[Congressional Bills 115th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H.R. 2810 Placed on Calendar Senate (PCS)]

<DOC>





                                                       Calendar No. 175
115th CONGRESS
  1st Session
                                H. R. 2810


_______________________________________________________________________


                   IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

                             July 18, 2017

            Received; read twice and placed on the calendar

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 AN ACT


 
     To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2018 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 2018''.

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.
            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. Report on acceleration of Increment 2 of the Warfighter 
                            Information Network-Tactical.
                       Subtitle C--Navy Programs

Sec. 121. Aircraft carriers.
Sec. 122. Procurement authority for icebreaker vessels.
Sec. 123. Limitation on availability of funds for procurement of 
                            icebreaker vessels.
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. Limitation on availability of funds for Arleigh Burke class 
                            destroyer.
Sec. 127. Extensions of authorities relating to construction of certain 
                            vessels.
Sec. 128. Multiyear procurement authority for V-22 Osprey aircraft.
Sec. 129. Limitation on availability of funds for the enhanced multi 
                            mission parachute system.
                     Subtitle D--Air Force Programs

Sec. 131. Streamlining acquisition of intercontinental ballistic 
                            missile security capability.
Sec. 132. Limitation on selection of single contractor for C-130H 
                            avionics modernization program increment 2.
Sec. 133. Limitation on availability of funds for EC-130H Compass Call 
                            recapitalization program.
Sec. 134. Cost-benefit analysis of upgrades to MQ-9 Reaper aircraft.
Sec. 135. Increase in amounts for enhancing intelligence, surveillance, 
                            and reconnaissance capability.
       Subtitle E--Defense-wide, Joint, and Multiservice Matters

Sec. 141. Authority for procurement of economic order quantities for 
                            the F-35 aircraft program.
Sec. 142. Limitation on demilitarization of certain cluster munitions.
Sec. 143. Reinstatement of requirement to preserve certain C-5 
                            aircraft.
Sec. 144. Requirement that certain aircraft and unmanned aerial 
                            vehicles use specified standard data link.
         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. Cost controls for presidential aircraft recapitalization 
                            program.
Sec. 212. Capital investment authority.
Sec. 213. Modification of authority to award prizes for advanced 
                            technology achievements.
Sec. 214. Critical technologies for Columbia class submarine.
Sec. 215. Joint Hypersonics Transition Office.
Sec. 216. Hypersonic airbreathing weapons capabilities.
Sec. 217. Limitation on availability of funds for MQ-25 unmanned air 
                            system.
Sec. 218. Limitation on availability of funds for contract writing 
                            systems.
Sec. 219. Strategy for use of virtual training technology.
Sec. 220. Increase in funding for electronics and electronic devices of 
                            the Army.
Sec. 221. Increase in funding for Historically Black Colleges and 
                            Universities and Minority Institutions.
Sec. 222. Establishment and expansion of Hacking for Defense Program.
Sec. 223. Pilot program on innovative technologies.
Sec. 224. STEM(MM) jobs action plan.
Sec. 225. Appropriate use of authority for prototype projects.
Sec. 226. Jet noise reduction program of the Navy.
Sec. 227. Process for coordination of studies and analysis research of 
                            the Department of Defense.
                  TITLE III--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE

              Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations

Sec. 301. Authorization of appropriations.
                   Subtitle B--Energy and Environment

Sec. 311. Codification of and improvements to Department of Defense 
                            clearinghouse to coordinate Department 
                            review of applications for certain projects 
                            that may have adverse impact on military 
                            operations and readiness.
Sec. 312. Energy performance goals and master plan.
Sec. 313. Payment to Environmental Protection Agency of stipulated 
                            penalty in connection with Umatilla 
                            Chemical Depot, Oregon.
Sec. 314. Payment to Environmental Protection Agency of stipulated 
                            penalty in connection with Longhorn Army 
                            Ammunition Plant, Texas.
Sec. 315. Department of Defense cleanup and removal of petroleum, oil, 
                            and lubricant associated with the Prinz 
                            Eugen.
                 Subtitle C--Logistics and Sustainment

Sec. 321. Reauthorization of multi-trades demonstration project.
Sec. 322. Guidance regarding use of organic industrial base.
Sec. 323. Prohibition on application of hiring freezes at Department of 
                            Defense industrial base facilities.
                          Subtitle D--Reports

