPORT--NAVY..
151 0605154N CENTER FOR NAVAL 46,856 46,856
ANALYSES.......
152 0605502N SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATIVE
RESEARCH.......
153 0605804N TECHNICAL 796 796
INFORMATION
SERVICES.......
154 0605853N MANAGEMENT, 32,782 32,782
TECHNICAL &
INTERNATIONAL
SUPPORT........
155 0605856N STRATEGIC 3,306 3,306
TECHNICAL
SUPPORT........
156 0605861N RDT&E SCIENCE 70,302 70,302
AND TECHNOLOGY
MANAGEMENT.....
157 0605863N RDT&E SHIP AND 144,033 144,033
AIRCRAFT
SUPPORT........
158 0605864N TEST AND 342,298 342,298
EVALUATION
SUPPORT........
159 0605865N OPERATIONAL TEST 16,399 16,399
AND EVALUATION
CAPABILITY.....
160 0605866N NAVY SPACE AND 4,579 4,579
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE (SEW)
SUPPORT........
161 0605867N SEW SURVEILLANCE/ 8,000 8,000
RECONNAISSANCE
SUPPORT........
162 0605873M MARINE CORPS 18,490 18,490
PROGRAM WIDE
SUPPORT........
163 0305885N TACTICAL 2,795 2,795
CRYPTOLOGIC
ACTIVITIES.....
164 0804758N SERVICE SUPPORT 0 0
TO JFCOM, JNTC.
165 0909999N FINANCING FOR 0 0
CANCELLED
ACCOUNT
ADJUSTMENTS....
................ SUBTOTAL, RDT&E 845,077 845,077
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
................
................ OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
167 0604402N UNMANNED COMBAT 142,282 142,282
AIR VEHICLE
(UCAV) ADVANCED
COMPONENT AND
PROTOTYPE
DEVELOPMENT....
168 0604717M MARINE CORPS 0 0
COMBAT SERVICES
SUPPORT........
169 0604766M MARINE CORPS 0 0
DATA SYSTEMS...
170 0101221N STRATEGIC SUB & 105,892 105,892
WEAPONS SYSTEM
SUPPORT........
171 0101224N SSBN SECURITY 34,729 34,729
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM........
172 0101226N SUBMARINE 1,434 1,434
ACOUSTIC
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT....
173 0101402N NAVY STRATEGIC 19,208 19,208
COMMUNICATIONS.
174 0203761N RAPID TECHNOLOGY 25,566 25,566
TRANSITION
(RTT)..........
175 0204136N F/A-18 SQUADRONS 188,299 188,299
176 0204152N E-2 SQUADRONS... 8,610 8,610
177 0204163N FLEET 15,695 15,695
TELECOMMUNICATI
ONS (TACTICAL).
178 0204228N SURFACE SUPPORT. 4,171 4,171
179 0204229N TOMAHAWK AND 11,265 11,265
TOMAHAWK
MISSION
PLANNING CENTER
(TMPC).........
180 0204311N INTEGRATED 45,922 45,922
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM.........
181 0204413N AMPHIBIOUS 8,435 8,435
TACTICAL
SUPPORT UNITS
(DISPLACEMENT
CRAFT).........
182 0204460M GROUND/AIR TASK 75,088 75,088
ORIENTED RADAR
(G/ATOR).......
183 0204571N CONSOLIDATED 20,229 20,229
TRAINING
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT....
184 0204574N CRYPTOLOGIC 1,756 1,756
DIRECT SUPPORT.
185 0204575N ELECTRONIC 19,843 19,843
WARFARE (EW)
READINESS
SUPPORT........
186 0205601N HARM IMPROVEMENT 11,477 11,477
187 0205604N TACTICAL DATA 118,818 118,818
LINKS..........
188 0205620N SURFACE ASW 27,342 27,342
COMBAT SYSTEM
INTEGRATION....
189 0205632N MK-48 ADCAP..... 28,717 28,717
190 0205633N AVIATION 89,157 89,157
IMPROVEMENTS...
191 0205658N NAVY SCIENCE 3,450 3,450
ASSISTANCE
PROGRAM........
192 0205675N OPERATIONAL 86,435 86,435
NUCLEAR POWER
SYSTEMS........
193 0206313M MARINE CORPS 219,054 219,054
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS........
194 0206623M MARINE CORPS 181,693 181,693
GROUND COMBAT/
SUPPORTING ARMS
SYSTEMS........
195 0206624M MARINE CORPS 58,393 58,393
COMBAT SERVICES
SUPPORT........
196 0206625M USMC 22,966 22,966
INTELLIGENCE/
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE SYSTEMS
(MIP)..........
197 0207161N TACTICAL AIM 21,107 21,107
MISSILES.......
198 0207163N ADVANCED MEDIUM 2,857 2,857
RANGE AIR-TO-
AIR MISSILE
(AMRAAM).......
199 0208058N JOINT HIGH SPEED 1,932 1,932
VESSEL (JHSV)..
204 0303109N SATELLITE 188,482 188,482
COMMUNICATIONS
(SPACE)........
205 0303138N CONSOLIDATED 16,749 16,749
AFLOAT NETWORK
ENTERPRISE
SERVICES
(CANES)........
206 0303140N INFORMATION 26,307 26,307
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM........
207 0303150M WWMCCS/GLOBAL 500 500
COMMAND AND
CONTROL SYSTEM.
208 0303238N CONSOLIDATED 0 0
AFLOAT NETWORK
ENTERPRISE
SERVICES
(CANES)--MIP...
210 0305149N COBRA JUDY...... 17,091 17,091
211 0305160N NAVY 810 810
METEOROLOGICAL
AND OCEAN
SENSORS-SPACE
(METOC)........
212 0305192N MILITARY 8,617 8,617
INTELLIGENCE
PROGRAM (MIP)
ACTIVITIES.....
213 0305204N TACTICAL 9,066 9,066
UNMANNED AERIAL
VEHICLES.......
214 0305206N AIRBORNE 0 0
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS........
215 0305207N MANNED 30,654 30,654
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS........
216 0305208M DISTRIBUTED 25,917 25,917
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE SYSTEMS
217 0305208N DISTRIBUTED 14,676 14,676
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE SYSTEMS
218 0305220N RQ-4 UAV........ 657,483 657,483
219 0305231N MQ-8 UAV........ 99,600 99,600
220 0305232M RQ-11 UAV....... 495 495
221 0305233N RQ-7 UAV........ 863 863
222 0305234M SMALL (LEVEL 0) 0 0
TACTICAL UAS
(STUASL0)......
223 0305234N SMALL (LEVEL 0) 9,734 9,734
TACTICAL UAS
(STUASL0)......
224 0305237N MEDIUM RANGE 0 0
MARITIME UAS...
225 0305239M RQ-21A.......... 22,343 22,343
226 0308601N MODELING AND 5,908 5,908
SIMULATION
SUPPORT........
227 0702207N DEPOT 27,391 27,391
MAINTENANCE
(NON-IF).......
228 0702239N AVIONICS 0 0
COMPONENT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM........
229 0708011N INDUSTRIAL 54,879 54,879
PREPAREDNESS...
230 0708730N MARITIME 5,000 5,000
TECHNOLOGY
(MARITECH).....
230A 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 1,151,159 1,151,159
PROGRAMS.......
................ SUBTOTAL, 3,975,546 3,975,546
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
................
230B ................ PRIOR YEAR -8,832
SAVINGS........
................ Medium range [-8,832]
maritime UAS
cancellation.
................
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 16,882,877 16,874,045
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
NAVY...........
................
................ RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL, AF
................ BASIC RESEARCH
001 0601102F DEFENSE RESEARCH 361,787 361,787
SCIENCES.......
002 0601103F UNIVERSITY 141,153 141,153
RESEARCH
INITIATIVES....
003 0601108F HIGH ENERGY 13,094 13,094
LASER RESEARCH
INITIATIVES....
................ SUBTOTAL, BASIC 516,034 516,034
RESEARCH.
................
................ APPLIED RESEARCH
004 0602102F MATERIALS....... 114,166 114,166
005 0602201F AEROSPACE 120,719 120,719
VEHICLE
TECHNOLOGIES...
006 0602202F HUMAN 89,319 89,319
EFFECTIVENESS
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
007 0602203F AEROSPACE 232,547 232,547
PROPULSION.....
008 0602204F AEROSPACE 127,637 127,637
SENSORS........
009 0602601F SPACE TECHNOLOGY 98,375 98,375
010 0602602F CONVENTIONAL 77,175 77,175
MUNITIONS......
011 0602605F DIRECTED ENERGY 106,196 106,196
TECHNOLOGY.....
012 0602788F DOMINANT 104,362 104,362
INFORMATION
SCIENCES AND
METHODS........
013 0602890F HIGH ENERGY 38,557 38,557
LASER RESEARCH.
................ SUBTOTAL, 1,109,053 1,109,053
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
................
................ ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
014 0603112F ADVANCED 47,890 47,890
MATERIALS FOR
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
015 0603199F SUSTAINMENT 6,565 6,565
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
(S&T)..........
016 0603203F ADVANCED 37,657 37,657
AEROSPACE
SENSORS........
017 0603211F AEROSPACE 81,376 81,376
TECHNOLOGY DEV/
DEMO...........
018 0603216F AEROSPACE 151,152 151,152
PROPULSION AND
POWER
TECHNOLOGY.....
019 0603270F ELECTRONIC 32,941 32,941
COMBAT
TECHNOLOGY.....
020 0603401F ADVANCED 64,557 64,557
SPACECRAFT
TECHNOLOGY.....
021 0603444F MAUI SPACE 29,256 29,256
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM (MSSS)..
022 0603456F HUMAN 21,523 21,523
EFFECTIVENESS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
023 0603601F CONVENTIONAL 36,352 36,352
WEAPONS
TECHNOLOGY.....
024 0603605F ADVANCED WEAPONS 19,004 19,004
TECHNOLOGY.....
025 0603680F MANUFACTURING 37,045 37,045
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM........
026 0603788F BATTLESPACE 31,419 31,419
KNOWLEDGE
DEVELOPMENT AND
DEMONSTRATION..
027 0603924F HIGH ENERGY 0 0
LASER ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM........
................ SUBTOTAL, 596,737 596,737
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
................
................ ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
028 0603260F INTELLIGENCE 3,866 3,866
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT....
029 0603287F PHYSICAL 3,704 3,704
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT......
030 0603430F ADVANCED EHF 229,171 227,671
MILSATCOM
(SPACE)........
................ Excess [-1,500]
funding......
031 0603432F POLAR MILSATCOM 120,676 120,676
(SPACE)........
032 0603438F SPACE CONTROL 25,144 23,144
TECHNOLOGY.....
................ Excess [-2,000]
funding......
033 0603742F COMBAT 32,243 32,243
IDENTIFICATION
TECHNOLOGY.....
034 0603790F NATO RESEARCH 4,507 4,507
AND DEVELOPMENT
035 0603791F INTERNATIONAL 652 652
SPACE
COOPERATIVE R&D
036 0603830F SPACE PROTECTION 10,429 10,429
PROGRAM (SPP)..
037 0603850F INTEGRATED 19,938 19,938
BROADCAST
SERVICE--DEM/
VAL............
038 0603851F INTERCONTINENTAL 71,181 71,181
BALLISTIC
MISSILE--DEM/
VAL............
039 0603854F WIDEBAND GLOBAL 12,027 12,027
SATCOM RDT&E
(SPACE)........
040 0603859F POLLUTION 2,054 2,054
PREVENTION--DEM/
VAL............
041 0603860F JOINT PRECISION 57,975 57,975
APPROACH AND
LANDING
SYSTEMS--DEM/
VAL............
042 0604015F LONG RANGE 291,742 291,742
STRIKE.........
043 0604283F BATTLE MGMT COM 114,417 114,417
& CTRL SENSOR
DEVELOPMENT....
044 0604317F TECHNOLOGY 2,576 2,576
TRANSFER.......
045 0604327F HARD AND DEEPLY 16,711 16,711
BURIED TARGET
DEFEAT SYSTEM
(HDBTDS)
PROGRAM........
046 0604330F JOINT DUAL ROLE 0 0
AIR DOMINANCE
MISSILE........
047 0604337F REQUIREMENTS 16,343 16,343
ANALYSIS AND
MATURATION.....
048 0604422F WEATHER 2,000 2,000
SATELLITE
FOLLOW-ON......
049 0604436F NEXT-GENERATION 0 0
MILSATCOM
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
050 0604635F GROUND ATTACK 9,423 9,423
WEAPONS FUZE
DEVELOPMENT....
051 0604775F DEFENSE RAPID 0 0
INNOVATION
PROGRAM........
052 0604796F ALTERNATIVE 0 0
FUELS..........
053 0604830F AUTOMATED AIR-TO- 0 0
AIR REFUELING..
054 0604857F OPERATIONALLY 0 45,000
RESPONSIVE
SPACE..........
................ Restore [45,000]
Operationally
Responsive
Space........
055 0604858F TECH TRANSITION 37,558 34,558
PROGRAM........
................ Excess [-3,000]
funding......
056 0305164F NAVSTAR GLOBAL 96,840 96,840
POSITIONING
SYSTEM (USER
EQUIPMENT)
(SPACE)........
057 0305178F NATIONAL POLAR- 0 0
ORBITING
OPERATIONAL
ENVIRONMENTAL
SATELLITE
SYSTEM (NPOESS)
................ SUBTOTAL, 1,181,177 1,219,677
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.....
................
................ SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
058 0603840F GLOBAL BROADCAST 14,652 14,652
SERVICE (GBS)..
059 0604222F NUCLEAR WEAPONS 25,713 25,713
SUPPORT........
060 0604233F SPECIALIZED 6,583 6,583
UNDERGRADUATE
FLIGHT TRAINING
061 0604270F ELECTRONIC 1,975 1,975
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT....
062 0604280F JOINT TACTICAL 2,594 2,594
RADIO..........
063 0604281F TACTICAL DATA 24,534 24,534
NETWORKS
ENTERPRISE.....
064 0604287F PHYSICAL 51 51
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT......
065 0604329F SMALL DIAMETER 143,000 143,000
BOMB (SDB)--EMD
066 0604421F COUNTERSPACE 28,797 28,797
SYSTEMS........
067 0604425F SPACE SITUATION 267,252 247,252
AWARENESS
SYSTEMS........
................ Excess [-20,000]
funding......
068 0604429F AIRBORNE 4,118 4,118
ELECTRONIC
ATTACK.........
069 0604441F SPACE BASED 448,594 446,594
INFRARED SYSTEM
(SBIRS) HIGH
EMD............
................ Excess [-2,000]
funding......
070 0604602F ARMAMENT/ 9,951 9,951
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT....
071 0604604F SUBMUNITIONS.... 2,567 2,567
072 0604617F AGILE COMBAT 13,059 13,059
SUPPORT........
073 0604706F LIFE SUPPORT 9,720 9,720
SYSTEMS........
074 0604735F COMBAT TRAINING 9,222 9,222
RANGES.........
075 0604740F INTEGRATED 0 0
COMMAND &
CONTROL
APPLICATIONS
(IC2A).........
076 0604750F INTELLIGENCE 803 803
EQUIPMENT......
077 0604800F F-35--EMD....... 1,210,306 1,210,306
078 0604851F INTERCONTINENTAL 135,437 135,437
BALLISTIC
MISSILE--EMD...
079 0604853F EVOLVED 7,980 7,980
EXPENDABLE
LAUNCH VEHICLE
PROGRAM
(SPACE)--EMD...
080 0604932F LONG RANGE 2,004 2,004
STANDOFF WEAPON
081 0604933F ICBM FUZE 73,512 73,512
MODERNIZATION..
082 0605213F F-22 140,100 140,100
MODERNIZATION
INCREMENT 3.2B.
083 0605221F NEXT GENERATION 1,815,588 1,728,458
AERIAL
REFUELING
AIRCRAFT.......
................ Excess prior [-87,130]
year funds...
084 0605229F CSAR HH-60 123,210 123,210
RECAPITALIZATIO
N..............
085 0605278F HC/MC-130 RECAP 19,039 19,039
RDT&E..........
086 0605931F B-2 DEFENSIVE 281,056 281,056
MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM.........
087 0101125F NUCLEAR WEAPONS 80,200 80,200
MODERNIZATION..
088 0207100F LIGHT ATTACK 0 0
ARMED
RECONNAISSANCE
(LAAR)
SQUADRONS......
089 0207604F READINESS 310 310
TRAINING
RANGES,
OPERATIONS AND
MAINTENANCE....
090 0207701F FULL COMBAT 14,861 14,861
MISSION
TRAINING.......
091 0305230F MC-12........... 19,949 19,949
092 0401138F C-27J AIRLIFT 0 0
SQUADRONS......
093 0401318F CV-22........... 28,027 28,027
094 0401845F AIRBORNE SENIOR 1,960 1,960
LEADER C3
(SLC3S)........
................ SUBTOTAL, SYSTEM 4,966,724 4,857,594
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION..
................
................ RDT&E MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
095 0604256F THREAT SIMULATOR 22,812 22,812
DEVELOPMENT....
096 0604759F MAJOR T&E 42,236 42,236
INVESTMENT.....
097 0605101F RAND PROJECT AIR 25,579 25,579
FORCE..........
098 0605502F SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATION
RESEARCH.......
099 0605712F INITIAL 16,197 16,197
OPERATIONAL
TEST &
EVALUATION.....
100 0605807F TEST AND 722,071 722,071
EVALUATION
SUPPORT........
101 0605860F ROCKET SYSTEMS 16,200 16,200
LAUNCH PROGRAM
(SPACE)........
102 0605864F SPACE TEST 10,051 45,051
PROGRAM (STP)..
................ Restore Space [35,000]
Test Program.
103 0605976F FACILITIES 42,597 42,597
RESTORATION AND
MODERNIZATION--
TEST AND
EVALUATION
SUPPORT........
104 0605978F FACILITIES 27,301 27,301
SUSTAINMENT--TE
ST AND
EVALUATION
SUPPORT........
105 0606323F MULTI-SERVICE 13,964 13,964
SYSTEMS
ENGINEERING
INITIATIVE.....
106 0606392F SPACE AND 203,766 203,766
MISSILE CENTER
(SMC) CIVILIAN
WORKFORCE......
107 0702806F ACQUISITION AND 42,430 42,430
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT........
108 0804731F GENERAL SKILL 1,294 1,294
TRAINING.......
109 0909980F JUDGMENT FUND 0 0
REIMBURSEMENT..
110 0909999F FINANCING FOR 0 0
CANCELLED
ACCOUNT
ADJUSTMENTS....
111 1001004F INTERNATIONAL 3,851 3,851
ACTIVITIES.....
................ SUBTOTAL, RDT&E 1,190,349 1,225,349
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
................
................ OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
112 0603423F GLOBAL 371,595 370,095
POSITIONING
SYSTEM III--
OPERATIONAL
CONTROL SEGMENT
................ Excess [-1,500]
funding......
113 0604263F COMMON VERTICAL 0 0
LIFT SUPPORT
PLATFORM.......
114 0605018F AF INTEGRATED 91,697 91,697
PERSONNEL AND
PAY SYSTEM (AF-
IPPS)..........
115 0605024F ANTI-TAMPER 17,037 17,037
TECHNOLOGY
EXECUTIVE
AGENCY.........
117 0101113F B-52 SQUADRONS.. 53,208 53,208
118 0101122F AIR-LAUNCHED 431 431
CRUISE MISSILE
(ALCM).........
119 0101126F B-1B SQUADRONS.. 16,265 16,265
120 0101127F B-2 SQUADRONS... 35,970 20,970
................ Efficiencies. [-15,000]
121 0101313F STRAT WAR 30,889 30,889
PLANNING
SYSTEM--USSTRAT
COM............
122 0101314F NIGHT FIST-- 10 10
USSTRATCOM.....
124 0102326F REGION/SECTOR 5,609 5,609
OPERATION
CONTROL CENTER
MODERNIZATION
PROGRAM........
125 0102823F STRATEGIC 0 0
AEROSPACE
INTELLIGENCE
SYSTEM
ACTIVITIES.....
126 0203761F WARFIGHTER RAPID 15,098 15,098
ACQUISITION
PROCESS (WRAP)
RAPID
TRANSITION FUND
127 0205219F MQ-9 UAV........ 147,971 147,971
128 0207040F MULTI-PLATFORM 49,848 49,848
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE
EQUIPMENT......
129 0207131F A-10 SQUADRONS.. 13,538 13,538
130 0207133F F-16 SQUADRONS.. 190,257 190,257
131 0207134F F-15E SQUADRONS. 192,677 192,677
132 0207136F MANNED 13,683 13,683
DESTRUCTIVE
SUPPRESSION....
133 0207138F F-22A SQUADRONS. 371,667 371,667
134 0207142F F-35 SQUADRONS.. 8,117 8,117
135 0207161F TACTICAL AIM 8,234 8,234
MISSILES.......
136 0207163F ADVANCED MEDIUM 87,041 87,041
RANGE AIR-TO-
AIR MISSILE
(AMRAAM).......
137 0207170F JOINT HELMET 1,472 1,472
MOUNTED CUEING
SYSTEM (JHMCS).
138 0207224F COMBAT RESCUE 2,095 2,095
AND RECOVERY...
139 0207227F COMBAT RESCUE-- 1,119 1,119
PARARESCUE.....
140 0207247F AF TENCAP....... 63,853 63,853
141 0207249F PRECISION ATTACK 1,063 1,063
SYSTEMS
PROCUREMENT....
142 0207253F COMPASS CALL.... 12,094 12,094
143 0207268F AIRCRAFT ENGINE 187,984 187,984
COMPONENT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM........
144 0207277F ISR INNOVATIONS. 0 0
145 0207325F JOINT AIR-TO- 7,950 7,950
SURFACE
STANDOFF
MISSILE (JASSM)
146 0207410F AIR & SPACE 76,315 76,315
OPERATIONS
CENTER (AOC)...
147 0207412F CONTROL AND 8,653 8,653
REPORTING
CENTER (CRC)...
148 0207417F AIRBORNE WARNING 65,200 65,200
AND CONTROL
SYSTEM (AWACS).
149 0207418F TACTICAL 5,767 5,767
AIRBORNE
CONTROL SYSTEMS
150 0207423F ADVANCED 0 0
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS........
152 0207431F COMBAT AIR 5,756 5,756
INTELLIGENCE
SYSTEM
ACTIVITIES.....
153 0207438F THEATER BATTLE 0 0
MANAGEMENT
(TBM) C4I......
154 0207444F TACTICAL AIR 16,226 16,226
CONTROL PARTY-
MOD............
155 0207445F FIGHTER TACTICAL 0 0
DATA LINK......
156 0207448F C2ISR TACTICAL 1,633 1,633
DATA LINK......
157 0207449F COMMAND AND 18,086 18,086
CONTROL (C2)
CONSTELLATION..
158 0207452F DCAPES.......... 15,690 15,690
159 0207581F JOINT 24,241 24,241
SURVEILLANCE/
TARGET ATTACK
RADAR SYSTEM
(JSTARS).......
160 0207590F SEEK EAGLE...... 22,654 22,654
161 0207601F USAF MODELING 15,501 15,501
AND SIMULATION.
162 0207605F WARGAMING AND 5,699 5,699
SIMULATION
CENTERS........
163 0207697F DISTRIBUTED 4,425 4,425
TRAINING AND
EXERCISES......
164 0208006F MISSION PLANNING 69,377 69,377
SYSTEMS........
165 0208021F INFORMATION 7,159 7,159
WARFARE SUPPORT
166 0208059F CYBER COMMAND 66,888 66,888
ACTIVITIES.....
174 0301400F SPACE 12,056 12,056
SUPERIORITY
INTELLIGENCE...
175 0302015F E-4B NATIONAL 4,159 4,159
AIRBORNE
OPERATIONS
CENTER (NAOC)..
176 0303131F MINIMUM 20,124 20,124
ESSENTIAL
EMERGENCY
COMMUNICATIONS
NETWORK (MEECN)
177 0303140F INFORMATION 69,133 69,133
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM........
178 0303141F GLOBAL COMBAT 6,512 6,512
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
179 0303150F GLOBAL COMMAND 4,316 4,316
AND CONTROL
SYSTEM.........
180 0303601F MILSATCOM 107,237 107,237
TERMINALS......
182 0304260F AIRBORNE SIGINT 129,106 129,106
ENTERPRISE.....
185 0305099F GLOBAL AIR 4,461 4,461
TRAFFIC
MANAGEMENT
(GATM).........
186 0305103F CYBER SECURITY 2,055 2,055
INITIATIVE.....
187 0305105F DOD CYBER CRIME 285 285
CENTER.........
188 0305110F SATELLITE 33,773 33,773
CONTROL NETWORK
(SPACE)........
189 0305111F WEATHER SERVICE. 29,048 29,048
190 0305114F AIR TRAFFIC 43,187 43,187
CONTROL,
APPROACH, AND
LANDING SYSTEM
(ATCALS).......
191 0305116F AERIAL TARGETS.. 50,496 50,496
194 0305128F SECURITY AND 354 354
INVESTIGATIVE
ACTIVITIES.....
195 0305145F ARMS CONTROL 4,000 4,000
IMPLEMENTATION.
196 0305146F DEFENSE JOINT 342 342
COUNTERINTELLIG
ENCE ACTIVITIES
198 0305164F NAVSTAR GLOBAL 29,621 29,621
POSITIONING
SYSTEM (USER
EQUIPMENT)
(SPACE)........
199 0305165F NAVSTAR GLOBAL 14,335 14,335
POSITIONING
SYSTEM (SPACE
AND CONTROL
SEGMENTS)......
201 0305173F SPACE AND 3,680 3,680
MISSILE TEST
AND EVALUATION
CENTER.........
202 0305174F SPACE INNOVATION 2,430 2,430
AND DEVELOPMENT
CENTER.........
203 0305182F SPACELIFT RANGE 8,760 8,760
SYSTEM (SPACE).
204 0305193F INTELLIGENCE 0 0
SUPPORT TO
INFORMATION
OPERATIONS (IO)
205 0305202F DRAGON U-2...... 23,644 23,644
206 0305205F ENDURANCE 21,000 21,000
UNMANNED AERIAL
VEHICLES.......
207 0305206F AIRBORNE 96,735 96,735
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS........
208 0305207F MANNED 13,316 13,316
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS........
209 0305208F DISTRIBUTED 63,501 63,501
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE SYSTEMS
210 0305219F MQ-1 PREDATOR A 9,122 9,122
UAV............
211 0305220F RQ-4 UAV........ 236,265 236,265
212 0305221F NETWORK-CENTRIC 7,367 7,367
COLLABORATIVE
TARGETING......
213 0305236F COMMON DATA LINK 38,094 38,094
(CDL)..........
214 0305238F NATO AGS........ 210,109 210,109
215 0305240F SUPPORT TO DCGS 24,500 24,500
ENTERPRISE.....
216 0305265F GPS III SPACE 318,992 318,992
SEGMENT........
217 0305614F JSPOC MISSION 54,645 54,645
SYSTEM.........
218 0305881F RAPID CYBER 4,007 4,007
ACQUISITION....
219 0305887F INTELLIGENCE 13,357 13,357
SUPPORT TO
INFORMATION
WARFARE........
220 0305913F NUDET DETECTION 64,965 64,965
SYSTEM (SPACE).
221 0305940F SPACE SITUATION 19,586 19,586
AWARENESS
OPERATIONS.....
222 0307141F INFORMATION 0 0
OPERATIONS
TECHNOLOGY
INTEGRATION &
TOOL
DEVELOPMENT....
223 0308699F SHARED EARLY 1,175 1,175
WARNING (SEW)..
224 0401115F C-130 AIRLIFT 5,000 5,000
SQUADRON.......
225 0401119F C-5 AIRLIFT 35,115 35,115
SQUADRONS (IF).
226 0401130F C-17 AIRCRAFT 99,225 99,225
(IF)...........
227 0401132F C-130J PROGRAM.. 30,652 30,652
228 0401134F LARGE AIRCRAFT 7,758 7,758
IR
COUNTERMEASURES
(LAIRCM).......
229 0401139F LIGHT MOBILITY 100 100
AIRCRAFT (LIMA)
230 0401218F KC-135S......... 0 0
231 0401219F KC-10S.......... 24,022 24,022
232 0401314F OPERATIONAL 7,471 7,471
SUPPORT AIRLIFT
233 0401315F C-STOL AIRCRAFT. 0 0
234 0408011F SPECIAL TACTICS / 4,984 4,984
COMBAT CONTROL
235 0702207F DEPOT 1,588 1,588
MAINTENANCE
(NON-IF).......
236 0708012F LOGISTICS 577 577
SUPPORT
ACTIVITIES.....
237 0708610F LOGISTICS 119,327 119,327
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
(LOGIT)........
238 0708611F SUPPORT SYSTEMS 15,873 15,873
DEVELOPMENT....
239 0801711F RECRUITING 0 0
ACTIVITIES.....
240 0804743F OTHER FLIGHT 349 349
TRAINING.......
241 0804757F JOINT NATIONAL 0 0
TRAINING CENTER
242 0808716F OTHER PERSONNEL 117 117
ACTIVITIES.....
243 0901202F JOINT PERSONNEL 2,018 2,018
RECOVERY AGENCY
244 0901218F CIVILIAN 1,561 1,561
COMPENSATION
PROGRAM........
245 0901220F PERSONNEL 7,634 7,634
ADMINISTRATION.
246 0901226F AIR FORCE 1,175 1,175
STUDIES AND
ANALYSIS AGENCY
247 0901279F FACILITIES 3,491 3,491
OPERATION--ADMI
NISTRATIVE.....
248 0901538F FINANCIAL 100,160 100,160
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT....
249 0902998F MANAGEMENT HQ-- 0 0
ADP SUPPORT
(AF)...........
249A 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 11,172,183 11,149,583
PROGRAMS.......
................ Classified [-4,600]
reduction....
................ Classified [-18,000]
reduction....
................ SUBTOTAL, 15,867,972 15,828,872
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
................
249B ................ PRIOR YEAR -78,426
SAVINGS........
................ C-130 AMP [-6,509]
cancellation.
................ MALD II [-7,917]
Cancellation.
................ Global Hawk [-64,000]
Block 30
cancellation.
................
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 25,428,046 25,274,890
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL, AF.
................
................ RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL, DW
................ BASIC RESEARCH
001 0601000BR DTRA BASIC 45,071 45,071
RESEARCH
INITIATIVE.....
002 0601101E DEFENSE RESEARCH 309,051 309,051
SCIENCES.......
003 0601110D8Z BASIC RESEARCH 19,405 19,405
INITIATIVES....
004 0601117E BASIC 39,676 39,676
OPERATIONAL
MEDICAL
RESEARCH
SCIENCE........
005 0601120D8Z NATIONAL DEFENSE 87,979 87,979
EDUCATION
PROGRAM........
006 0601384BP CHEMICAL AND 50,566 50,566
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE PROGRAM
................ SUBTOTAL, BASIC 551,748 551,748
RESEARCH.
................
................ APPLIED RESEARCH
007 0602000D8Z JOINT MUNITIONS 20,615 20,615
TECHNOLOGY.....
008 0602115E BIOMEDICAL 110,900 110,900
TECHNOLOGY.....
009 0602228D8Z HISTORICALLY 0 0
BLACK COLLEGES
AND
UNIVERSITIES
(HBCU) SCIENCE.
010 0602234D8Z LINCOLN 36,826 36,826
LABORATORY
RESEARCH
PROGRAM........
011 0602250D8Z SYSTEMS 2020 7,898 7,898
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
012 0602303E INFORMATION & 392,421 392,421
COMMUNICATIONS
TECHNOLOGY.....
013 0602304E COGNITIVE 30,424 30,424
COMPUTING
SYSTEMS........
014 0602305E MACHINE 0 0
INTELLIGENCE...
015 0602383E BIOLOGICAL 19,236 19,236
WARFARE DEFENSE
016 0602384BP CHEMICAL AND 223,269 223,269
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE PROGRAM
017 0602663D8Z DATA TO 13,753 13,753
DECISIONS
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
018 0602668D8Z CYBER SECURITY 18,985 18,985
RESEARCH.......
019 0602670D8Z HUMAN, SOCIAL 6,771 6,771
AND CULTURE
BEHAVIOR
MODELING (HSCB)
APPLIED
RESEARCH.......
020 0602702E TACTICAL 233,209 233,209
TECHNOLOGY.....
021 0602715E MATERIALS AND 166,067 166,067
BIOLOGICAL
TECHNOLOGY.....
022 0602716E ELECTRONICS 222,416 222,416
TECHNOLOGY.....
023 0602718BR WEAPONS OF MASS 172,352 172,352
DESTRUCTION
DEFEAT
TECHNOLOGIES...
024 1160401BB SPECIAL 28,739 28,739
OPERATIONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
................ SUBTOTAL, 1,703,881 1,703,881
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
................
................ ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
(ATD)
025 0603000D8Z JOINT MUNITIONS 25,612 25,612
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
026 0603121D8Z SO/LIC ADVANCED 26,324 26,324
DEVELOPMENT....
027 0603122D8Z COMBATING 77,144 65,844
TERRORISM
TECHNOLOGY
SUPPORT........
................ Reduction due [-11,300]
to
duplication
of effort....
028 0603160BR COUNTERPROLIFERA 275,022 275,022
TION
INITIATIVES--PR
OLIFERATION
PREVENTION AND
DEFEAT.........
029 0603175C BALLISTIC 79,975 79,975
MISSILE DEFENSE
TECHNOLOGY.....
030 0603200D8Z JOINT ADVANCED 0 0
CONCEPTS.......
031 0603225D8Z JOINT DOD-DOE 20,032 20,032
MUNITIONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
032 0603264S AGILE 3,892 3,892
TRANSPORTATION
FOR THE 21ST
CENTURY (AT21)--
THEATER
CAPABILITY.....
033 0603274C SPECIAL PROGRAM-- 36,685 36,685
MDA TECHNOLOGY.
034 0603286E ADVANCED 174,316 174,316
AEROSPACE
SYSTEMS........
035 0603287E SPACE PROGRAMS 159,704 159,704
AND TECHNOLOGY.
036 0603384BP CHEMICAL AND 234,280 234,280
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM--ADVANC
ED DEVELOPMENT.
037 0603618D8Z JOINT ELECTRONIC 6,983 6,983
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
038 0603648D8Z JOINT CAPABILITY 158,263 158,263
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATIONS.
039 0603662D8Z NETWORKED 25,393 25,393
COMMUNICATIONS
CAPABILITIES...
040 0603663D8Z DATA TO 13,754 13,754
DECISIONS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
041 0603665D8Z BIOMETRICS 0 0
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY.....
042 0603668D8Z CYBER SECURITY 19,935 19,935
ADVANCED
RESEARCH.......
043 0603670D8Z HUMAN, SOCIAL 8,235 8,235
AND CULTURE
BEHAVIOR
MODELING (HSCB)
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT....
044 0603680D8Z DEFENSE-WIDE 21,966 51,966
MANUFACTURING
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM........
................ Industrial [30,000]
Base
Innovation
Fund.........
045 0603699D8Z EMERGING 24,662 24,662
CAPABILITIES
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
046 0603711D8Z JOINT ROBOTICS 0 0
PROGRAM/
AUTONOMOUS
SYSTEMS........