Sec. 331. Quarterly reports on personnel and unit readiness.
Sec. 332. Biennial report on core depot-level maintenance and repair 
                            capability.
Sec. 333. Annual report on personnel, training, and equipment needs of 
                            non-federalized National Guard.
Sec. 334. Annual report on military working dogs used by the Department 
                            of Defense.
Sec. 335. Annual briefings on Army explosive ordnance disposal.
Sec. 336. Report on effects of climate change on Department of Defense.
Sec. 337. Updated guidance regarding biennial core report.
Sec. 338. Report on arctic readiness.
Sec. 339. Report on cyber capability and readiness shortfalls.
Sec. 340. Report on effects of increased automation of defense 
                            industrial base on manufacturing workforce.
Sec. 340A. Comptroller General review of Department of Defense cost 
                            models used in making personnel decisions.
                       Subtitle E--Other Matters

Sec. 341. Explosive safety board.
Sec. 342. Department of Defense support for military service memorials 
                            and museums that highlight the role of 
                            women in the Armed Forces.
Sec. 343. Limitation on availability of funds for advanced skills 
                            management software system of the Navy.
Sec. 344. Cost-benefit analysis of uniform specifications for Afghan 
                            military or security forces.
Sec. 345. Increase in funding for civil military programs.
Sec. 346. Report on maternity uniforms.
Sec. 347. Status of compliance with process for communicating 
                            availability of surplus ammunition.
Sec. 348. Increase in funding for National Guard counter-drug programs.
              TITLE IV--MILITARY PERSONNEL AUTHORIZATIONS

                       Subtitle A--Active Forces

Sec. 401. End strengths for active forces.
Sec. 402. Revisions in permanent active duty end strength minimum 
                            levels.
                       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 2018 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--Regular and Reserve Component Management

Sec. 501. Modification of requirements relating to conversion of 
                            certain military technician (dual status) 
                            positions to civilian positions.
Sec. 502. Pilot program on use of retired senior enlisted members of 
                            the Army National Guard as Army National 
                            Guard recruiters.
Sec. 503. Equal treatment of orders to serve on active duty under 
                            section 12304a and 12304b of title 10, 
                            United States Code.
Sec. 504. Direct employment pilot program for members of the National 
                            Guard and Reserve.
Sec. 505. Designating the Explosive Ordnance Disposal Corps as a basic 
                            branch of the Army.
  Subtitle B--General Service Authorities and Correction of Military 
                                Records

Sec. 511. Consideration of additional medical evidence by Boards for 
                            the Correction of Military Records and 
                            liberal consideration of evidence relating 
                            to post-traumatic stress disorder or 
                            traumatic brain injury.
Sec. 512. Public availability of information related to disposition of 
                            claims regarding discharge or release of 
                            members of the Armed Forces when the claims 
                            involve sexual assault.
Sec. 513. Pilot program on use of video teleconferencing technology by 
                            boards for the correction of military 
                            records and discharge review boards.
Sec. 514. Inclusion of specific email address block on Certificate of 
                            Release or Discharge from Active Duty (DD 
                            Form 214).
Sec. 515. Provision of information on naturalization through military 
                            service.
Sec. 516. Training requirements.
Sec. 517. Confidential review of characterization of terms of discharge 
                            of members who are survivors of sex-related 
                            offenses.
          Subtitle C--Military Justice and Other Legal Issues

Sec. 521. Clarifying amendments related to the Uniform Code of Military 
                            Justice reform by the Military Justice Act 
                            of 2016.
Sec. 522. Minimum confinement period required for conviction of certain 
                            sex-related offenses committed by members 
                            of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 523. Prohibition on wrongful broadcast or distribution of intimate 
                            visual images.
Sec. 524. Information for the Special Victims' Counsel or Victims' 
                            Legal Counsel.
Sec. 525. Special Victims' Counsel training regarding the unique 
                            challenges often faced by male victims of 
                            sexual assault.
Sec. 526. Garnishment to satisfy judgment rendered for physically, 
                            sexually, or emotionally abusing a child.
Sec. 527. Inclusion of information in annual SAPRO reports regarding 
                            military sexual harassment and incidents 
                            involving nonconsensual distribution of 
                            private sexual images.
Sec. 528. Inclusion of information in annual SAPRO reports regarding 
                            sexual assaults committed by a member of 
                            the Armed Forces against the member's 
                            spouse or other family member.
Sec. 529. Notification of members of the Armed Forces undergoing 
                            certain administrative separations of 
                            potential eligibility for veterans 
                            benefits.
Sec. 530. Consistent access to Special Victims' Counsel for former 
                            dependents of members of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 531. Inclusion of additional information in annual SAPRO reports.
Sec. 532. Sexual assault prevention and response.
   Subtitle D--Member Education, Training, Resilience, and Transition

Sec. 541. Prohibition on release of military service academy graduates 
                            to participate in professional athletics.
Sec. 542. ROTC Cyber Institutes at the senior military colleges.
Sec. 543. Lieutenant Henry Ossian Flipper Leadership Scholarship 
                            Program.
Sec. 544. Extension of suicide prevention and resilience program.
Sec. 545. Annual training regarding the influence campaign of the 
                            Russian Federation.
Sec. 546. Program to assist members in obtaining professional 
                            credentials.
Sec. 547. Expanding eligibility for the United States Military 
                            Apprenticeship Program.
Subtitle E--Defense Dependents' Education and Military Family Readiness 
                                Matters

Sec. 551. Continuation of authority to assist local educational 
                            agencies that benefit dependents of members 
                            of the Armed Forces and Department of 
                            Defense civilian employees.
Sec. 552. Education for dependents of certain retired members of the 
                            Armed Forces.
Sec. 553. Codification of authority to conduct family support programs 
                            for immediate family members of members of 
                            the Armed Forces assigned to special 
                            operations forces.
Sec. 554. Reimbursement for State licensure and certification costs of 
                            a spouse of a member of the Armed Forces 
                            arising from relocation to another State.
Sec. 555. Five-year extension of authorities relating to the transition 
                            and support of military dependent students 
                            to local educational agencies.
Sec. 556. Enhancing military childcare programs and activities of the 
                            Department of Defense.
                   Subtitle F--Decorations and Awards

Sec. 561. Replacement of military decorations at the request of 
                            relatives of deceased members of the Armed 
                            Forces.
Sec. 562. Congressional Defense Service Medal.
Sec. 563. Limitations on authority to revoke certain military 
                            decorations awarded to members of the Armed 
                            Forces.
Sec. 564. Award of Vietnam Service Medal to veterans who participated 
                            in Mayaguez rescue operation.
Sec. 565. Award of medals or other commendations to handlers of 
                            military working dogs and military working 
                            dogs.
Sec. 566. Eligibility of veterans of Operation End Sweep for Vietnam 
                            Service Medal.
Sec. 567. Expedited replacement of military decorations for veterans of 
                            World War II and the Korean War.
Sec. 568. Atomic veterans service medal.
          Subtitle G--Miscellaneous Reports and Other Matters

Sec. 571. Expansion of United States Air Force Institute of Technology 
                            enrollment authority to include civilian 
                            employees of the homeland security 
                            industry.
Sec. 572. Servicemembers' Group Life Insurance.
Sec. 573. Voter registration.
Sec. 574. Sense of Congress regarding section 504 of title 10, United 
                            States Code, on existing authority of the 
                            Department of Defense to enlist 
                            individuals, not otherwise eligible for 
                            enlistment, whose enlistment is vital to 
                            the national interest.
Sec. 575. Sense of Congress regarding nondiscrimination at United 
                            States Military Academy.
Sec. 576. Extension of authority of the Secretary of Veterans Affairs 
                            to provide for the conduct of medical 
                            disability examinations by contract 
                            physicians.
Sec. 577. Issuance of consolidated pregnancy and parenthood 
                            instruction.
Sec. 578. Proof of period of military service for purposes of interest 
                            rate limitation under the Servicemembers 
                            Civil Relief Act.
Sec. 579. Report regarding possible improvements to processing 
                            retirements and medical discharges.
Sec. 580. Establishment of separation oath for members of the Armed 
                            Forces.
Sec. 581. Extension of reporting requirement regarding diversity in 
                            military leadership.
          TITLE VI--COMPENSATION AND OTHER PERSONNEL BENEFITS

                     Subtitle A--Pay and Allowances

Sec. 601. Annual adjustment of basic monthly pay.
Sec. 602. Limitation on basic allowance for housing modification 
                            authority for members of the uniformed 
                            services residing in Military Housing 
                            Privatization Initiative housing.
Sec. 603. Housing treatment for certain members of the Armed Forces, 
                            and their spouses and other dependents, 
                            undergoing a permanent change of station 
                            within the United States.
Sec. 604. Per diem allowance policies.
Sec. 605. Reevaluation of BAH for the military housing area including 
                            Staten Island.
Sec. 606. Application of basic allowance for housing to members of the 
                            uniformed services in the Virgin Islands.
           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. Reimbursement for State licensure and certification costs of 
                            a member of the Armed Forces arising from 
                            separation from the Armed Forces.
Sec. 617. Increase in maximum amount of aviation bonus for 12-month 
                            period of obligated service.
Sec. 618. Technical and clerical amendments relating to 2008 
                            consolidation of certain special pay 
                            authorities.
Sec. 619. Improved employment assistance for members of the Armed 
                            Forces and veterans.
     Subtitle C--Disability Pay, Retired Pay, and Survivor Benefits