047 0603712S GENERIC 24,605 24,605
LOGISTICS R&D
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATIONS.
048 0603713S DEPLOYMENT AND 30,678 30,678
DISTRIBUTION
ENTERPRISE
TECHNOLOGY.....
049 0603716D8Z STRATEGIC 65,282 65,282
ENVIRONMENTAL
RESEARCH
PROGRAM........
050 0603720S MICROELECTRONICS 72,234 69,234
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT AND
SUPPORT........
................ DMEA upgrade [-3,000]
reduction....
051 0603727D8Z JOINT 8,403 8,403
WARFIGHTING
PROGRAM........
052 0603739E ADVANCED 111,008 111,008
ELECTRONICS
TECHNOLOGIES...
053 0603755D8Z HIGH PERFORMANCE 0 0
COMPUTING
MODERNIZATION
PROGRAM........
054 0603760E COMMAND, CONTROL 237,859 237,859
AND
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS........
055 0603765E CLASSIFIED DARPA 3,000 3,000
PROGRAMS.......
056 0603766E NETWORK-CENTRIC 236,883 236,883
WARFARE
TECHNOLOGY.....
057 0603767E SENSOR 299,438 299,438
TECHNOLOGY.....
058 0603769SE DISTRIBUTED 12,195 12,195
LEARNING
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
059 0603781D8Z SOFTWARE 30,036 30,036
ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE......
060 0603826D8Z QUICK REACTION 107,002 107,002
SPECIAL
PROJECTS.......
061 0603828D8Z JOINT 0 0
EXPERIMENTATION
062 0603828J JOINT 21,230 21,230
EXPERIMENTATION
063 0603832D8Z DOD MODELING AND 47,433 47,433
SIMULATION
MANAGEMENT
OFFICE.........
064 0603901C DIRECTED ENERGY 46,944 46,944
RESEARCH.......
065 0603902C NEXT GENERATION 224,077 224,077
AEGIS MISSILE..
066 0603941D8Z TEST & 92,602 92,602
EVALUATION
SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY.....
067 0603942D8Z TECHNOLOGY 0 0
TRANSFER.......
068 0604055D8Z OPERATIONAL 26,244 26,244
ENERGY
CAPABILITY
IMPROVEMENT....
069 0303310D8Z CWMD SYSTEMS.... 53,946 53,946
070 1160402BB SPECIAL 45,317 45,317
OPERATIONS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
071 1160422BB AVIATION 861 861
ENGINEERING
ANALYSIS.......
072 1160472BB SOF INFORMATION 4,959 4,959
AND BROADCAST
SYSTEMS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.....
................ SUBTOTAL, 3,194,413 3,210,113
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
(ATD)..........
................
................ ADVANCED 3,194,413 3,210,113
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.....
073 0603161D8Z NUCLEAR AND 33,234 33,234
CONVENTIONAL
PHYSICAL
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT RDT&E
ADC&P..........
074 0603527D8Z RETRACT LARCH... 21,023 21,023
075 0603600D8Z WALKOFF......... 94,624 94,624
076 0603709D8Z JOINT ROBOTICS 0 0
PROGRAM........
077 0603714D8Z ADVANCED SENSOR 16,958 18,958
APPLICATIONS
PROGRAM........
................ Reverse cuts [2,000]
to testing...
078 0603851D8Z ENVIRONMENTAL 75,941 75,941
SECURITY
TECHNICAL
CERTIFICATION
PROGRAM........
079 0603881C BALLISTIC 316,929 316,929
MISSILE DEFENSE
TERMINAL
DEFENSE SEGMENT
080 0603882C BALLISTIC 903,172 903,172
MISSILE DEFENSE
MIDCOURSE
DEFENSE SEGMENT
081 0603884BP CHEMICAL AND 179,023 179,023
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM--DEM/
VAL............
082 0603884C BALLISTIC 347,012 347,012
MISSILE DEFENSE
SENSORS........
083 0603888C BALLISTIC 0 0
MISSILE DEFENSE
TEST & TARGETS.
084 0603890C BMD ENABLING 362,711 362,711
PROGRAMS.......
085 0603891C SPECIAL 272,387 272,387
PROGRAMS--MDA..
086 0603892C AEGIS BMD....... 992,407 992,407
087 0603893C SPACE TRACKING & 51,313 51,313
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM.........
088 0603895C BALLISTIC 6,912 6,912
MISSILE DEFENSE
SYSTEM SPACE
PROGRAMS.......
089 0603896C BALLISTIC 366,552 366,552
MISSILE DEFENSE
COMMAND AND
CONTROL, BATTLE
MANAGEMENT &
COMMUNICATION..
090 0603898C BALLISTIC 55,550 55,550
MISSILE DEFENSE
JOINT
WARFIGHTER
SUPPORT........
091 0603904C MISSILE DEFENSE 63,043 63,043
INTEGRATION &
OPERATIONS
CENTER (MDIOC).
092 0603906C REGARDING TRENCH 11,371 11,371
093 0603907C SEA BASED X-BAND 9,730 9,730
RADAR (SBX)....
094 0603913C ISRAELI 99,836 409,836
COOPERATIVE
PROGRAMS.......
................ Arrow Weapon [20,000]
System
improvements.
................ Arrow-3 [20,000]
interceptor..
................ David's Sling [60,000]
short-range
BMD..........
................ Iron Dome [210,000]
short-range
rocket
defense......
095 0603914C BALLISTIC 454,400 454,400
MISSILE DEFENSE
TEST...........
096 0603915C BALLISTIC 435,747 435,747
MISSILE DEFENSE
TARGETS........
097 0603920D8Z HUMANITARIAN 13,231 13,231
DEMINING.......
098 0603923D8Z COALITION 11,398 11,398
WARFARE........
099 0604016D8Z DEPARTMENT OF 3,283 24,083
DEFENSE
CORROSION
PROGRAM........
................ Increase for [20,800]
requirements
shortfall....
100 0604400D8Z DEPARTMENT OF 12,368 12,368
DEFENSE (DOD)
UNMANNED
AIRCRAFT SYSTEM
(UAS) COMMON
DEVELOPMENT....
101 0604670D8Z HUMAN, SOCIAL 5,131 5,131
AND CULTURE
BEHAVIOR
MODELING (HSCB)
RESEARCH AND
ENGINEERING....
102 0604775D8Z DEFENSE RAPID 0 200,000
INNOVATION
PROGRAM........
................ Rapid [200,000]
Innovation
Program......
103 0604787D8Z JOINT SYSTEMS 0 0
INTEGRATION
COMMAND (JSIC).
104 0604787J JOINT SYSTEMS 3,273 3,273
INTEGRATION....
105 0604828D8Z JOINT FIRES 0 0
INTEGRATION AND
INTEROPERABILIT
Y TEAM.........
106 0604828J JOINT FIRES 7,364 7,364
INTEGRATION AND
INTEROPERABILIT
Y TEAM.........
107 0604880C LAND-BASED SM-3 276,338 276,338
(LBSM3)........
108 0604881C AEGIS SM-3 BLOCK 420,630 420,630
IIA CO-
DEVELOPMENT....
109 0604883C PRECISION 297,375 297,375
TRACKING SPACE
SENSOR RDT&E...
110 0604884C AIRBORNE 0 0
INFRARED (ABIR)
111 0604886C ADVANCED REMOTE 58,742 58,742
SENSOR
TECHNOLOGY
(ARST).........
112 0605017D8Z REDUCTION OF 0 0
TOTAL OWNERSHIP
COST...........
113 0303191D8Z JOINT 3,158 3,158
ELECTROMAGNETIC
TECHNOLOGY
(JET) PROGRAM..
................ SUBTOTAL, 6,282,166 6,814,966
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.....
................
................ SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT AND
DEMONSTRATION
(SDD)
114 0604051D8Z DEFENSE 0 0
ACQUISITION
CHALLENGE
PROGRAM (DACP).
115 0604161D8Z NUCLEAR AND 6,817 6,817
CONVENTIONAL
PHYSICAL
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT RDT&E
SDD............
116 0604165D8Z PROMPT GLOBAL 110,383 110,383
STRIKE
CAPABILITY
DEVELOPMENT....
117 0604384BP CHEMICAL AND 311,071 311,071
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM--EMD...
118 0604709D8Z JOINT ROBOTICS 0 0
PROGRAM--EMD...
119 0604764K ADVANCED IT 25,787 25,787
SERVICES JOINT
PROGRAM OFFICE
(AITS-JPO).....
120 0604771D8Z JOINT TACTICAL 20,688 20,688
INFORMATION
DISTRIBUTION
SYSTEM (JTIDS).
121 0605000BR WEAPONS OF MASS 5,749 5,749
DESTRUCTION
DEFEAT
CAPABILITIES...
122 0605013BL INFORMATION 12,699 12,699
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT....
123 0605018BTA DEFENSE 0 0
INTEGRATED
MILITARY HUMAN
RESOURCES
SYSTEM (DIMHRS)
124 0605020BTA BUSINESS 0 0
TRANSFORMATION
AGENCY R&D
ACTIVITIES.....
125 0605021SE HOMELAND 387 387
PERSONNEL
SECURITY
INITIATIVE.....
126 0605022D8Z DEFENSE 1,859 1,859
EXPORTABILITY
PROGRAM........
127 0605027D8Z OUSD(C) IT 7,010 7,010
DEVELOPMENT
INITIATIVES....
128 0605070S DOD ENTERPRISE 133,104 133,104
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT AND
DEMONSTRATION..
129 0605075D8Z DCMO POLICY AND 25,269 25,269
INTEGRATION....
130 0605140D8Z TRUSTED FOUNDRY. 0 0
131 0605210D8Z DEFENSE-WIDE 10,238 10,238
ELECTRONIC
PROCUREMENT
CAPABILITIES...
132 0303141K GLOBAL COMBAT 19,670 19,670
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
133 0305304D8Z DOD ENTERPRISE 3,556 3,556
ENERGY
INFORMATION
MANAGEMENT
(EEIM).........
134 0807708D8Z WOUNDED ILL AND 0 0
INJURED SENIOR
OVERSIGHT
COMMITTEE (WII-
SOC) STAFF
OFFICE.........
................ SUBTOTAL, SYSTEM 694,287 694,287
DEVELOPMENT AND
DEMONSTRATION
(SDD)..........
................
................ RDT&E MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
135 0604774D8Z DEFENSE 6,383 6,383
READINESS
REPORTING
SYSTEM (DRRS)..
136 0604875D8Z JOINT SYSTEMS 3,845 3,845
ARCHITECTURE
DEVELOPMENT....
137 0604940D8Z CENTRAL TEST AND 144,109 144,109
EVALUATION
INVESTMENT
DEVELOPMENT
(CTEIP)........
138 0604942D8Z ASSESSMENTS AND 2,419 2,419
EVALUATIONS....
139 0604943D8Z THERMAL VICAR... 8,214 8,214
140 0605100D8Z JOINT MISSION 19,380 19,380
ENVIRONMENT
TEST CAPABILITY
(JMETC)........
141 0605104D8Z TECHNICAL 32,266 32,266
STUDIES,
SUPPORT AND
ANALYSIS.......
142 0605110D8Z USD(A&T)-- 840 840
CRITICAL
TECHNOLOGY
SUPPORT........
143 0605117D8Z FOREIGN MATERIEL 56,012 56,012
ACQUISITION AND
EXPLOITATION...
144 0605126J JOINT INTEGRATED 55,508 55,508
AIR AND MISSILE
DEFENSE
ORGANIZATION
(JIAMDO).......
145 0605128D8Z CLASSIFIED 0 0
PROGRAM USD(P).
146 0605130D8Z FOREIGN 18,174 18,174
COMPARATIVE
TESTING........
147 0605142D8Z SYSTEMS 43,195 43,195
ENGINEERING....
148 0605151D8Z STUDIES AND 6,457 6,457
ANALYSIS
SUPPORT--OSD...
149 0605161D8Z NUCLEAR MATTERS- 4,901 4,901
PHYSICAL
SECURITY.......
150 0605170D8Z SUPPORT TO 6,307 6,307
NETWORKS AND
INFORMATION
INTEGRATION....
151 0605200D8Z GENERAL SUPPORT 6,601 6,601
TO USD
(INTELLIGENCE).
152 0605384BP CHEMICAL AND 92,849 92,849
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE PROGRAM
153 0605502BR SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATION
RESEARCH.......
154 0605502C SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATIVE
RESEARCH--MDA..
155 0605502D8W SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATIVE
RESEARCH.......
156 0605502D8Z SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATIVE
RESEARCH.......
157 0605502E SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATIVE
RESEARCH.......
158 0605502S SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATIVE
RESEARCH.......
159 0605790D8Z SMALL BUSINESS 1,857 1,857
INNOVATION
RESEARCH (SBIR)/
SMALL BUSINESS
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSFER (S....
160 0605798D8Z DEFENSE 12,056 12,056
TECHNOLOGY
ANALYSIS.......
161 0605799D8Z EMERGING 0 0
CAPABILITIES...
162 0605801KA DEFENSE 55,454 55,454
TECHNICAL
INFORMATION
CENTER (DTIC)..
163 0605803SE R&D IN SUPPORT 16,364 16,364
OF DOD
ENLISTMENT,
TESTING AND
EVALUATION.....
164 0605804D8Z DEVELOPMENT TEST 15,110 20,110
AND EVALUATION.
................ DT&E increase [5,000]
165 0605897E DARPA AGENCY 0 0
RELOCATION.....
166 0605898E MANAGEMENT HQ-- 69,767 69,767
R&D............
167 0606100D8Z BUDGET AND 4,454 4,454
PROGRAM
ASSESSMENTS....
168 0606301D8Z AVIATION SAFETY 0 0
TECHNOLOGIES...
169 0203345D8Z DEFENSE 2,637 2,637
OPERATIONS
SECURITY
INITIATIVE
(DOSI).........
170 0204571J JOINT STAFF 0 0
ANALYTICAL
SUPPORT........
173 0303166D8Z SUPPORT TO 0 0
INFORMATION
OPERATIONS (IO)
CAPABILITIES...
174 0303166J SUPPORT TO 8,238 8,238
INFORMATION
OPERATIONS (IO)
CAPABILITIES...
175 0303169D8Z INFORMATION 0 0
TECHNOLOGY
RAPID
ACQUISITION....
176 0305103E CYBER SECURITY 1,801 1,801
INITIATIVE.....
177 0305193D8Z INTELLIGENCE 16,041 16,041
SUPPORT TO
INFORMATION
OPERATIONS (IO)
179 0305400D8Z WARFIGHTING AND 0 0
INTELLIGENCE-
RELATED SUPPORT
180 0804767D8Z COCOM EXERCISE 77,475 77,475
ENGAGEMENT AND
TRAINING
TRANSFORMATION
(CE2T2)........
181 0901585C PENTAGON 0 0
RESERVATION....
182 0901598C MANAGEMENT HQ-- 34,855 34,855
MDA............
183 0901598D8W MANAGEMENT 104 104
HEADQUARTERS
WHS............
184 0909999D8Z FINANCING FOR 0 0
CANCELLED
ACCOUNT
ADJUSTMENTS....
184A 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 64,255 64,255
PROGRAMS.......
................ SUBTOTAL, RDT&E 887,928 892,928
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
................
................ OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
185 0604130V ENTERPRISE 8,866 8,866
SECURITY SYSTEM
(ESS)..........
186 0605127T REGIONAL 3,238 3,238
INTERNATIONAL
OUTREACH (RIO)
AND PARTNERSHIP
FOR PEACE
INFORMATION
MGMT...........
187 0605147T OVERSEAS 288 288
HUMANITARIAN
ASSISTANCE
SHARED
INFORMATION
SYSTEM (OHASIS)
188 0607384BP CHEMICAL AND 14,745 14,745
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
(OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT)...
189 0607828D8Z JOINT 0 0
INTEGRATION AND
INTEROPERABILIT
Y..............
190 0607828J JOINT 5,013 5,013
INTEGRATION AND
INTEROPERABILIT
Y..............
191 0208043J PLANNING AND 3,922 3,922
DECISION AID
SYSTEM (PDAS)..
192 0208045K C4I 72,574 72,574
INTEROPERABILIT
Y..............
194 0301144K JOINT/ALLIED 6,214 6,214
COALITION
INFORMATION
SHARING........
201 0302016K NATIONAL 499 499
MILITARY
COMMAND SYSTEM-
WIDE SUPPORT...
202 0302019K DEFENSE INFO 14,498 14,498
INFRASTRUCTURE
ENGINEERING AND
INTEGRATION....
203 0303126K LONG-HAUL 26,164 26,164
COMMUNICATIONS-
-DCS...........
204 0303131K MINIMUM 12,931 12,931
ESSENTIAL
EMERGENCY
COMMUNICATIONS
NETWORK (MEECN)
205 0303135G PUBLIC KEY 6,296 6,296
INFRASTRUCTURE
(PKI)..........
206 0303136G KEY MANAGEMENT 30,948 30,948
INFRASTRUCTURE
(KMI)..........
207 0303140D8Z INFORMATION 11,780 11,780
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM........
208 0303140G INFORMATION 191,452 191,452
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM........
209 0303140K INFORMATION 0 0
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM........
210 0303149J C4I FOR THE 0 0
WARRIOR........
211 0303150K GLOBAL COMMAND 36,575 36,575
AND CONTROL
SYSTEM.........
212 0303153K DEFENSE SPECTRUM 24,278 24,278
ORGANIZATION...
213 0303170K NET-CENTRIC 2,924 2,924
ENTERPRISE
SERVICES (NCES)
214 0303260D8Z DEFENSE MILITARY 1,294 1,294
DECEPTION
PROGRAM OFFICE
(DMDPO)........
215 0303610K TELEPORT PROGRAM 6,050 6,050
217 0304210BB SPECIAL 17,058 17,058
APPLICATIONS
FOR
CONTINGENCIES..