Sec. 621. Findings and sense of Congress regarding the Special Survivor 
                            Indemnity Allowance.
                       Subtitle D--Other Matters

Sec. 631. Land conveyance authority, Army and Air Force Exchange 
                            Service property, Dallas, Texas.
Sec. 632. Report regarding management of military commissaries and 
                            exchanges.
                   TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS

           Subtitle A--TRICARE and Other Health Care Benefits

Sec. 701. Physical examinations for members of a reserve component who 
                            are separating from the Armed Forces.
Sec. 702. Mental health examinations before members separate from the 
                            Armed Forces.
Sec. 703. Provision of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for certain members of 
                            the Armed Forces.
Sec. 704. Mental health assessments for members of the Armed Forces 
                            deployed in support of a contingency 
                            operation.
Sec. 705. Counseling and treatment for substance use disorders and 
                            chronic pain management services for 
                            members who separate from the Armed Forces.
Sec. 706. Expansion of sexual trauma counseling and treatment for 
                            members of the reserve components.
                 Subtitle B--Health Care Administration

Sec. 711. Clarification of roles of commanders of military medical 
                            treatment facilities and Surgeons General.
Sec. 712. Maintenance of inpatient capabilities of military medical 
                            treatment facilities located outside the 
                            United States.
Sec. 713. Regular update of prescription drug pricing standard under 
                            TRICARE retail pharmacy program.
Sec. 714. Residency requirements for podiatrists.
Sec. 715. Training requirement for health care professionals 
                            prescribing opioids for treatment of pain 
                            in the Armed Forces.
                       Subtitle C--Other Matters

Sec. 721. One year extension of pilot program for prescription drug 
                            acquisition cost parity in the TRICARE 
                            Pharmacy Benefits Program.
Sec. 722. Pilot program on health care assistance system.
Sec. 723. Research of chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
Sec. 724. Sense of Congress on eligibility of victims of acts of terror 
                            for evaluation and treatment at military 
                            treatment facilities.
Sec. 725. Prohibition on availability of funds for termination of 
                            Vets4Warriors crisis hotline program.
Sec. 726. Report on implementation of GAO recommendations.
Sec. 727. Authorization of Intergovernmental Agreements for the 
                            Provision of Health Screenings.
Sec. 728. Study on safe opioid prescribing practices.
Sec. 729. Tick-borne diseases.
Sec. 730. Report.
Sec. 731. Provision of support by Department of Defense to Department 
                            of Veterans Affairs regarding electronic 
                            health record system.
Sec. 732. Increased collaboration with NIH to combat triple negative 
                            breast cancer.
Sec. 733. Encouraging transition of military medical professionals into 
                            employment with Veterans Health 
                            Administration.
  TITLE VIII--ACQUISITION POLICY, ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT, AND RELATED 
                                MATTERS

     Subtitle A--Defense Acquisition Streamlining and Transparency

                Part I--Acquisition System Streamlining

Sec. 801. Procurement through online marketplaces.
Sec. 802. Performance of incurred cost audits.
Sec. 803. Modifications to cost or pricing data and reporting 
                            requirements.
           Part II--Early Investments in Acquisition Programs

Sec. 811. Requirement to emphasize reliability and maintainability in 
                            weapon system design.
Sec. 812. Licensing of appropriate intellectual property to support 
                            major weapon systems.
Sec. 813. Management of intellectual property matters within the 
                            Department of Defense.
Sec. 814. Improvement of planning for acquisition of services.
Sec. 815. Improvements to test and evaluation processes and tools.
              Part III--Acquisition Workforce Improvements

Sec. 821. Enhancements to the civilian program management workforce.
Sec. 822. Improvements to the hiring and training of the acquisition 
                            workforce.
Sec. 823. Extension and modifications to acquisition demonstration 
                            project.
Sec. 824. Acquisition positions in the Offices of the Secretaries of 
                            the Military Departments.
                   Part IV--Transparency Improvements

Sec. 831. Transparency of defense business system data.
Sec. 832. Major defense acquisition programs: display of budget 
                            information.
Sec. 833. Enhancements to transparency in test and evaluation processes 
                            and data.
     Subtitle B--Streamlining of Defense Acquisition Statutes and 
                              Regulations

Sec. 841. Modifications to the advisory panel on streamlining and 
                            codifying acquisition regulations.
Sec. 842. Extension of maximum duration of fuel storage contracts.
Sec. 843. Exception for business operations from requirement to accept 
                            $1 coins.
Sec. 844. Repeal of expired pilot program.
Subtitle C--Amendments to General Contracting Authorities, Procedures, 
                            and Limitations