220 0305103D8Z CYBER SECURITY 0 0
INITIATIVE.....
222 0305103K CYBER SECURITY 4,189 4,189
INITIATIVE.....
223 0305125D8Z CRITICAL 10,462 10,462
INFRASTRUCTURE
PROTECTION
(CIP)..........
227 0305186D8Z POLICY R&D 6,360 6,360
PROGRAMS.......
229 0305199D8Z NET CENTRICITY.. 21,190 21,190
232 0305208BB DISTRIBUTED 7,114 7,714
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE SYSTEMS
................ USSOCOM UFR.. [600]
235 0305208K DISTRIBUTED 3,247 3,247
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE SYSTEMS
237 0305219BB MQ-1 PREDATOR A 1,355 1,355
UAV............
239 0305231BB MQ-8 UAV........ 0 0
240 0305387D8Z HOMELAND DEFENSE 2,303 2,303
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSFER
PROGRAM........
241 0305600D8Z INTERNATIONAL 1,478 1,478
INTELLIGENCE
TECHNOLOGY AND
ARCHITECTURES..
249 0708011S INDUSTRIAL 27,044 27,044
PREPAREDNESS...
250 0708012S LOGISTICS 4,711 4,711
SUPPORT
ACTIVITIES.....
251 0902298J MANAGEMENT HQ-- 4,100 4,100
OJCS...........
252 1001018D8Z NATO AGS........ 0 0
253 1105219BB MQ-9 UAV........ 3,002 3,002
254 1105232BB RQ-11 UAV....... 0 0
255 1105233BB RQ-7 UAV........ 0 0
256 1160279BB SMALL BUSINESS 0 0
INNOVATIVE
RESEARCH/SMALL
BUS TECH
TRANSFER PILOT
PROG...........
257 1160403BB SPECIAL 97,267 97,267
OPERATIONS
AVIATION
SYSTEMS
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT....
258 1160404BB SPECIAL 821 821
OPERATIONS
TACTICAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT....
259 1160405BB SPECIAL 25,935 25,935
OPERATIONS
INTELLIGENCE
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT....
260 1160408BB SOF OPERATIONAL 51,700 51,700
ENHANCEMENTS...
261 1160421BB SPECIAL 1,822 1,822
OPERATIONS CV-
22 DEVELOPMENT.
262 1160427BB MISSION TRAINING 10,131 10,131
AND PREPARATION
SYSTEMS (MTPS).
263 1160429BB AC/MC-130J...... 19,647 19,647
264 1160474BB SOF 2,225 2,225
COMMUNICATIONS
EQUIPMENT AND
ELECTRONICS
SYSTEMS........
265 1160476BB SOF TACTICAL 3,036 3,036
RADIO SYSTEMS..
266 1160477BB SOF WEAPONS 1,511 1,511
SYSTEMS........
267 1160478BB SOF SOLDIER 4,263 4,263
PROTECTION AND
SURVIVAL
SYSTEMS........
268 1160479BB SOF VISUAL 4,448 4,448
AUGMENTATION,
LASERS AND
SENSOR SYSTEMS.
269 1160480BB SOF TACTICAL 11,325 11,325
VEHICLES.......
270 1160481BB SOF MUNITIONS... 1,515 1,515
271 1160482BB SOF ROTARY WING 24,430 24,430
AVIATION.......
272 1160483BB SOF UNDERWATER 26,405 34,405
SYSTEMS........
................ Transfer from [8,000]
PDW Line 64
at USSOCOM
request......
273 1160484BB SOF SURFACE 8,573 8,573
CRAFT..........
274 1160488BB SOF MILITARY 0 0
INFORMATION
SUPPORT
OPERATIONS.....
275 1160489BB SOF GLOBAL VIDEO 7,620 7,620
SURVEILLANCE
ACTIVITIES.....
276 1160490BB SOF OPERATIONAL 16,386 16,386
ENHANCEMENTS
INTELLIGENCE...
276A 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 3,754,516 3,754,516
PROGRAMS.......
................ SUBTOTAL, 4,667,738 4,676,338
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
................
................ UNDISTRIBUTED
................ UNDISTRIBUTED... -100,000
................ DARPA [-75,000]
undistributed
reduction....
................ DARPA [-25,000]
classified
programs
reduction....
................
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 17,982,161 18,444,261
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL, DW.
................
................ OPERATIONAL TEST
& EVAL, DEFENSE
................ RDT&E MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
001 0605118OTE OPERATIONAL TEST 72,501 76,501
AND EVALUATION.
................ NCR [4,000]
transition...
002 0605131OTE LIVE FIRE TEST 49,201 49,201
AND EVALUATION.
003 0605814OTE OPERATIONAL TEST 63,566 63,566
ACTIVITIES AND
ANALYSES.......
................ TOTAL, 185,268 189,268
OPERATIONAL
TEST & EVAL,
DEFENSE.
................
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 69,407,767 69,286,218
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4202. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION FOR OVERSEAS
CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4202. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION FOR OVERSEAS
CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Line Program Element Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
................ RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
ARMY
................ ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
060 0603747A SOLDIER SUPPORT 19,860 19,860
AND
SURVIVABILITY..
................ SUBTOTAL, 19,860 19,860
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.....
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 19,860 19,860
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
ARMY...........
................
................ RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
NAVY
................ ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
056 0603654N JOINT SERVICE 4,600 4,600
EXPLOSIVE
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT....
................ SUBTOTAL, 4,600 4,600
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.....
................
................ SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
131 0604771N MEDICAL 2,173 2,173
DEVELOPMENT....
................ SUBTOTAL, SYSTEM 2,173 2,173
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION..
................
................ RDT&E MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
160 0605866N NAVY SPACE AND 5,200 5,200
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE (SEW)
SUPPORT........
................ SUBTOTAL, RDT&E 5,200 5,200
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
................
................ OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
195 0206624M MARINE CORPS 6,762 6,762
COMBAT SERVICES
SUPPORT........
221 0305233N RQ-7 UAV........ 7,600 7,600
230A 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 33,784 33,784
PROGRAMS.......
................ SUBTOTAL, 48,146 48,146
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 60,119 60,119
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
NAVY...........
................
................ RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL, AF
................ OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
249A 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 53,150 53,150
PROGRAMS.......
................ SUBTOTAL, 53,150 53,150
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 53,150 53,150
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL, AF.
................
................ RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL, DW
................ OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
239 0305231BB MQ-8 UAV........ 5,000 5,000
276A 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 107,387 107,387
PROGRAMS.......
................ SUBTOTAL, 112,387 112,387
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 112,387 112,387
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL, DW.
................
................ TOTAL, RESEARCH, 245,516 245,516
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS..................................................... 1,223,087 1,223,087
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES........................................... 80,574 80,574
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................. 723,039 723,039
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS............................................... 706,974 706,974
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT..................................... 1,226,650 1,226,650
060 AVIATION ASSETS.................................................... 1,319,832 1,319,832
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................. 3,447,174 3,447,174
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS...................................... 454,774 454,774
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE...................................... 1,762,757 1,762,757
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT............................................ 7,401,613 7,401,613
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 3,041,074 3,041,074
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HQ'S.................................... 410,171 410,171
130 COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS............................... 177,819 177,819
140 ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES.............................................. 0 0
150 COMMANDERS EMERGENCY RESPONSE PROGRAM.............................. 0 0
160 RESET.............................................................. 0 0
170 COMBATANT COMMANDERS ANCILLARY MISSIONS............................ 461,333 461,333
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 22,436,871 22,436,871
MOBILIZATION
180 STRATEGIC MOBILITY................................................. 405,496 405,496
190 ARMY PREPOSITIONING STOCKS......................................... 195,349 195,349
200 INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS............................................ 6,379 6,379
SUBTOTAL, MOBILIZATION............................................. 607,224 607,224
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
210 OFFICER ACQUISITION................................................ 112,866 112,866
220 RECRUIT TRAINING................................................... 73,265 73,265
230 ONE STATION UNIT TRAINING.......................................... 51,227 51,227
240 SENIOR RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS............................. 443,306 443,306
250 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING......................................... 1,099,556 1,099,556
260 FLIGHT TRAINING.................................................... 1,130,627 1,130,627
270 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................. 191,683 191,683
280 TRAINING SUPPORT................................................... 652,095 652,095
290 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING......................................... 507,510 507,510
300 EXAMINING.......................................................... 156,964 156,964
310 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION................................... 244,343 244,343
320 CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING.................................... 212,477 212,477
330 JUNIOR ROTC........................................................ 182,691 182,691
SUBTOTAL, TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................. 5,058,610 5,058,610
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
350 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION......................................... 601,331 601,331
360 CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES.......................................... 741,324 741,324
370 LOGISTIC SUPPORT ACTIVITIES........................................ 610,136 610,136
380 AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT.............................................. 478,707 478,707
390 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 556,307 539,107
GFEBS realignment per Army request.............................. [-17,200]
400 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS......................................... 1,547,925 1,547,925
410 MANPOWER MANAGEMENT................................................ 362,205 362,205
420 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT............................................ 220,754 220,754
430 OTHER SERVICE SUPPORT.............................................. 1,153,556 1,145,456
Decrease for ahead of need request.............................. [-8,100]
440 ARMY CLAIMS ACTIVITIES............................................. 250,970 250,970
450 REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............................................. 222,351 222,351
460 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT............................................ 222,379 222,379
470 SUPPORT OF NATO OPERATIONS......................................... 459,710 459,710
480 MISC. SUPPORT OF OTHER NATIONS..................................... 25,637 25,637
490 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 1,052,595 1,052,595
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES............................... 8,505,887 8,480,587
UNDISTRIBUTED
UNDISTRIBUTED...................................................... -120,000
Unobligated balances............................................ [-120,000]
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY............................... 36,608,592 36,463,292
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS................................ 4,918,144 4,918,144
020 FLEET AIR TRAINING................................................. 1,886,825 1,886,825
030 AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA & ENGINEERING SERVICES..................... 44,032 44,032
040 AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT.................................. 101,565 101,565
050 AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT................................................ 374,827 374,827
060 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE......................................... 960,802 960,802
070 AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.................................. 37,545 37,545
080 AVIATION LOGISTICS................................................. 328,805 328,805
090 MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.................................. 4,686,535 4,686,535
100 SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING................................. 769,204 769,204
110 SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............................................. 5,089,981 5,089,981
120 SHIP DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT...................................... 1,315,366 1,315,366
130 COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS.............................................. 619,909 619,909
140 ELECTRONIC WARFARE................................................. 92,364 92,364
150 SPACE SYSTEMS AND SURVEILLANCE..................................... 174,437 174,437
160 WARFARE TACTICS.................................................... 441,035 441,035
170 OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY........................... 333,554 333,554
180 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES.............................................. 910,087 910,087
190 EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE.............................................. 167,158 167,158
200 DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT........................................... 4,183 4,183
210 COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS............................... 95,528 95,528
220 COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION SUPPORT........................ 204,569 204,569
230 CRUISE MISSILE..................................................... 111,884 111,884
240 FLEET BALLISTIC MISSILE............................................ 1,181,038 1,181,038
250 IN-SERVICE WEAPONS SYSTEMS SUPPORT................................. 87,606 87,606
260 WEAPONS MAINTENANCE................................................ 519,583 519,583
270 OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT....................................... 300,435 300,435
280 ENTERPRISE INFORMATION............................................. 1,077,924 1,077,924
290 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION......................... 2,101,279 2,101,279
300 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................. 4,822,093 4,822,093
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 33,758,297 33,758,297
MOBILIZATION
310 SHIP PREPOSITIONING AND SURGE...................................... 334,659 334,659
320 AIRCRAFT ACTIVATIONS/INACTIVATIONS................................. 6,562 6,562
330 SHIP ACTIVATIONS/INACTIVATIONS..................................... 1,066,329 1,066,329
340 EXPEDITIONARY HEALTH SERVICES SYSTEMS.............................. 83,901 83,901
350 INDUSTRIAL READINESS............................................... 2,695 2,695
360 COAST GUARD SUPPORT................................................ 23,502 23,502
SUBTOTAL, MOBILIZATION............................................. 1,517,648 1,517,648
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
370 OFFICER ACQUISITION................................................ 147,807 147,807
380 RECRUIT TRAINING................................................... 10,473 10,473
390 RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS.................................... 139,220 139,220
400 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING......................................... 582,177 582,177
410 FLIGHT TRAINING.................................................... 5,456 5,456
420 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................. 170,746 170,746
430 TRAINING SUPPORT................................................... 153,403 153,403
440 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING......................................... 241,329 241,329
450 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION................................... 108,226 108,226
460 CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING.................................... 105,776 105,776
470 JUNIOR ROTC........................................................ 51,817 51,817
SUBTOTAL, TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................. 1,716,430 1,716,430
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
480 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 797,177 797,177
490 EXTERNAL RELATIONS................................................. 12,872 12,872
500 CIVILIAN MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT......................... 120,181 120,181
510 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT......................... 235,753 235,753
520 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT............................................ 263,060 263,060
530 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS......................................... 363,213 363,213
540 MEDICAL ACTIVITIES................................................. 0 0
550 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION......................................... 182,343 182,343
560 ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS............................................. 0 0
570 PLANNING, ENGINEERING AND DESIGN................................... 282,464 282,464
580 ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT................................. 1,092,123 1,092,123
590 HULL, MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL SUPPORT............................ 53,560 53,560
600 COMBAT/WEAPONS SYSTEMS............................................. 25,299 25,299
610 SPACE AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE SYSTEMS............................... 64,418 64,418
620 NAVAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICE........................................ 580,042 580,042
680 INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS AND AGENCIES............................ 4,984 4,984
690 CANCELLED ACCOUNT ADJUSTMENTS...................................... 0 0
700 JUDGEMENT FUND..................................................... 0 0
710 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 537,079 537,079
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 4,614,568 4,614,568
UNDISTRIBUTED
UNDISTRIBUTED...................................................... -23,000
Unobligated balances............................................ [-23,000]
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY............................... 41,606,943 41,583,943
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATIONAL FORCES................................................. 788,055 788,055
020 FIELD LOGISTICS.................................................... 762,614 762,614
030 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 168,447 168,447
040 MARITIME PREPOSITIONING............................................ 100,374 100,374
050 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION........................... 825,039 825,039
060 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................. 2,188,883 2,188,883
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 4,833,412 4,833,412
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
070 RECRUIT TRAINING................................................... 18,251 18,251
080 OFFICER ACQUISITION................................................ 869 869
090 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING......................................... 80,914 80,914
100 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................. 42,744 42,744
110 TRAINING SUPPORT................................................... 292,150 292,150
120 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING......................................... 168,609 168,609
130 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION................................... 56,865 56,865
140 JUNIOR ROTC........................................................ 19,912 19,912
SUBTOTAL, TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................. 680,314 680,314
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
150 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION......................................... 39,962 39,962
170 ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT................................. 83,404 83,404
180 CANCELLED ACCOUNT ADJUSTMENT....................................... 0 0
190 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 346,071 346,071
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 469,437 469,437
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS....................... 5,983,163 5,983,163
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES.............................................. 2,973,141 2,973,141
020 COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES.......................................... 1,611,032 1,611,032
030 AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING (OJT, MAINTAIN SKILLS)..................... 1,472,806 1,472,806
040 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 5,545,470 5,545,470
050 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 1,353,987 1,353,987
060 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 2,595,032 2,595,032
070 GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING....................................... 957,040 957,040
080 OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS...................................... 916,200 916,200
090 JCS EXERCISES...................................................... 0 0
100 TACTICAL INTEL AND OTHER SPECIAL ACTIVITIES........................ 733,716 733,716
110 LAUNCH FACILITIES.................................................. 314,490 314,490
120 SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS.............................................. 488,762 488,762
130 COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION SUPPORT........................ 862,979 862,979
140 COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS............................... 222,429 222,429
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 20,047,084 20,047,084
MOBILIZATION
150 AIRLIFT OPERATIONS................................................. 1,785,379 1,785,379
160 MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS.......................................... 154,049 154,049
170 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 1,477,396 1,477,396
180 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 309,699 309,699
190 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 707,574 707,574
SUBTOTAL, MOBILIZATION............................................. 4,434,097 4,434,097
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
200 OFFICER ACQUISITION................................................ 115,427 115,427
210 RECRUIT TRAINING................................................... 17,619 17,619
220 RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS (ROTC)............................. 92,949 92,949
230 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 336,433 336,433
240 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 842,441 842,441
250 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING......................................... 482,634 482,634
260 FLIGHT TRAINING.................................................... 750,609 750,609
270 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................. 235,114 235,114
280 TRAINING SUPPORT................................................... 101,231 101,231
290 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 233,330 233,330
300 JUDGEMENT FUND..................................................... 0 0
310 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING......................................... 130,217 130,217
320 EXAMINING.......................................................... 2,738 2,738
330 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION................................... 155,170 155,170
340 CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING.................................... 175,147 175,147
350 JUNIOR ROTC........................................................ 74,809 74,809
SUBTOTAL, TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................. 3,745,868 3,745,868
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
360 LOGISTICS OPERATIONS............................................... 1,029,734 1,029,734
370 TECHNICAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES....................................... 913,843 913,843
390 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 303,610 303,610
400 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 1,266,800 1,266,800
410 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 587,654 587,654
420 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS......................................... 667,910 667,910
430 OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES....................................... 1,094,509 1,094,509
440 CIVIL AIR PATROL................................................... 23,904 23,904
450 JUDGEMENT FUND REIMBURSEMENT....................................... 0 0
470 INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT.............................................. 81,307 81,307
480 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 1,239,040 1,239,040
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 7,208,311 7,208,311
UNDISTRIBUTED
UNDISTRIBUTED...................................................... -32,000
Unobligated balances............................................ [-32,000]
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE.......................... 35,435,360 35,403,360
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
OPERATING FORCES
010 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF.............................................. 485,708 485,708
020 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND......................................... 0 5,107,501
Transfer from Line 025.......................................... [5,091,001]
USSOCOM UFR..................................................... [16,500]
025 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 5,091,001 0
Transfer to Line 020............................................ [-5,091,001]
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 5,576,709 5,593,209
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
030 DEFENSE ACQUISITION UNIVERSITY..................................... 147,210 147,210
040 NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY........................................ 84,999 84,999
SUBTOTAL, TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................. 232,209 232,209
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
050 CIVIL MILITARY PROGRAMS............................................ 161,294 161,294
070 DEFENSE BUSINESS TRANSFORMATION AGENCY............................. 0 0
080 DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY...................................... 573,973 573,973
090 DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY................................. 1,293,196 1,293,196
100 DEFENSE FINANCE AND ACCOUNTING SERVICE............................. 17,513 17,513
110 DEFENSE HUMAN RESOURCES ACTIVITY................................... 676,186 676,186
120 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY................................. 1,346,847 1,346,847
140 DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY...................................... 35,137 35,137
150 DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY........................................... 431,893 431,893
160 DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY............................................. 224,013 224,013
170 DEFENSE POW/MIA OFFICE............................................. 21,964 21,964
180 DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION AGENCY................................ 557,917 540,317
Program decrease--Defense Security Assessment................... [-2,600]
Program decrease--Global Train and Equip........................ [-15,000]
190 DEFENSE SECURITY SERVICE........................................... 506,662
Transfer from Line 280.......................................... [506,662]
200 DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY SECURITY ADMINISTRATION......................... 35,319 35,319
210 DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY.................................... 443,382
Transfer from Line 280.......................................... [443,382]
220 DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EDUCATION ACTIVITY........................... 2,744,971 2,744,971
230 MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY............................................. 259,975 259,975
250 OFFICE OF ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT...................................... 253,437 114,037
Decrease for ahead of need request.............................. [-139,400]
260 OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE................................. 2,095,362 2,095,362
270 WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS SERVICE.................................... 521,297 521,297
280 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 14,933,801 14,158,757
Transfer to Line 190............................................ [-506,662]
Transfer to Line 210............................................ [-443,382]
Commercial imagery service level agreement...................... [125,000]
Additional ISR Support to Operation Observant Compass........... [50,000]
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 26,184,095 26,202,095
UNDISTRIBUTED
UNDISTRIBUTED...................................................... 5,000
Unobligated balances............................................ [-25,000]
Impact aid for schools with military dependent students......... [25,000]
Impact aid for children with severe disabilities................ [5,000]
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE....................... 31,993,013 32,032,513
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS..................................................... 1,391 1,391
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES........................................... 20,889 20,889
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................. 592,724 592,724
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS............................................... 114,983 114,983
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT..................................... 633,091 633,091
060 AVIATION ASSETS.................................................... 76,823 76,823
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................. 481,997 481,997
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS...................................... 70,118 70,118
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE...................................... 141,205 141,205
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT............................................ 561,878 561,878
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 287,399 287,399
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HQ'S.................................... 52,431 52,431
130 ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES.............................................. 0 0
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 3,034,929 3,034,929
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
140 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION......................................... 12,995 12,995
150 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 32,432 32,432
160 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS......................................... 4,895 4,895
170 MANPOWER MANAGEMENT................................................ 16,074 16,074
180 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING......................................... 60,683 60,683
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 127,079 127,079
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES........................... 3,162,008 3,162,008
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS................................ 616,776 616,776
020 INTERMEDIATE MAINTENANCE........................................... 15,076 15,076
030 AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT.................................. 1,479 1,479
040 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE......................................... 107,251 107,251
050 AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.................................. 355 355
060 MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.................................. 82,186 82,186
070 SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING................................. 589 589
080 SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............................................. 48,593 48,593
090 COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS.............................................. 15,274 15,274
100 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES.............................................. 124,917 124,917
110 WEAPONS MAINTENANCE................................................ 1,978 1,978
120 ENTERPRISE INFORMATION............................................. 43,699 43,699
130 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION......................... 60,646 60,646
140 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................. 105,227 105,227
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 1,224,046 1,224,046
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
150 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 3,117 3,117
160 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT......................... 14,337 14,337
170 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS......................................... 2,392 2,392
180 ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT................................. 3,090 3,090
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 22,936 22,936
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES........................... 1,246,982 1,246,982
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATING FORCES................................................... 89,690 89,690
020 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 16,735 16,735
030 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION......................... 37,913 37,913
040 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................. 103,746 103,746
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 248,084 248,084
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
050 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION......................................... 873 873
060 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 14,330 14,330
070 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING......................................... 8,998 8,998
080 CANCELLED ACCOUNT ADJUSTMENT....................................... 0 0
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 24,201 24,201
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE......................... 272,285 272,285
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES.............................................. 2,089,326 2,089,326
020 MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS......................................... 112,992 112,992
030 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 406,101 406,101
040 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 71,564 71,564
050 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 364,862 364,862
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 3,044,845 3,044,845
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
060 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 78,824 78,824
070 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING......................................... 16,020 16,020
080 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERS MGMT (ARPC)............................. 19,496 19,496
090 OTHER PERS SUPPORT (DISABILITY COMP)............................... 6,489 6,489
100 AUDIOVISUAL........................................................ 808 808
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 121,637 121,637
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE......................... 3,166,482 3,166,482
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS..................................................... 680,206 680,206
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES........................................... 186,408 186,408
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................. 865,628 865,628
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS............................................... 112,651 112,651
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT..................................... 36,091 36,091
060 AVIATION ASSETS.................................................... 907,011 907,011
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................. 751,606 751,606
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS...................................... 60,043 60,043
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE...................................... 411,940 411,940
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT............................................ 995,423 995,423
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 688,189 688,189
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HQ'S.................................... 953,716 953,716
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 6,648,912 6,648,912
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
130 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION......................................... 11,806 11,806
140 REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............................................. 1,656 1,656
150 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 89,358 89,358
160 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS......................................... 39,513 39,513
170 MANPOWER MANAGEMENT................................................ 7,224 7,224
180 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING......................................... 310,143 310,143
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 459,700 459,700
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG............................... 7,108,612 7,108,612
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG
OPERATING FORCES
010 AIRCRAFT OPERATIONS................................................ 3,559,824 3,559,824
020 MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS......................................... 721,225 721,225
030 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 774,875 774,875
040 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 270,709 270,709
050 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 624,443 624,443
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 5,951,076 5,951,076
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
060 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 32,358 32,358
070 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING......................................... 32,021 32,021
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 64,379 64,379
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG................................ 6,015,455 6,015,455
MISCELLANEOUS APPROPRIATIONS
010 US COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES, DEFENSE.................. 13,516 13,516
040 ACQ WORKFORCE DEV FD............................................... 274,198 274,198
020 OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER AND CIVIC AID...................... 108,759 108,759
030 COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION....................................... 519,111 519,111
050 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY.................................... 335,921 335,921
060 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY.................................... 310,594 310,594
070 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE............................... 529,263 529,263
080 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE................................. 11,133 11,133
090 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION FORMERLY USED SITES...................... 237,543 237,543
TOTAL, MISCELLANEOUS APPROPRIATIONS................................ 2,340,038 2,340,038
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE..................................... 174,938,933 174,778,133
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4302. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4302. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
OPERATING FORCES
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS............................................... 2,758,162 2,758,162
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT..................................... 991,396 991,396
060 AVIATION ASSETS.................................................... 40,300 40,300
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................. 1,755,445 1,755,445
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS...................................... 307,244 307,244
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT............................................ 393,165 393,165
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 250,000 250,000
140 ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES.............................................. 12,524,137 12,524,137
150 COMMANDERS EMERGENCY RESPONSE PROGRAM.............................. 400,000 200,000
Program decrease................................................ [-200,000]
160 RESET.............................................................. 3,687,973 3,687,973
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 23,107,822 22,907,822
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
350 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION......................................... 3,238,310 3,238,310
360 CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES.......................................... 129,000 129,000
380 AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT.............................................. 78,022 78,022
420 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT............................................ 137,277 97,277
Transfer to OPA OCO Line 061 at SOUTHCOM request................ [-40,000]
430 OTHER SERVICE SUPPORT.............................................. 72,293 72,293
490 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 1,828,717 1,828,717
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES............................... 5,483,619 5,443,619
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY............................... 28,591,441 28,351,441
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS................................ 937,098 937,098
030 AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA & ENGINEERING SERVICES..................... 1,000 1,000
040 AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT.................................. 15,794 15,794
050 AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT................................................ 19,013 19,013
060 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE......................................... 201,912 201,912
070 AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.................................. 3,000 3,000
080 AVIATION LOGISTICS................................................. 44,150 44,150
090 MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.................................. 463,738 463,738
100 SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING................................. 24,774 24,774
110 SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............................................. 1,310,010 1,310,010
130 COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS.............................................. 42,965 42,965
160 WARFARE TACTICS.................................................... 25,970 25,970
170 OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY........................... 19,226 19,226
180 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES.............................................. 1,668,359 1,668,359
190 EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE.............................................. 7,954 7,954
250 IN-SERVICE WEAPONS SYSTEMS SUPPORT................................. 94,655 94,655
260 WEAPONS MAINTENANCE................................................ 303,087 303,087
290 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION......................... 3,218 3,218
300 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................. 143,442 143,442
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 5,329,365 5,329,365
MOBILIZATION
340 EXPEDITIONARY HEALTH SERVICES SYSTEMS.............................. 31,395 31,395
360 COAST GUARD SUPPORT................................................ 254,461 254,461
SUBTOTAL, MOBILIZATION............................................. 285,856 285,856
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
400 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING......................................... 50,903 50,903
SUBTOTAL, TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................. 50,903 50,903
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
480 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 1,377 1,377
490 EXTERNAL RELATIONS................................................. 487 487
510 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT......................... 6,022 6,022
520 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT............................................ 3,514 3,514
550 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION......................................... 184,864 184,864
580 ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT................................. 2,026 2,026
620 NAVAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICE........................................ 1,425 1,425
710 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 14,556 14,556
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 214,271 214,271
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY............................... 5,880,395 5,880,395
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATIONAL FORCES................................................. 1,921,258 1,921,258
020 FIELD LOGISTICS.................................................... 1,094,028 1,094,028
030 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 222,824 222,824
060 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................. 88,690 88,690
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 3,326,800 3,326,800
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
110 TRAINING SUPPORT................................................... 215,212 215,212
SUBTOTAL, TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................. 215,212 215,212
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
150 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION......................................... 512,627 512,627
190 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 11,701 11,701
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 524,328 524,328
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS....................... 4,066,340 4,066,340
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES.............................................. 1,494,144 1,494,144
020 COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES.......................................... 809,531 809,531
030 AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING (OJT, MAINTAIN SKILLS)..................... 13,095 13,095
040 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 1,403,238 1,403,238
050 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 155,954 155,954
060 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 342,226 342,226
070 GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING....................................... 15,108 15,108
080 OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS...................................... 271,390 271,390
100 TACTICAL INTEL AND OTHER SPECIAL ACTIVITIES........................ 25,400 25,400
120 SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS.............................................. 5,110 5,110
130 COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION SUPPORT........................ 52,173 52,173
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 4,587,369 4,587,369
MOBILIZATION
150 AIRLIFT OPERATIONS................................................. 3,187,211 3,187,211
160 MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS.......................................... 43,509 43,509
170 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 554,943 554,943
180 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 4,431 4,431
190 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 9,256 9,256
SUBTOTAL, MOBILIZATION............................................. 3,799,350 3,799,350
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
230 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 424 424
240 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 1,036 1,036
250 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING......................................... 10,923 10,923
260 FLIGHT TRAINING.................................................... 72 72
270 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................. 323 323
280 TRAINING SUPPORT................................................... 352 352
SUBTOTAL, TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................. 13,130 13,130
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
360 LOGISTICS OPERATIONS............................................... 100,429 100,429
390 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION................ 47,200 47,200
400 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 7,242 7,242
410 ADMINISTRATION..................................................... 1,552 1,552
420 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS......................................... 82,094 82,094
430 OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES....................................... 582,977 582,977
480 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 20,270 20,270
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 841,764 841,764
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE.......................... 9,241,613 9,241,613
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
OPERATING FORCES
010 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF.............................................. 2,000 2,000
020 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND......................................... 2,503,060 2,503,060
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 2,505,060 2,505,060
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
080 DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY...................................... 30,674 30,674
090 DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY................................. 69,803 69,803
110 DEFENSE HUMAN RESOURCES ACTIVITY................................... 3,334 3,334
120 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY................................. 152,925 152,925
140 DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY...................................... 102,322 102,322
160 DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY............................................. 10,823 10,823
180 DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION AGENCY................................ 2,200,000 2,200,000
220 DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EDUCATION ACTIVITY........................... 139,830 139,830
260 OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE................................. 87,805 87,805
280 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS................................................ 2,522,003 2,522,003
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 5,319,519 5,319,519
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE....................... 7,824,579 7,824,579
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES
OPERATING FORCES
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................. 78,600 78,600
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT..................................... 20,811 20,811
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................. 20,726 20,726
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT............................................ 34,400 34,400
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 154,537 154,537
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES........................... 154,537 154,537
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS................................ 24,834 24,834
020 INTERMEDIATE MAINTENANCE........................................... 300 300
040 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE......................................... 13,364 13,364
060 MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.................................. 8,213 8,213
080 SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............................................. 929 929
100 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES.............................................. 8,244 8,244
140 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................. 40 40
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 55,924 55,924
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES........................... 55,924 55,924
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATING FORCES................................................... 22,657 22,657
040 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................. 2,820 2,820
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 25,477 25,477
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE......................... 25,477 25,477
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES.............................................. 7,600 7,600
030 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................. 106,768 106,768
050 BASE SUPPORT....................................................... 6,250 6,250
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 120,618 120,618
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE......................... 120,618 120,618
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS..................................................... 38,485 38,485
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES........................................... 1,959 1,959
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................. 20,076 20,076
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS............................................... 2,028 2,028
060 AVIATION ASSETS.................................................... 183,811 183,811
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................. 43,780 43,780
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT............................................ 70,237 70,237
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HQ'S.................................... 20,072 20,072
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 380,448 380,448
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
160 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS......................................... 2,000 2,000
SUBTOTAL, ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................. 2,000 2,000
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG............................... 382,448 382,448
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG
OPERATING FORCES
020 MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS......................................... 19,975 19,975
SUBTOTAL, OPERATING FORCES......................................... 19,975 19,975
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG................................ 19,975 19,975
AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES FUND
MINISTRY OF DEFENSE
010 SUSTAINMENT........................................................ 2,523,825 2,523,825
020 INFRASTRUCTURE..................................................... 190,000 190,000
030 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION....................................... 241,521 241,521
040 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS............................................ 758,380 758,380
SUBTOTAL, MINISTRY OF DEFENSE...................................... 3,713,726 3,713,726
MINISTRY OF INTERIOR
050 SUSTAINMENT........................................................ 1,305,950 1,305,950
060 INFRASTRUCTURE..................................................... 50,000 50,000
070 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION....................................... 84,859 84,859
080 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS............................................ 569,868 569,868
SUBTOTAL, MINISTRY OF INTERIOR..................................... 2,010,677 2,010,677
RELATED ACTIVITIES
090 SUSTAINMENT........................................................ 18,325 18,325
100 INFRASTRUCTUE...................................................... 1,200 1,200
110 EQUIPMENT & TRANSPORTATION......................................... 1,239 1,239
120 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS............................................ 4,000 4,000
SUBTOTAL, RELATED ACTIVITIES....................................... 24,764 24,764
TOTAL, AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES FUND............................ 5,749,167 5,749,167
AFGHANISTAN INFRASTRUCTURE FUND
010 POWER.............................................................. 400,000 350,000
Program decrease................................................ [-50,000]
TOTAL, AFGHANISTAN INFRASTRUCTURE FUND............................. 400,000 350,000
TOTAL, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE..................................... 62,512,514 62,222,514
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL
SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY PERSONNEL...................... 135,111,799 135,117,799
BAH for Full-time Guard Transition to [6,000]
Active Duty..........................
TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL............. 135,111,799 135,117,799
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4402. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4402. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In
Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY PERSONNEL...................... 14,060,094 14,060,094
TOTAL, MILITARY PERSONNEL............. 14,060,094 14,060,094
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY
010 PREPOSITIONED WAR RESERVE STOCKS... 60,037 60,037
TOTAL, WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY.. 60,037 60,037
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR FORCE
010 C-17 CLS ENGINE REPAIR............. 0 0
020 TRANSPORTATION FALLEN HEROES....... 0 0
040 SUPPLIES AND MATERIALS (MEDICAL/ 45,452 45,452
DENTAL)...........................
TOTAL, WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR 45,452 45,452
FORCE.............................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-WIDE
010 DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY (DLA)..... 39,135 39,135
TOTAL, WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 39,135 39,135
DEFENSE-WIDE......................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DECA
010 WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DECA......... 1,371,560 1,371,560
TOTAL, WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DECA.. 1,371,560 1,371,560
NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND
010 T-AKE.............................. 0 0
020 MPF MLP............................ 38,000 38,000
030 POST DELIVERY AND OUTFITTING....... 39,386 39,386
040 NATIONAL DEF SEALIFT VESSEL........ 0 0
050 LG MED SPD RO/RO MAINTENANCE....... 128,819 128,819
060 DOD MOBILIZATION ALTERATIONS....... 26,598 26,598
070 TAH MAINTENANCE.................... 29,199 29,199
080 RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT........... 42,811 42,811
090 READY RESERVE FORCE................ 303,323 303,323
100 MARAD SHIP FINANCING GUARANTEE 0 0
PROGRAM...........................