Sec. 851. Limitation on unilateral definitization.
Sec. 852. Codification of requirements pertaining to assessment, 
                            management, and control of operating and 
                            support costs for major weapon systems.
Sec. 853. Use of program income by eligible entities that carry out 
                            procurement technical assistance programs.
Sec. 854. Amendment to sustainment reviews.
Sec. 855. Clarification to other transaction authority.
Sec. 856. Clarifying the use of lowest price technically acceptable 
                            source selection process.
Sec. 857. Amendment to nontraditional and small contractor innovation 
                            prototyping program.
Sec. 858. Modification to annual meeting requirement of Configuration 
                            Steering Boards.
Sec. 859. Change to definition of subcontract in certain circumstances.
Sec. 860. Amendment relating to applicability of inflation adjustments.
Sec. 860A. Exemption of certain contracts from inflation adjustments.
Sec. 860B. Inclusion of SBIR and STTR programs in technical assistance.
                       Subtitle D--Other Matters

Sec. 861. Exemption from design-build selection procedures.
Sec. 862. Requirement that certain ship components be manufactured in 
                            the national technology and industrial 
                            base.
Sec. 863. Procurement of aviation critical safety items.
Sec. 864. Milestones and timelines for contracts for foreign military 
                            sales.
Sec. 865. Notification requirement for certain contracts for audit 
                            services.
Sec. 866. Training in acquisition of commercial items.
Sec. 867. Notice of cost-free Federal procurement technical assistance 
                            in connection with registration of small 
                            business concerns on procurement websites 
                            of the Department of Defense.
Sec. 868. Comptroller General report on contractor business system 
                            requirements.
Sec. 869. Standard guidelines for evaluation of requirements for 
                            services contracts.
Sec. 870. Temporary limitation on aggregate annual amount available for 
                            contract services.
Sec. 871. Development of Procurement Administrative Lead Time.
Sec. 872. Sense of Congress regarding steel produced in the United 
                            States.
Sec. 873. Amendments relating to information technology.
Sec. 874. Repeal of certain auditing requirements.
Sec. 875. Prohibition on contracting with certain telecommunications 
                            providers.
Sec. 876. Assessment and authority to terminate or prohibit contracts 
                            for procurement from Chinese companies 
                            providing support to the Democratic 
                            People's Republic of Korea.
Sec. 877. Report on sourcing of tungsten and tungsten powders from 
                            domestic producers.
      TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT

 Subtitle A--Organization and Management of the Department of Defense 
                               Generally

Sec. 901. Responsibility of the Chief Information Officer of the 
                            Department of Defense for risk management 
                            activities regarding supply chain for 
                            information technology systems.
Sec. 902. Repeal of Office of Corrosion Policy and Oversight.
Sec. 903. Designation of corrosion control and prevention executives 
                            for the military departments.
Sec. 904. Maintaining civilian workforce capabilities to sustain 
                            readiness, the all volunteer force, and 
                            operational effectiveness.
          Subtitle B--Designation of the Navy and Marine Corps

Sec. 911. Redesignation of the Department of the Navy as the Department 
                            of the Navy and Marine Corps.
Sec. 912. Conforming amendments to title 10, United States Code.
Sec. 913. Other provisions of law and other references.
Sec. 914. Effective date.
                       Subtitle C--Other Matters

Sec. 921. Transition of the Office of the Secretary of Defense to 
                            reflect establishment of positions of Under 
                            Secretary of Defense for Research and 
                            Engineering, Under Secretary of Defense for 
                            Acquisition and Sustainment, and Chief 
                            Management Officer.
Sec. 922. Extension of deadlines for reporting and briefing 
                            requirements for Commission on the National 
                            Defense Strategy for the United States.
Sec. 923. Briefing on force management level policy.
Sec. 924. Sense of Congress on cooperative program for information 
                            security education.
Sec. 925. Completion of Department of Defense Directive 2310.07E 
                            regarding missing persons.
Sec. 926. Responsibility for Developmental Test and Evaluation Within 
                            the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
                      TITLE X--GENERAL PROVISIONS

                     Subtitle A--Financial Matters

Sec. 1001. General transfer authority.
Sec. 1002. Preparation of consolidated corrective action plan and 
                            implementation of centralized reporting 
                            system.
Sec. 1003. Additional requirements relating to Department of Defense 
                            audits.
Sec. 1004. Amendments to Department of Defense financial audit plan.
Sec. 1005. Report on auditable financial statements.
                Subtitle B--Naval Vessels and Shipyards