TOTAL, NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT 608,136 608,136
FUND..............................
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
DHP, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE
010 IN-HOUSE CARE...................... 8,625,507 8,625,507
020 PRIVATE SECTOR CARE................ 16,148,263 16,148,263
030 CONSOLIDATED HEALTH SUPPORT........ 2,309,185 2,309,185
040 INFORMATION MANAGEMENT............. 1,465,328 1,465,328
050 MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES.............. 332,121 332,121
060 EDUCATION AND TRAINING............. 722,081 722,081
070 BASE OPERATIONS/COMMUNICATIONS..... 1,746,794 1,746,794
070A UNDISTRIBUTED...................... 452,000
Restore DOD assumed Savings for [452,000]
TRICARE Proposals...............
SUBTOTAL, DHP, OPERATION & 31,349,279 31,801,279
MAINTENANCE.......................
DHP, RDT&E
080 DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM............. 672,977 672,977
SUBTOTAL, DHP, RDT&E............... 672,977 672,977
DHP, PROCUREMENT
090 DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM............. 506,462 506,462
SUBTOTAL, DHP, PROCUREMENT
TOTAL, DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM...... 32,528,718 32,980,718
CHEM AGENTS & MUNITIONS DESTRUCTION
001 OPERATION & MAINTENANCE............ 635,843 635,843
002 RDT&E.............................. 647,351 647,351
003 PROCUREMENT........................ 18,592 18,592
TOTAL, CHEM AGENTS & MUNITIONS 1,301,786 1,301,786
DESTRUCTION.......................
DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG
ACTIVITIES, DEF
010 DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG 889,545 863,645
ACTIVITIES, DEF...................
Transfer to Demand Reduction [-25,900]
Program.........................
020 DRUG DEMAND REDUCTION PROGRAM...... 109,818 135,718
Expanded drug testing........... [25,900]
TOTAL, DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG 999,363 999,363
ACTIVITIES, DEF...................
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
010 OPERATION & MAINTENANCE............ 272,821 331,921
DoD IG growth plan.............. [59,100]
020 RDT&E.............................. 0 0
030 PROCUREMENT........................ 1,000 1,000
TOTAL, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR 273,821 332,921
GENERAL...........................
TOTAL, OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS........ 37,228,008 37,739,108
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4502. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4502. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In
Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY
010 PREPOSITIONED WAR RESERVE 42,600 42,600
STOCKS........................
TOTAL, WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 42,600 42,600
ARMY..........................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR FORCE
010 C-17 CLS ENGINE REPAIR......... 230,400 230,400
020 TRANSPORTATION FALLEN HEROES... 10,000 10,000
TOTAL, WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 240,400 240,400
AIR FORCE.....................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-
WIDE
010 DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY (DLA). 220,364 220,364
TOTAL, WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 220,364 220,364
DEFENSE-WIDE..................
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
DHP, OPERATION & MAINTENANCE
010 IN-HOUSE CARE.................. 483,326 483,326
020 PRIVATE SECTOR CARE............ 376,982 376,982
030 CONSOLIDATED HEALTH SUPPORT.... 111,675 111,675
040 INFORMATION MANAGEMENT......... 4,773 4,773
050 MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES.......... 660 660
060 EDUCATION AND TRAINING......... 15,370 15,370
070 BASE OPERATIONS/COMMUNICATIONS. 1,112 1,112
SUBTOTAL, DHP, OPERATION &
MAINTENANCE
TOTAL, DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.. 993,898 993,898
DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG
ACTIVITIES, DEF
010 DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG 469,025 469,025
ACTIVITIES, DEF...............
TOTAL, DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR- 469,025 469,025
DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEF..........
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
010 OPERATION & MAINTENANCE........ 10,766 10,766
TOTAL, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR 10,766 10,766
GENERAL.......................
TOTAL, OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS.... 1,977,053 1,977,053
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State or Country and Budget Senate
Account Installation Project Title Request Agreement
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ARMY Milcon .......................
Alaska
ARMY Fort Wainwright Modified Record Fire Range. 10,400 10,400
ARMY Joint Base Elmendorf- Modified Record Fire Range. 7,900 7,900
Richardson
California
ARMY Concord Lightning Protection System 5,800 5,800
ARMY Concord Engineering/Housing 3,100 3,100
Maintenance Shop.
Colorado
ARMY Fort Carson, Colorado Digital Multipurpose 18,000 18,000
Training Range.
District of Columbia
ARMY Fort McNair Vehicle Storage Building, 7,200 7,200
Installation.
Georgia
ARMY Fort Benning Ground Source Heat Transfer 16,000 16,000
System.
ARMY Fort Gordon Modified Record Fire Range. 4,000 4,000
ARMY Fort Gordon Multipurpose Machine Gun 7,100 7,100
Range.
ARMY Fort Gordon Ground Source Heat Transfer 12,200 12,200
System.
ARMY Fort Stewart, Georgia Digital Multipurpose 22,000 22,000
Training Range.
ARMY Fort Stewart, Georgia Automated Combat Pistol 3,650 3,650
Qual Crse.
ARMY Fort Stewart, Georgia Unmanned Aerial Vehicle 24,000 24,000
Complex.
Hawaii
ARMY Pohakuloa Training Area Automated Infantry Platoon 29,000 29,000
Battle Course.
ARMY Schofield Barracks Barracks................... 41,000 41,000
ARMY Schofield Barracks Barracks................... 55,000 55,000
ARMY Wheeler Army Air Field Combat Aviation Brigade 85,000 85,000
Barracks.
Kansas
ARMY Fort Riley, Kansas Unmanned Aerial Vehicle 12,200 12,200
Complex.
Kentucky
ARMY Fort Campbell, Kentucky Battalion Headquarters 55,000 55,000
Complex.
ARMY Fort Campbell, Kentucky Live Fire Exercise 3,800 3,800
Shoothouse.
ARMY Fort Campbell, Kentucky Unmanned Aerial Vehicle 23,000 23,000
Complex.
ARMY Fort Knox Automated Infantry Squad 6,000 6,000
Battle Course.
Missouri
ARMY Fort Leonard Wood Trainee Barracks Complex 3, 58,000 58,000
Ph 2.
ARMY Fort Leonard Wood Vehicle Maintenance Shop... 39,000 39,000
ARMY Fort Leonard Wood Battalion Complex 26,000 26,000
Facilities.
New Jersey
ARMY Picatinny Arsenal Ballistic Evaluation Center 10,200 10,200
ARMY Joint Base McGuire-Dix- Flight Equipment Complex... 47,000 47,000
Lakehurst
New York
ARMY Fort Drum, New York Aircraft Maintenance Hangar 95,000 95,000
ARMY U.S. Military Academy Cadet Barracks............. 192,000 0
North Carolina
ARMY Fort Bragg Aerial Gunnery Range....... 42,000 42,000
ARMY Fort Bragg Infrastructure............. 30,000 0
ARMY Fort Bragg Unmanned Aerial Vehicle 26,000 26,000
Complex.
Oklahoma
ARMY Fort Sill Modified Record Fire Range. 4,900 4,900
South Carolina
ARMY Fort Jackson Trainee Barracks Complex 2, 24,000 24,000
Ph 2.
Texas
ARMY Corpus Christi Aircraft Component 13,200 13,200
Maintenance Shop.
ARMY Corpus Christi Aircraft Paint Shop........ 24,000 24,000
ARMY Fort Bliss Multipurpose Machine Gun 7,200 7,200
Range.
ARMY Fort Hood, Texas Modified Record Fire Range. 4,200 4,200
ARMY Fort Hood, Texas Training Aids Center....... 25,000 25,000
ARMY Fort Hood, Texas Unmanned Aerial Vehicle 22,000 22,000
Complex.
ARMY Joint Base San Antonio Barracks................... 21,000 21,000
Virginia
ARMY Arlington Cemetery Expansion 84,000 0
Millennium Site.
ARMY Fort Belvoir Secure Admin/Operations 94,000 94,000
Facility.
ARMY Fort Lee Adv Individual Training 81,000 81,000
Barracks Cplx, Ph2.
Washington
ARMY Yakima Convoy Live Fire Range..... 5,100 5,100
ARMY Joint Base Lewis- Battalion Complex.......... 73,000 73,000
McChord
ARMY Joint Base Lewis- Waste Water Treatment Plant 91,000 91,000
McChord
Italy
ARMY Camp Ederle Barracks................... 36,000 36,000
ARMY Vicenza Simulations Center......... 32,000 32,000
Japan
ARMY Okinawa Satellite Communications 78,000 78,000
Facility.
ARMY Sagami Vehicle Maintenance Shop... 18,000 18,000
Korea
ARMY Camp Humphreys Battalion Headquarters 45,000 45,000
Complex.
Worldwide Unspec
ARMY Unspecified Worldwide Minor Construction FY 13... 25,000 25,000
Locations
ARMY Unspecified Worldwide Host Nation Support FY 13.. 34,000 34,000
Locations
ARMY Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design FY13... 65,173 46,173
Locations
.........................
Milcon, A--SUBTOTAL 1,923,323 1,598,323
.......................
NAVY Milcon .......................
Arizona
NAVY Yuma Security Operations Complex 13,300 13,300
NAVY Yuma Combat Aircraft Loading 15,985 15,985
Apron.
California
NAVY Camp Pendleton, Comm. Information Systems 78,897 78,897
California Ops Complex.
NAVY Camp Pendleton, San Jacinto Road Extension. 5,074 5,074
California
NAVY Camp Pendleton, MV22 Aviation Simulator 4,139 4,139
California Building.
NAVY Ventura County BAMS Maintenance Training 14,843 12,790
Facility.
NAVY Miramar Hangar 5 Renovations & 27,897 27,897
Addition.
NAVY San Diego Entry Control Point (Gate 11,752 11,752
Five).
NAVY San Diego LCS Training Facility...... 59,436 59,436
NAVY Seal Beach Strategic Systems Weapons 30,594 30,594
Eval. Test Lab.
NAVY Twentynine Palms, Land Expansion Phase 2..... 47,270 47,270
California
NAVY Coronado Bachelor Quarters.......... 76,063 76,063
NAVY Coronado H-60S Simulator Training 2,478 2,478
Facility.
Florida
NAVY Jacksonville BAMS Mission Control 21,980 21,980
Complex.
Hawaii
NAVY Kaneohe Bay MV-22 Hangar and 82,630 82,630
Infrastructure.
NAVY Kaneohe Bay Aircraft Staging Area...... 14,680 14,680
Mississippi
NAVY Meridian Dining Facility............ 10,926 10,926
New Jersey
NAVY Earle Combat System Engineering 33,498 33,498
Building Addition.
North Carolina
NAVY Camp Lejeune, North Staff NCO Academy 28,986 28,986
Carolina Facilities.
NAVY Camp Lejeune, North Base Access and Road--Phase 40,904 40,904
Carolina 3.
NAVY Cherry Point Marine Marine Air Support Squadron 34,310 34,310
Corps Air Station Compound.
NAVY Cherry Point Marine Armory..................... 11,581 11,581
Corps Air Station
NAVY New River Personnel Administration 8,525 8,525
Center.
South Carolina
NAVY Beaufort Ground Support Equipment 9,465 9,465
Shop.
NAVY Beaufort Simulated LHD Flight Deck.. 12,887 12,887
NAVY Beaufort Recycling/Hazardous Waste 3,743 3,743
Facility.
NAVY Beaufort Aircraft Maintenance Hangar 42,010 42,010
NAVY Beaufort Airfield Security Upgrades. 13,675 13,675
NAVY Parris Island Front Gate ATFP 10,135 10,135
Improvements.
Virginia
NAVY Dahlgren Cruiser/Destroyer Upgrade 16,494 16,494
Training Facility.
NAVY Dahlgren Physical Fitness Center.... 11,734 11,734
NAVY Oceana Naval Air A School Barracks.......... 39,086 39,086
Station
NAVY Portsmouth Drydock 8 Electrical 32,706 32,706
Distribution Upgrade.
NAVY Quantico The Basic School Student 31,012 31,012
Quarters--Phase 7.
NAVY Quantico Infrastructure--Widen 14,826 14,826
Russell Road.
NAVY Quantico Weapons Training Battalion 12,876 12,876
Mess Hall.
NAVY Yorktown Regimental Headquarters.... 11,015 11,015
NAVY Yorktown Bachelor Enlisted Quarters. 18,422 18,422
NAVY Yorktown Motor Transportation 6,188 6,188
Facility.
NAVY Yorktown Supply Warehouse Facility.. 8,939 8,939
NAVY Yorktown Armory..................... 4,259 4,259
Washington
NAVY Whidbey Island EA-18G Flight Simulator 6,272 6,272
Facility.
NAVY Kitsap Explosives Handling Wharf 280,041 254,241
#2 (INC).
Bahrain Island
NAVY SW Asia Transient Quarters......... 41,529 41,529
NAVY SW Asia Combined Dining Facility... 9,819 9,819
Diego Garcia
NAVY Diego Garcia Communications 1,691 1,691
Infrastructure.
Greece
NAVY Souda Bay Aircraft Parking Apron 20,493 20,493
Expansion.
NAVY Souda Bay Intermodal Access Road..... 4,630 4,630
Guam
NAVY Joint Region Marianas North Ramp Parking 25,904 0
(Andersen AFB)--INC 2.
Japan
NAVY Iwakuni Maintenance Hangar 5,722 5,722
Improvements.
NAVY Iwakuni Vertical Take-Off and 7,416 7,416
Landing Pad North.
NAVY Okinawa Bachelor Quarters.......... 8,206 8,206
Romania
NAVY Deveselu, Romania AEGIS Ashore Missile 45,205 45,205
Defense Complex.
Spain
NAVY Rota General Purpose Warehouse.. 3,378 3,378
NAVY Rota High Explosive Magazine.... 13,837 13,837
Worldwide Unspec
NAVY Various Worldwide BAMS Operational Facilities 34,048 34,048
Locations
Djibouti
NAVY Camp Lemonier, Djibouti Containerized Living and 7,510 7,510
Work Units.
NAVY Camp Lemonier, Djibouti Galley Addition and 22,220 22,220
Warehouse.
NAVY Camp Lemonier, Djibouti Joint HQ/Joint Operations 42,730 42,730
Center Facility.
NAVY Camp Lemonier, Djibouti Fitness Center............. 26,960 26,960
Worldwide Unspec
NAVY Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 16,535 16,535
Locations Construction.
NAVY Unspecified Worldwide MCON Design Funds.......... 102,619 102,619
Locations
.........................
Milcon, N--SUBTOTAL 1,701,985 1,648,228
.......................
AF Milcon .......................
Arkansas
AF Little Rock AFB C-130J Fuel Systems 26,000 26,000
Maintenance Hangar.
AF Little Rock AFB C-130J Flight Simulator 4,178 4,178
Addition.
Florida
AF Tyndall AFB F-22 ADAL Hangar for Low 14,750 14,750
Observable/Composite.
Georgia
AF Fort Stewart, Georgia Air Support Operations 7,250 7,250
Center (ASOC).
AF Moody AFB HC-130J Simulator Facility. 8,500 8,500
Nebraska
AF Offutt AFB US STRATCOM Replacement 161,000 128,000
Facility, Incr 2.
New Mexico
AF Holloman AFB MQ-9 Maintenance Hangar.... 25,000 25,000
North Dakota
AF Minot AFB B-52 Add/Alter Munitions 4,600 4,600
AGE Facility.
Texas
AF Joint Base San Antonio Dormitory (144 Rm)......... 18,000 18,000
Utah
AF Hill AFB F-35 ADAL Hangar 45W/AMU... 7,250 7,250
AF Hill AFB F-35 Modular Storage 2,280 2,280
Magazines.
AF Hill AFB F-35 ADAL Building 118 for 4,000 4,000
Flight Simulator.
Greenland
AF Thule Ab Dormitory (48 PN).......... 24,500 24,500
Italy
AF Aviano Ab F-16 Mission Training 9,400 9,400
Center.
Worldwide Unspec
AF Unspecified Worldwide Transient Contingency 17,625 0
Locations Dormitory--100 Rm.
AF Unspecified Worldwide Transient Aircraft Hangars. 15,032 0
Locations
AF Unspecified Worldwide Sanitary Sewer Lift/Pump 2,000 2,000
Locations Station.
AF Various Worldwide Unspecified Minor 18,200 18,200
Locations Construction.
AF Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 18,635 18,635
Locations
.........................
Milcon, AF--SUBTOTAL 388,200 322,543
.......................
DEF-WIDE Milcon .......................
Belgium
DEFW Brussels NATO Headquarters Facility. 26,969 26,969
Worldwide Unspec
DEFW Unspecified Worldwide Energy Conservation 150,000 150,000
Locations Investment Program.
DEFW Unspecified Worldwide Contingency Construction... 10,000 10,000
Locations
Texas
DFAS Red River Army Depot DFAS Facility.............. 16,715 16,715
Illinois
DISA Scott AFB DISA Facility Upgrades..... 84,111 84,111
Germany
DISA Stuttgart-Patch DISA Europe Facility 2,413 2,413
Barracks Upgrades.
Arizona
DLA Yuma Truck Unload Facility...... 1,300 1,300
California
DLA Def Fuel Support Point-- Replace Fuel Pier.......... 91,563 91,563
San Diego
DLA Edwards Air Force Base Replace Fuel Storage....... 27,500 27,500
Delaware
DLA Dover AFB Replace Truck Off-Load 2,000 2,000
Facility.