Sec. 1011. National Defense Sealift Fund.
Sec. 1012. National Defense Sealift Fund: construction of national 
                            icebreaker vessels.
Sec. 1013. Use of National Sea-Based Deterrence Fund for multiyear 
                            procurement of certain critical components.
Sec. 1014. Restrictions on the overhaul and repair of vessels in 
                            foreign shipyards.
Sec. 1015. Availability of funds for retirement or inactivation of 
                            Ticonderoga-class cruisers or dock landing 
                            ships.
Sec. 1016. Policy of the United States on minimum number of battle 
                            force ships.
                      Subtitle C--Counterterrorism

Sec. 1021. Termination of requirement to submit annual budget 
                            justification display for Department of 
                            Defense combating terrorism program.
Sec. 1022. Prohibition on use of funds for transfer or release of 
                            individuals detained at United States Naval 
                            Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba to the United 
                            States.
Sec. 1023. Prohibition on use of funds to construct or modify 
                            facilities in the United States to house 
                            detainees transferred from United States 
                            Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Sec. 1024. Prohibition on use of funds for transfer or release of 
                            individuals detained at United States Naval 
                            Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to certain 
                            countries.
Sec. 1025. Biannual report on support of special operations to combat 
                            terrorism.
Sec. 1026. Prohibition on use of funds to close or relinquish control 
                            of United States Naval Station, Guantanamo 
                            Bay, Cuba.
Sec. 1027. Sense of Congress regarding providing for timely victim and 
                            family testimony in military commission 
                            trials.
Sec. 1028. Authority to use video teleconferencing technology in 
                            military commission procedures.
Sec. 1029. Public availability of military commission proceedings.
         Subtitle D--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations

Sec. 1031. Limitation on expenditure of funds for emergency and 
                            extraordinary expenses for intelligence and 
                            counter-intelligence activities and 
                            representation allowances.
Sec. 1032. Modifications to humanitarian demining assistance 
                            authorities.
Sec. 1033. Prohibition on charge of certain tariffs on aircraft 
                            traveling through channel routes.
Sec. 1034. Limitation on divestment of U-2 or RQ-4 aircraft.
Sec. 1035. Prohibition on use of funds for retirement of legacy 
                            maritime mine countermeasures platforms.
Sec. 1036. Restriction on use of certain funds pending solicitation of 
                            bids for Western Pacific dry dock.
Sec. 1037. National Guard flyovers of public events.
Sec. 1038. Transfer of funds to World War I Centennial Commission.
Sec. 1039. Limitation on use of funds for provision of man-portable air 
                            defense systems to the vetted Syrian 
                            opposition.
Sec. 1040. Determination regarding transfer of defense articles to 
                            units committing gross violations of human 
                            rights.
Sec. 1041. Prohibition on use of funds to designate or expand Federal 
                            National Heritage Areas.
Sec. 1042. Requirement relating to transfer of excess Department of 
                            Defense equipment to Federal and State 
                            agencies.
Sec. 1043. Limitation on use of funds to close biosafety level 4 
                            laboratories.
                    Subtitle E--Studies and Reports

Sec. 1051. Elimination of reporting requirements terminated after 
                            November 25, 2017, pursuant to section 1080 
                            of the National Defense Authorization Act 
                            for Fiscal Year 2016.
Sec. 1052. Report on Department of Defense arctic capability and 
                            resource gaps and required infrastructure.
Sec. 1053. Review and assessment of Department of Defense personnel 
                            recovery and nonconventional assisted 
                            recovery mechanisms.
Sec. 1054. Mine warfare readiness inspection plan and report.
Sec. 1055. Report on civilian casualties from Department of Defense 
                            strikes.
Sec. 1056. Reports on infrastructure and capabilities of Lajes Field, 
                            Portugal.
Sec. 1057. Report on Joint Pacific Alaska Range Complex modernization.
Sec. 1058. Report on potential agreement with the government of Russia 
                            on the status of Syria.
Sec. 1059. Report on prior attempted Russian cyber attacks against 
                            defense systems.
Sec. 1060. Report on alternatives to aqueous film forming foam.
Sec. 1060A. Report on project, program, and portfolio management 
                            standards.
Sec. 1060B. Study on health effects of exposure to perfluorooctane 
                            sulfonate and perfluorooctanoic acid from 
                            firefighting foam used at military 
                            installations.
Sec. 1060C. Report on the National Biodefense Analysis and 
                            Countermeasures Center.
                       Subtitle F--Other Matters

Sec. 1061. Technical, conforming, and clerical amendments.
Sec. 1062. Workforce issues for relocation of Marines to Guam.
Sec. 1063. Protection of Second Amendment Rights of Military Families.
Sec. 1064. Transfer of surplus firearms to corporation for the 
                            promotion of rifle practice and firearms 
                            safety.
Sec. 1065. National Guard accessibility to Department of Defense issued 
                            unmanned aircraft.
Sec. 1066. Sense of Congress regarding aircraft carriers.
Sec. 1067. Notice to Congress of terms of Department of Defense 
                            settlement agreements.
Sec. 1068. Sense of Congress recognizing the United States Navy 
                            Seabees.
Sec. 1069. Recognition of the United States Special Operations Command.
Sec. 1070. Sense of Congress regarding World War I.
Sec. 1071. Findings and sense of Congress regarding the National Guard 
                            Youth Challenge Program.
Sec. 1072. Sense of Congress regarding National Purple Heart 
                            Recognition Day.
Sec. 1073. Providing assistance to House of Representatives in response 
                            to cybersecurity events.
Sec. 1074. Review and update of regulations governing debt collectors 
                            interactions with unit commanders of 
                            members of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 1075. Sense of Congress regarding Pacific War memorial.
Sec. 1076. Sense of Congress on cybersecurity cooperation with Ukraine.
Sec. 1077. Apollo I memorial.
Sec. 1078. National strategy for countering violent extremist groups.
Sec. 1079. Adequacy of the report on the vulnerabilities of the defense 
                            industrial base.
Sec. 1080. Federal charter for Spirit of America.
Sec. 1081. Air transportation of civilian Department of Defense 
                            personnel to and from Afghanistan.
Sec. 1082. Collaboration between FAA and DOD on unmanned aircraft 
                            systems.
                  TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL MATTERS

Sec. 1101. Extension of direct hire authority for domestic Defense 
                            Industrial Base Facilities and Major Range 
                            and Test Facilities Base.
Sec. 1102. Extension of authority to provide voluntary separation 
                            incentive pay for civilian employees of the 
                            Department of Defense.
Sec. 1103. Additional Department of Defense science and technology 
                            reinvention laboratories.
Sec. 1104. One year extension of authority to waive annual limitation 
                            on premium pay and aggregate limitation on 
                            pay for Federal civilian employees working 
                            overseas.
Sec. 1105. Appointment of retired members of the armed forces to 
                            positions in or under the Department of 
                            Defense.
Sec. 1106. Direct hire authority for financial management experts in 
                            the Department of Defense workforce.
Sec. 1107. Extension of authority for temporary personnel flexibilities 
                            for domestic defense industrial base 
                            facilities and Major Range and Test 
                            Facilities Base civilian personnel.
Sec. 1108. One-year extension of temporary authority to grant 
                            allowances, benefits, and gratuities to 
                            civilian personnel on official duty in a 
                            combat zone.
Sec. 1109. Extension of overtime rate authority for Department of the 
                            Navy employees preforming work aboard or 
                            dockside in support of the nuclear-powered 
                            aircraft carrier forward deployed in Japan.
Sec. 1110. Briefing on diversity in the civilian workforce on Air Force 
                            installations.
             TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS

                  Subtitle A--Assistance and Training

Sec. 1201. One-year extension of logistical support for coalition 
                            forces supporting certain United States 
                            military operations.
Sec. 1202. Modification to Special Defense Acquisition Fund.
Sec. 1203. Modification to ministry of defense advisor authority.
Sec. 1204. Modification of authority to build capacity of foreign 
                            security forces.
Sec. 1205. Extension and modification of authority on training for 
                            Eastern European national military forces 
                            in the course of multilateral exercises.
Sec. 1206. Extension of participation in and support of the Inter-
                            American Defense College.
        Subtitle B--Matters Relating to Afghanistan and Pakistan

Sec. 1211. Extension of authority to transfer defense articles and 
                            provide defense services to the military 
                            and security forces of Afghanistan.
Sec. 1212. Report on United States strategy in Afghanistan.
Sec. 1213. Extension and modification of authority for reimbursement of 
                            certain coalition nations for support 
                            provided to United States military 
                            operations.
Sec. 1214. Sense of Congress relating to Dr. Shakil Afridi.
         Subtitle C--Matters Relating to Syria, Iraq, and Iran