Florida
DLA Hurlburt Field Construct Fuel Storage 16,000 16,000
Facility.
Indiana
DLA Grissom ARB Replace Hydrant Fuel System 26,800 26,800
Louisiana
DLA Barksdale AFB Upgrade Pumphouse.......... 11,700 11,700
North Carolina
DLA Seymour Johnson AFB Replace Pipeline........... 1,850 1,850
Pennsylvania
DLA Def Dist Depot New Replace Sewage Treatment 6,300 6,300
Cumberland Plant.
DLA Def Dist Depot New Replace Communications 6,800 6,800
Cumberland Building.
DLA Def Dist Depot New Replace Reservoir.......... 4,300 4,300
Cumberland
Guam
DLA Andersen AFB Upgrade Fuel Pipeline...... 67,500 0
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
DLA Guantanamo Bay Replace Truck Load Facility 2,600 2,600
DLA Guantanamo Bay Replace Fuel Pier.......... 37,600 37,600
Kentucky
DODEA Fort Campbell, Kentucky Replace Barkley Elementary 41,767 41,767
School.
Germany
DODEA Vogelweh Replace Vogelweh Elementary 61,415 61,415
School.
DODEA Weisbaden Weisbaden High School 52,178 52,178
Addition.
Japan
DODEA Camp Zama Renovate Zama High School.. 13,273 13,273
DODEA Kadena AB Replace Elementary School.. 71,772 71,772
DODEA Kadena AB Replace Stearley Heights 71,773 71,773
Elementary School.
DODEA Zukeran Replace Zukeran Elementary 79,036 79,036
School.
DODEA Sasebo Replace Sasebo Elementary 35,733 35,733
School.
Korea
DODEA Osan AFB Replace Osan Elementary 42,692 42,692
School.
United Kingdom
DODEA RAF Feltwell Feltwell Elementary School 30,811 30,811
Addition.
DODEA Menwith Hill Station Replace Menwith Hill 46,488 46,488
Elementary/High School.
New York
MDA Fort Drum, New York IDT Complex................ 25,900 25,900
Romania
MDA Deveselu, Romania Aegis Ashore Missile 157,900 157,900
Defense System Complex.
Colorado
NSA Buckley Air Force Base Denver Power House......... 30,000 30,000
Maryland
NSA Fort Meade NSAW Recapitalize Building 25,000 25,000
#1/Site M Inc 1.
NSA Fort Meade High Performance Computing 300,521 225,521
Center Inc 2.
Utah
NSA Camp Williams IC CNCI Data Center 1 Inc 4 191,414 191,414
United Kingdom
NSA Menwith Hill Station MHS Utilities and Roads.... 3,795 3,795
California
SOCOM Coronado SOF Indoor Dynamic Shooting 31,170 31,170
Facility.
SOCOM Coronado SOF Close Quarters Combat/ 13,969 13,969
Dynamic Shoot Fac.
SOCOM Coronado SOF Mobile Comm Detachment 10,120 10,120
Support Facility.
Colorado
SOCOM Fort Carson, Colorado SOF Battalion Operations 56,673 56,673
Complex.
Florida
SOCOM Eglin AFB SOF AVFID Ops and 41,695 41,695
Maintenance Facilities.
SOCOM Macdill AFB SOF Joint Special Ops 34,409 34,409
University Fac (JSOU).
Hawaii
SOCOM Joint Base Pearl Harbor- SOF SDVT-1 Waterfront 24,289 24,289
Hickam Operations Facility.
Kentucky
SOCOM Fort Campbell, Kentucky SOF Landgraf Hangar 3,559 3,559
Extension.
SOCOM Fort Campbell, Kentucky SOF Ground Support 26,313 26,313
Battalion.
New Mexico
SOCOM Cannon AFB SOF AC-130J Combat Parking 22,062 22,062
Apron.
North Carolina
SOCOM Camp Lejeune, North SOF Marine Battalion 53,399 53,399
Carolina Company/Team Facilities.
SOCOM Camp Lejeune, North SOF Survival Evasion 5,465 5,465
Carolina Resist. Escape Tng Fac.
SOCOM Fort Bragg SOF Support Addition....... 3,875 3,875
SOCOM Fort Bragg SOF Battalion Operations 40,481 50,481
Facility.
SOCOM Fort Bragg SOF Civil Affairs Battalion 31,373 41,373
Complex.
SOCOM Fort Bragg SOF Sustainment Brigade 24,693 34,693
Complex.
Virginia
SOCOM Joint Exp Base Little SOF Combat Services Support 11,132 11,132
Creek--Story Facility--East.
Washington
SOCOM Fort Lewis SOF Military Working Dog 3,967 3,967
Kennel.
SOCOM Fort Lewis SOF Battalion Operations 46,553 46,553
Facility.
Conus Classified
SOCOM Classified Location SOF Parachute Training 6,477 6,477
Facility.
United Kingdom
SOCOM RAF Mildenhall SOF CV-22 Simulator 6,490 6,490
Facility.
California
TMA Twentynine Palms, Medical Clinic Replacement. 27,400 27,400
California
Colorado
TMA Pikes Peak High Altitude Medical 3,600 3,600
Research Lab.
Illinois
TMA Great Lakes Drug Laboratory Replacement 28,700 28,700
TMA Scott AFB Medical Logistics Warehouse 2,600 2,600
Maryland
TMA Annapolis Health Clinic Replacement.. 66,500 66,500
TMA Bethesda Naval Hospital Temporary Medical 26,600 26,600
Facilities.
TMA Bethesda Naval Hospital Base Installation Access/ 7,000 0
Appearance Plan.
TMA Bethesda Naval Hospital Electrical Capacity and 35,600 35,600
Cooling Towers.
TMA Fort Detrick USAMRIID Stage I, Incr 7... 19,000 19,000
Missouri
TMA Fort Leonard Wood Dental Clinic.............. 18,100 18,100
New Mexico
TMA Cannon AFB Medical/Dental Clinic 71,023 71,023
Replacement.
New York
TMA Fort Drum, New York Soldier Specialty Care 17,300 17,300
Clinic.
North Carolina
TMA Camp Lejeune, North Medical Clinic Replacement. 21,200 21,200
Carolina
TMA Seymour Johnson AFB Medical Clinic Replacement. 53,600 53,600
South Carolina
TMA Shaw AFB Medical Clinic Replacement. 57,200 57,200
Texas
TMA Fort Bliss Hospital Replacement Incr 4 207,400 107,400
TMA Joint Base San Antonio Ambulatory Care Center 80,700 80,700
Phase 3 Incr.
Virginia
TMA Norfolk Veterinary Facility 8,500 8,500
Replacement.
Germany
TMA Rhine Ordnance Barracks Medical Center Replacement 127,000 127,000
Incr 2.
Korea
TMA Kunsan Air Base Medical/Dental Clinic 13,000 13,000
Addition.
TMA Osan AFB Hospital Addition/ 34,600 34,600
Alteration.
Worldwide Unspec
DEFW Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 3,000 3,000
Locations Construction.
DLA Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 7,254 7,254
Locations Construction.
DODEA Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 4,091 4,091
Locations Construction.
NSA Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor Milcon... 3,000 3,000
Locations
SOCOM Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor Const.... 10,000 10,000
Locations
TJS Unspecified Worldwide Exercise Related Minor 6,440 6,440
Locations Construction.
TMA Unspecified Worldwide Minor Construction......... 5,000 5,000
Locations
DEFW Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 47,978 47,978
Locations
DIA Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 2,919 2,919
Locations
DLA Unspecified Worldwide Planning & Design.......... 5,000 5,000
Locations
DODEA Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 105,569 105,569
Locations
MDA Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 4,548 4,548
Locations
NSA Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 8,300 8,300
Locations
SOCOM Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 27,620 27,620
Locations
TMA Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 105,700 105,700
Locations
WHS Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 7,928 7,928
Locations
.........................
Milcon,Def-Wide--SUBTOTAL 3,654,623 3,435,123
Services MILCON--TOTAL 7,668,131 7,004,217
.......................
MCon,Army NG .......................
Alabama
ARMY, NG Fort McClellan Live Fire Shoot House...... 5,400 5,400
Arkansas
ARMY, NG Searcy Field Maintenance Shop..... 6,800 6,800
California
ARMY, NG Fort Irwin Maneuver Area Training & 25,000 25,000
Equipment Site Ph3.
Connecticut
ARMY, NG Camp Hartell Combined Support 32,000 32,000
Maintenance Shop.
Delaware
ARMY, NG Bethany Beach Regional Training Institute 5,500 5,500
Ph1.
Florida
ARMY, NG Camp Blanding Combined Arms Collective 9,000 9,000
Training Fac.
ARMY, NG Miramar Readiness Center........... 20,000 20,000
Hawaii
ARMY, NG Kapolei Army Aviation Support 28,000 28,000
Facility Ph1.
Idaho
ARMY, NG Orchard Training Area ORTC(Barracks)Ph2.......... 40,000 40,000
Indiana
ARMY, NG South Bend Armed Forces Reserve Center 21,000 21,000
Add/Alt.
ARMY, NG Terre Haute Field Maintenance Shop..... 9,000 9,000
Iowa
ARMY, NG Camp Dodge Urban Assault Course....... 3,000 3,000
Kansas
ARMY, NG Topeka Taxiway, Ramp & Hangar 9,500 9,500
Alterations.
Kentucky
ARMY, NG Frankfort Army Aviation Support 32,000 32,000
Facility.
Massachusetts
ARMY, NG Camp Edwards Unit Training Equipment 22,000 22,000
Site.
Minnesota
ARMY, NG Camp Ripley Scout Reconnaissance Range. 17,000 17,000
ARMY, NG St Paul Readiness Center........... 17,000 17,000
Missouri
ARMY, NG Fort Leonard Wood Regional Training Institute 18,000 18,000
ARMY, NG Kansas City Readiness Center Add/Alt... 1,900 1,900
ARMY, NG Monett Readiness Center Add/Alt... 820 820
ARMY, NG Perryville Readiness Center Add/Alt... 700 700
Montana
ARMY, NG Miles City Readiness Center........... 11,000 11,000
New Jersey
ARMY, NG Sea Girt Regional Training Institute 34,000 34,000
New York
ARMY, NG Stormville Combined Support Maint Shop 24,000 24,000
Ph1.
Ohio
ARMY, NG Chillicothe Field Maintenance Shop Add/ 3,100 3,100
Alt.
ARMY, NG Delaware Readiness Center........... 12,000 12,000
Oklahoma
ARMY, NG Camp Gruber Operations Readiness 25,000 25,000
Training Complex.
Utah
ARMY, NG Camp Williams BEQ Facility (Regional 15,000 15,000
Training Institute).
ARMY, NG Camp Williams Regional Training Institute 21,000 21,000
Ph2.
Washington
ARMY, NG Fort Lewis Readiness Center........... 35,000 35,000
West Virginia
ARMY, NG Logan Readiness Center........... 14,200 14,200
Wisconsin
ARMY, NG Wausau Field Maintenance Shop..... 10,000 10,000
Guam
ARMY, NG Barrigada JFHQ Ph4................... 8,500 8,500
Puerto Rico
ARMY, NG Camp Santiago Readiness Center........... 3,800 3,800
ARMY, NG Ceiba Refill Station Building.... 2,200 2,200
ARMY, NG Guaynabo Readiness Center (JFHQ).... 15,000 15,000
ARMY, NG Gurabo Readiness Center........... 14,700 14,700
Worldwide Unspec
ARMY, NG Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 15,057 15,057
Locations Construction.
ARMY, NG Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 26,622 26,622
Locations
.........................
MCon,Army NG--Subtotal 613,799 613,799
.......................
MCon,Air NG .......................
California
AF, NG Fresno Yosemite IAP ANG F-15 Conversion............ 11,000 11,000
Hawaii
AF, NG Joint Base Pearl Harbor- TFI--F-22 Combat Apron 6,500 6,500
Hickam Addition.
New Mexico
AF, NG Kirtland AFB Alter Target Intelligence 8,500 8,500
Facility.
Wyoming
AF, NG Cheyenne Map C-130 Flight Simulator 6,486 6,486
Training Facility.
Worldwide Unspec
AF, NG Various Worldwide Unspecified Minor 5,900 5,900
Locations Construction.
AF, NG Various Worldwide Planning and Design........ 4,000 4,000
Locations
.........................
MCon,Air NG--Subtotal 42,386 42,386
NG MILCON--TOTAL 656,185 656,185
.......................
MCon,A Res .......................
California
ARMY, RESERVE Fort Hunter Liggett ORTC....................... 64,000 64,000
ARMY, RESERVE Fort Hunter Liggett UPH Barracks............... 4,300 4,300
ARMY, RESERVE Tustin Army Reserve Center........ 27,000 27,000
Illinois
ARMY, RESERVE Fort Sheridan Army Reserve Center........ 28,000 28,000
Maryland
ARMY, RESERVE Aberdeen Proving Ground Army Reserve Center........ 21,000 21,000
ARMY, RESERVE Baltimore Add/Alt Army Reserve Center 10,000 10,000
Massachusetts
ARMY, RESERVE Devens Reserve Forces Automatic Record Fire Range 4,800 4,800
Training Area
ARMY, RESERVE Devens Reserve Forces Combat Pistol/MP Firearms 3,700 3,700
Training Area Qualification.
Nevada
ARMY, RESERVE Las Vegas Army Reserve Center/AMSA... 21,000 21,000
New Jersey
ARMY, RESERVE Joint Base McGuire-Dix- Automated Infantry Squad 7,400 7,400
Lakehurst Battle Course.
Washington
ARMY, RESERVE Joint Base Lewis- Army Reserve Center........ 40,000 40,000
McChord
Wisconsin
ARMY, RESERVE Fort McCoy Central Issue Facility..... 12,200 12,200
ARMY, RESERVE Fort McCoy Dining Facility............ 8,600 8,600
ARMY, RESERVE Fort McCoy ECS Tactical Equip. Maint. 27,000 27,000
Facility (TEMF).
Worldwide Unspec
ARMY, RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 10,895 10,895
Locations Construction.
ARMY, RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 15,951 15,951
Locations
.........................
MCon,A Res--Subtotal 305,846 305,846
Milcon, Naval Res .......................
Arizona
NAVY, RESERVE Yuma Reserve Training Facility-- 5,379 5,379
Yuma AZ.
Iowa
NAVY, RESERVE Fort Des Moines Joint Reserve Center--Des 19,162 19,162
Moines IA.
Louisiana
NAVY, RESERVE New Orleans Transient Quarters......... 7,187 7,187
New York
NAVY, RESERVE Brooklyn Vehicle Maint. Fac.-- 4,430 4,430
Brooklyn NY.
Texas
NAVY, RESERVE Fort Worth Commercial Vehicle 11,256 11,256
Inspection Site.
Worldwide Unspec
NAVY, RESERVE Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 2,118 2,118
Locations
.........................
Milcon, Naval Res--Subtotal 49,532 49,532
MCon,AF Res .......................
New York
AF, RESERVE Niagara Falls IAP Flight Simulator Facility.. 6,100 6,100
Worldwide Unspec
AF, RESERVE Various Worldwide Unspecified Minor 2,000 2,000
Locations Construction.
AF, RESERVE Various Worldwide Planning and Design........ 2,879 2,879
Locations
.........................
MCon,AF Res--Subtotal 10,979 10,979
Reserve Milcon--TOTAL 366,357 366,357
.......................
MILCON Major Accounts--TOTAL 8,690,673 8,026,759
.......................
.......................
Chem-Demil .......................
Colorado
Chem Demil Pueblo Depot Ammunition Demilitarization 36,000 36,000
Facility, Ph XIV.
Kentucky
Chem Demil Blue Grass Army Depot Ammunition Demilitarization 115,000 115,000
Ph XIII.
.........................
ChemDemil / NSIP--Total 151,000 151,000
.......................
NSIP .......................
Worldwide Unspec
NSIP NATO Security NATO Security Investment 254,163 254,163
Investment Program Program.
.........................
NATO Security Investment Program 254,163 254,163
.......................
Army Fam Housing .......................
Worldwide Unspec
FH Const,A Unspecified Worldwide Family Housing P&D......... 4,641 4,641
Locations
.........................
Army Fam Hsg Construction--Subtotal 4,641 4,641
Worldwide Unspec
FH Op&Dt,A Unspecified Worldwide Utilities Account.......... 88,112 88,112
Locations
FH Op&Dt,A Unspecified Worldwide Services Account........... 13,487 13,487
Locations
FH Op&Dt,A Unspecified Worldwide Management Account......... 56,970 56,970
Locations
FH Op&Dt,A Unspecified Worldwide Miscellaneous Account...... 620 620
Locations
FH Op&Dt,A Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings Account........ 31,785 31,785
Locations
FH Op&Dt,A Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................... 203,533 203,533
Locations
FH Op&Dt,A Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance of Real 109,534 109,534
Locations Property.
FH Op&Dt,A Unspecified Worldwide Privatization Support Costs 26,010 26,010
Locations
.........................
Army Fam Hsg O&M--Subtotal 530,051 530,051
Army Fam Hsg--TOTAL 534,692 534,692
Navy Fam Housing .......................
Worldwide Unspec
FH Const,N Unspecified Worldwide Improvements............... 97,655 97,655
Locations
FH Const,N Unspecified Worldwide Design..................... 4,527 4,527
Locations
.........................
Navy Fam Hsg Construction--Subtotal 102,182 102,182
Worldwide Unspec
FH Op&Dt,N Unspecified Worldwide Utilities Account.......... 80,860 80,860
Locations
FH Op&Dt,N Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings Account........ 17,697 17,697
Locations
FH Op&Dt,N Unspecified Worldwide Management Account......... 62,741 62,741
Locations
FH Op&Dt,N Unspecified Worldwide Miscellaneous Account...... 491 491
Locations
FH Op&Dt,N Unspecified Worldwide Services Account........... 19,615 19,615
Locations
FH Op&Dt,N Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................... 83,774 83,774
Locations
FH Op&Dt,N Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance of Real 85,254 85,254
Locations Property.
FH Op&Dt,N Unspecified Worldwide Privatization Support Costs 27,798 27,798
Locations
.........................
Navy Fam Hsg O&M--Subtotal 378,230 378,230
Navy Fam Hsg--TOTAL 480,412 480,412
AF Fam Housing .......................
Worldwide Unspec
FH Con,AF Unspecified Worldwide Improvements............... 79,571 79,571
Locations
FH Con,AF Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design........ 4,253 4,253
Locations
.........................
AF Fam Hsg Construction--Subtotal 83,824 83,824
Worldwide Unspec
FH Op&Dt,AF Unspecified Worldwide Utilities Account.......... 75,662 75,662
Locations
FH Op&Dt,AF Unspecified Worldwide Management Account......... 55,002 55,002
Locations
FH Op&Dt,AF Unspecified Worldwide Services Account........... 16,550 16,550
Locations
FH Op&Dt,AF Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings Account........ 37,878 37,878
Locations
FH Op&Dt,AF Unspecified Worldwide Miscellaneous Account...... 1,943 1,943
Locations
FH Op&Dt,AF Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................... 62,730 62,730
Locations
FH Op&Dt,AF Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance (RPMA RPMC).... 201,937 201,937
Locations
FH Op&Dt,AF Unspecified Worldwide Housing Privatization...... 46,127 46,127
Locations
.........................
AF Fam Hsg O&M--Subtotal 497,829 497,829
AF Fam Hsg--TOTAL 581,653 581,653
Def-Wide Fam Housing .......................
Worldwide Unspec
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Utilities Account.......... 283 283
Locations
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Utilities Account.......... 12 12
Locations
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings Account........ 4,660 4,660
Locations
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings Account........ 20 20
Locations
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Services Account........... 31 31
Locations
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Management Account......... 371 371
Locations
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings Account........ 66 66
Locations
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................... 35,333 35,333
Locations
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................... 10,822 10,822
Locations
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance of Real 567 567
Locations Property.
FH Op&Dt,D-W Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance of Real 73 73
Locations Property.
.........................
DefWide Fam Hsg O&M--Subtotal 52,238 52,238
DoD FH Imprv Fd .......................
Worldwide Unspec
DoD FH Imprv Fd Unspecified Worldwide Family Housing Improvement 1,786 1,786
Locations Fund.
.........................
DoD Fam Hsg Imprv Fd--Subtotal 1,786 1,786
FAM HSG--TOTAL 1,650,781 1,650,781
.......................
BRAC IV .......................
Worldwide Unspec
BRAC, A Base Realignment & Base Realignment & Closure. 79,893 79,893
Closure, Army
BRAC, N Base Realignment & Base Realignment & Closure. 146,951 146,951
Closure, Navy
BRAC, AF Base Realignment & Base Realignment & Closure. 122,552 122,552
Closure, AF
.........................
BRAC IV--TOTAL 349,396 349,396
.......................
2005 BRAC .......................
ARMY BRAC .......................
Worldwide Unspec
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-121: Fort Gillem, GA... 4,976 4,976
Locations
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-222: Fort McPherson, GA 6,772 6,772
Locations
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide Program Management Various 20,453 20,453
Locations Locations.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-223: Fort Monmouth, NJ. 9,989 9,989
Locations
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-36: Red River Army 1,385 1,385
Locations Depot.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-113: Fort Monroe, VA... 12,184 12,184
Locations
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-236: RC Transformation 557 557
Locations in CT.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-242: RC Transformation 172 172
Locations in NY.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-253: RC Transformation 100 100
Locations in PA.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-212: USAR Cmd & Cntrl-- 222 222
Locations New England.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide USA-167: USAR Command and 175 175
Locations Control--NE.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide IND-112: River Bank Army 22,431 22,431
Locations Ammo Plant, CA.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide IND-119: Newport Chemical 197 197
Locations Depot, IN.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide IND-106: Kansas Army 7,280 7,280
Locations Ammunition Plant, KS.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide IND-110: Mississippi Army 160 160
Locations Ammo Plant, MS.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide IND-122: Lone Star Army 11,379 11,379
Locations Ammo Plant, TX.
BRAC--Army Unspecified Worldwide MED-2: Walter Reed NMMC, 7,787 7,787
Locations Bethesda, MD.
.........................
BRAC--Army--Subtotal 106,219 106,219
NAVY BRAC .......................
Worldwide Unspec
BRAC--Navy Unspecified Worldwide DON-172: NWS Seal Beach, 2,129 2,129
Locations Concord, CA.
BRAC--Navy Unspecified Worldwide DON-138: NAS Brunswick, ME. 4,897 4,897
Locations
BRAC--Navy Unspecified Worldwide DON-157: MCSA Kansas City, 39 39
Locations MO.
BRAC--Navy Unspecified Worldwide DON-84: JRB Willow Grove & 189 189
Locations Cambria Reg AP.
BRAC--Navy Unspecified Worldwide DON-168: NS Newport, RI.... 1,742 1,742
Locations
BRAC--Navy Unspecified Worldwide DON-100: Planning, Design 5,038 5,038
Locations and Management.
BRAC--Navy Unspecified Worldwide DON-101: Various Locations. 4,176 4,176
Locations
.........................
BRAC--Navy--Subtotal 18,210 18,210
AF BRAC .......................
Worldwide Unspec
BRAC--Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Program Management Various 605 605
Locations Locations.
BRAC--Air Force Unspecified Worldwide MED-57: Brooks City Base, 326 326
Locations TX.
BRAC--Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Comm Add 3: Galena Fol, AK. 1,337 1,337
Locations
.........................
BRAC--Air Force--Subtotal 2,268 2,268
BRAC 2005--TOTAL 126,697 126,697
BRAC IV + BRAC 2005--TOTAL 476,093 476,093
.......................
MILCON GRAND TOTAL 11,222,710 10,558,796
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLVII--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
SEC. 4701. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4701. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS (In Thousands
of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2013 Senate
Program Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discretionary Summary By Appropriation
Energy And Water Development, And
Related Agencies
Appropriation Summary:
Energy Programs
Electricity delivery and energy 6,000 0
reliability........................
Atomic Energy Defense Activities
National nuclear security
administration:
Weapons activities................ 7,577,341 7,602,341
Defense nuclear nonproliferation.. 2,458,631 2,458,631
Naval reactors.................... 1,088,635 1,126,621
Office of the administrator....... 411,279 386,279
Total, National nuclear security 11,535,886 11,573,872
administration.........................
Environmental and other defense
activities:
Defense environmental cleanup..... 5,472,001 5,009,001
Other defense activities.......... 735,702 735,702
Total, Environmental & other defense 6,207,703 5,744,703
activities.............................
Total, Atomic Energy Defense Activities. 17,743,589 17,318,575
Total, Discretionary Funding............ 17,749,589 17,318,575
Electricity Delivery & Energy Reliability
Electricity Delivery & Energy
Reliability
Infrastructure security & energy 6,000 0
restoration..........................
Weapons Activities
Directed stockpile work
Life extension programs
B61 Life extension program.......... 369,000 369,000
W76 Life extension program.......... 174,931 174,931
Total, Life extension programs.......... 543,931 543,931
Stockpile systems
B61 Stockpile systems............... 72,364 72,364
W76 Stockpile systems............... 65,445 90,445
W78 Stockpile systems............... 139,207 139,207
W80 Stockpile systems............... 46,540 46,540
B83 Stockpile systems............... 57,947 57,947
W87 Stockpile systems............... 85,689 85,689
W88 Stockpile systems............... 123,217 123,217
Total, Stockpile systems................ 590,409 615,409
Weapons dismantlement and disposition
Operations and maintenance.......... 51,265 51,265
Stockpile services
Production support.................. 365,405 365,405
Research and development support.... 28,103 28,103
R&D certification and safety........ 191,632 191,632
Management, technology, and 175,844 175,844
production.........................
Plutonium sustainment............... 141,685 141,685
Total, Stockpile services............... 902,669 902,669
Total, Directed stockpile work.......... 2,088,274 2,113,274
Campaigns:
Science campaign
Advanced certification.............. 44,104 44,104
Primary assessment technologies..... 94,000 94,000
Dynamic materials properties........ 97,000 97,000
Advanced radiography................ 30,000 30,000
Secondary assessment technologies... 85,000 85,000
Total, Science campaign................. 350,104 350,104
Engineering campaign
Enhanced surety..................... 46,421 46,421
Weapon systems engineering 18,983 18,983
assessment technology..............
Nuclear survivability............... 21,788 21,788
Enhanced surveillance............... 63,379 63,379
Total, Engineering campaign............. 150,571 150,571
Inertial confinement fusion ignition
and high yield campaign
Diagnostics, cryogenics and 81,942 81,942
experimental support...............
Ignition............................ 84,172 84,172
Support of other stockpile programs. 14,817 14,817
Pulsed power inertial confinement 6,044 6,044
fusion.............................
Joint program in high energy density 8,334 8,334
laboratory plasmas.................
Facility operations and target 264,691 264,691
production.........................
Total, Inertial confinement fusion and 460,000 460,000
high yield campaign....................
Advanced simulation and computing 600,000 600,000
campaign.............................
Readiness Campaign
Nonnuclear readiness................ 64,681 64,681
Tritium readiness................... 65,414 65,414
Total, Readiness campaign............... 130,095 130,095
Total, Campaigns........................ 1,690,770 1,690,770
Readiness in technical base and
facilities (RTBF)
Operations of facilities
Kansas City Plant................. 163,602 163,602
Lawrence Livermore National 89,048 89,048
Laboratory.......................
Los Alamos National Laboratory.... 335,978 335,978
Nevada National Security Site..... 115,697 115,697
Pantex............................ 172,020 172,020
Sandia National Laboratory........ 167,384 167,384
Savannah River Site............... 120,577 120,577
Y-12 National security complex.... 255,097 255,097
Total, Operations of facilities......... 1,419,403 1,419,403
Science, technology and engineering 166,945 166,945
capability support...................
Nuclear operations capability support. 203,346 203,346
Subtotal, Readiness in technical base 1,789,694 1,789,694
and facilities.........................
Construction:
13-D-301 Electrical infrastructure 23,000 23,000
upgrades, LANL/LLNL................
12-D-301 TRU waste facilities, LANL. 24,204 24,204
11-D-801 TA-55 Reinvestment project, 8,889 8,889
LANL...............................
10-D-501 Nuclear facilities risk 17,909 17,909
reduction Y-12 National security
complex, Oakridge, TN..............
09-D-404 Test capabilities 11,332 11,332
revitalization II, Sandia National
Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM......
08-D-802 High explosive pressing 24,800 24,800
facility Pantex Plant, Amarillo, TX
06-D-141 PED/Construction, UPFY-12, 340,000 0
Oak Ridge, TN......................
06-D-141 PED/Construction, UPFY-12, 0 340,000
Phase I, Oak Ridge, TN.............
Total, Construction..................... 450,134 450,134
Total, Readiness in technical base and 2,239,828 2,239,828
facilities.............................
Secure transportation asset
Operations and equipment.............. 114,965 114,965
Program direction..................... 104,396 104,396
Total, Secure transportation asset...... 219,361 219,361
Nuclear counterterrorism incident 247,552 247,552
response...............................
Site stewardship
Operations and maintenance............ 90,001 90,001
Total, Site stewardship................. 90,001 90,001
Defense nuclear security
Operations and maintenance............ 643,285 643,285
NNSA CIO activities..................... 155,022 155,022
Legacy contractor pensions.............. 185,000 185,000
National security applications.......... 18,248 18,248
Subtotal, Weapons activities............ 7,577,341 7,602,341
Total, Weapons Activities............... 7,577,341 7,602,341
Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation
Nonproliferation and verification R&D
Operations and maintenance............ 398,186 398,186
Domestic Enrichment R&D.............. 150,000 150,000
Subtotal, Nonproliferation and 548,186 548,186
verification R&D.......................
Nonproliferation and international 150,119 150,119
security...............................
International nuclear materials 311,000 311,000
protection and cooperation.............
Fissile materials disposition
U.S. surplus fissile materials
disposition
Operations and maintenance
U.S. plutonium disposition........ 498,979 498,979
U.S. uranium disposition.......... 29,736 29,736
Total, Operations and maintenance....... 528,715 528,715
Construction:
99-D-143 Mixed oxide fuel 388,802 388,802
fabrication facility, Savannah
River, SC........................
Total, Construction..................... 388,802 388,802
Total, U.S. surplus fissile materials 917,517 917,517
disposition............................
Russian surplus fissile materials 3,788 3,788
disposition..........................
Total, Fissile materials disposition.... 921,305 921,305
Global threat reduction initiative...... 466,021 466,021
Legacy contractor pensions.............. 62,000 62,000
Subtotal, Defense Nuclear 2,458,631 2,458,631
Nonproliferation.......................
Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation. 2,458,631 2,458,631
Naval Reactors
Naval reactors development.............. 418,072 418,072
Ohio replacement reactor systems 89,700 127,686
development............................
S8G Prototype refueling................. 121,100 121,100
Naval reactors operations and 366,961 366,961
infrastructure.........................
Construction:
13-D-905 Remote-handled low-level 8,890 8,890
waste facility, INL..................
13-D-904 KS Radiological work and 2,000 2,000
storage building, KSO................
13-D-903, KS Prototype Staff Building, 14,000 14,000
KSO..................................
10-D-903, Security upgrades, KAPL..... 19,000 19,000
08-D-190 Expended Core Facility M-290 5,700 5,700
recovering discharge station,Naval
Reactor Facility, ID.................
Total, Construction..................... 49,590 49,590
Program direction....................... 43,212 43,212
Subtotal, Naval Reactors................ 1,088,635 1,126,621
Total, Naval Reactors................... 1,088,635 1,126,621
Office Of The Administrator
Office of the administrator............. 411,279 386,279
Total, Office Of The Administrator...... 411,279 386,279
Defense Environmental Cleanup
Closure sites:
Closure sites administration.......... 1,990 1,990
Hanford site:
River corridor and other cleanup 389,347 389,347
operations...........................
Central plateau remediation........... 558,820 558,820
Richland community and regulatory 15,156 15,156
support..............................
Total, Hanford site..................... 963,323 963,323
Idaho National Laboratory:
Idaho cleanup and waste disposition... 396,607 396,607
Idaho community and regulatory support 3,000 3,000
Total, Idaho National Laboratory........ 399,607 399,607
NNSA sites
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory 1,484 1,484
Nuclear facility D&D Separations 24,000 24,000
Process Research Unit................
Nevada................................ 64,641 64,641
Sandia National Laboratories.......... 5,000 5,000
Los Alamos National Laboratory........ 239,143 239,143
Total, NNSA sites and Nevada off-sites.. 334,268 334,268
Oak Ridge Reservation:
Building 3019......................... 67,525 67,525
OR cleanup and disposition............ 109,470 109,470
OR reservation community and 4,500 4,500
regulatory support...................
Total, Oak Ridge Reservation............ 181,495 181,495
Office of River Protection:
Waste treatment and immobilization
plant
01-D-416 A-E/ORP-0060/Major 690,000 690,000
construction.......................
Tank farm activities
Rad liquid tank waste stabilization 482,113 482,113
and disposition....................
Total, Office of River protection....... 1,172,113 1,172,113
Savannah River sites:
Savannah River risk management 444,089 444,089
operations...........................
SR community and regulatory support... 16,584 16,584
Radioactive liquid tank waste:
Radioactive liquid tank waste 698,294 698,294
stabilization and disposition......
Construction:
05-D-405 Salt waste processing 22,549 22,549
facility, Savannah River.........
Total, Radioactive liquid tank waste.... 720,843 720,843
Total, Savannah River site.............. 1,181,516 1,181,516
Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
Waste isolation pilot plant........... 198,010 198,010
Total, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant...... 198,010 198,010
Program direction....................... 323,504 323,504
Program support......................... 18,279 18,279
Safeguards and Security:
Oak Ridge Reservation................. 18,817 18,817
Paducah............................... 8,909 8,909
Portsmouth............................ 8,578 8,578
Richland/Hanford Site................. 71,746 71,746
Savannah River Site................... 121,977 121,977
Waste Isolation Pilot Project......... 4,977 4,977
West Valley........................... 2,015 2,015
Total, Safeguards and Security.......... 237,019 237,019
Technology development.................. 20,000 20,000
Uranium enrichment D&D fund contribution 463,000 0
Subtotal, Defense environmental cleanup. 5,494,124 5,031,124
Adjustments
Use of prior year balances........... -12,123 -12,123
Use of unobligated balances.......... -10,000 -10,000
Total, Adjustments...................... -22,123 -22,123
Total, Defense Environmental Cleanup.... 5,472,001 5,009,001
Other Defense Activities
Health, safety and security
Health, safety and security........... 139,325 139,325
Program direction..................... 106,175 106,175
Total, Health, safety and security...... 245,500 245,500
Specialized security activities......... 188,619 188,619
Office of Legacy Management
Legacy management..................... 164,477 164,477
Program direction..................... 13,469 13,469
Total, Office of Legacy Management...... 177,946 177,946
Defense-related activities
Defense related administrative support.. 118,836 118,836
Office of hearings and appeals.......... 4,801 4,801
Subtotal, Other defense activities...... 735,702 735,702
Total, Other Defense Activities......... 735,702 735,702
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Calendar No. 419
112th CONGRESS
2d Session
S. 3254
[Report No. 112-173]
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2013 for military
activities of the Department of Defense, for military construction, and
for defense activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe
military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other
purposes.
_______________________________________________________________________
June 4, 2012
Read twice and placed on the calendar