Sec. 1221. Report on United States strategy in Syria.
Sec. 1221A. Report on impact of humanitarian crisis on achievement of 
                            United States security objectives in Syria.
Sec. 1222. Extension and modification of authority to provide 
                            assistance to counter the Islamic State of 
                            Iraq and the Levant.
Sec. 1223. Extension and modification of authority to support 
                            operations and activities of the Office of 
                            Security Cooperation in Iraq.
Sec. 1224. Sense of Congress on threats posed by the Government of 
                            Iran.
Sec. 1225. Report on merits of an Incidents at Sea agreement between 
                            the United States, Iran, and certain other 
                            countries.
Sec. 1226. Extension of quarterly reports on confirmed ballistic 
                            missile launches from Iran and imposition 
                            of sanctions in connection with those 
                            launches.
Sec. 1227. Report on steps and protocols related to the rescue, care, 
                            and treatment of captives of the Islamic 
                            State.
Sec. 1228. Reports on deployment of United States combat forces to 
                            Syria.
Sec. 1229. Report on use by the Government of Iran of commercial 
                            aircraft and related services for illicit 
                            activities.
Sec. 1230. Limitation on funding.
Sec. 1230A. Strategy for Syria and Iraq.
         Subtitle D--Matters Relating to the Russian Federation

Sec. 1231. Extension of limitation on military cooperation between the 
                            United States and the Russian Federation.
Sec. 1232. Prohibition on availability of funds relating to sovereignty 
                            of the Russian Federation over Crimea.
Sec. 1233. Statement of policy on the Russian Federation.
Sec. 1234. Modification and extension of Ukraine Security Assistance 
                            Initiative.
Sec. 1235. Limitation on availability of funds relating to 
                            implementation of the Open Skies Treaty.
Sec. 1236. Sense of Congress on importance of nuclear capabilities of 
                            NATO.
Sec. 1237. Sense of Congress on support for Georgia.
Sec. 1238. Sense of Congress on support for Estonia, Latvia, and 
                            Lithuania.
Sec. 1239. Report on defense cooperation between Serbia and the Russian 
                            Federation.
Sec. 1240. Plan to respond in case of Russian noncompliance with the 
                            New START Treaty.
Subtitle E--Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty Preservation 
                              Act of 2017

Sec. 1241. Short title.
Sec. 1242. Findings.
Sec. 1243. Compliance enforcement regarding Russian violations of the 
                            INF Treaty.
Sec. 1244. Development of INF range ground-launched missile system.
Sec. 1245. Notification requirement related to Russian Federation 
                            development of noncompliant systems and 
                            United States actions regarding material 
                            breach of INF Treaty by the Russian 
                            Federation.
Sec. 1246. Limitation on availability of funds to extend the 
                            implementation of the New START Treaty.
Sec. 1247. Review of RS-26 ballistic missile.
Sec. 1248. Definitions.
   Subtitle F--Fostering Unity Against Russian Aggression Act of 2017

Sec. 1251. Short title.
Sec. 1252. Findings and sense of Congress.
Sec. 1253. Strategy to counter threats by the Russian Federation.
Sec. 1254. Strategy to increase conventional precision strike weapon 
                            stockpiles in the United States European 
                            Command's areas of responsibility.
Sec. 1255. Plan to counter the military capabilities of the Russian 
                            Federation.
Sec. 1256. Plan to increase cyber and information operations, 
                            deterrence, and defense.
Sec. 1257. Sense of Congress on enhancing maritime capabilities.
Sec. 1258. Plan to reduce the risks of miscalculation and unintended 
                            consequences that could precipitate a 
                            nuclear war.
Sec. 1259. Definitions.
      Subtitle G--Matters Relating to the Indo-Asia-Pacific Region

Sec. 1261. Sense of Congress on the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
Sec. 1262. Report on strategy to prioritize United States defense 
                            interests in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
Sec. 1263. Assessment of United States force posture and basing needs 
                            in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
Sec. 1264. Extended deterrence commitment to the Asia-Pacific region.
Sec. 1265. Authorization of appropriations to meet United States 
                            financial obligations under Compact of Free 
                            Association with Palau.
Sec. 1266. Sense of Congress reaffirming security commitments to the 
                            Governments of Japan and South Korea and 
                            trilateral cooperation between the United 
                            States, Japan, and South Korea.
Sec. 1267. Sense of Congress on freedom of navigation operations in the 
                            South China Sea.
Sec. 1268. Sense of Congress on strengthening the defense of Taiwan.
Sec. 1269. Sense of Congress on the Association of Southeast Asian 
                            Nations.
Sec. 1270. Sense of Congress on reaffirming the importance of the 
                            United States-Australia defense alliance.
Sec. 1270A. Restriction on funding for the Preparatory Commission for 
                            the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty 
                            Organization.
Sec. 1270B. Sense of Congress on North Korea.
Sec. 1270C. Strategy to further United States-India defense 
                            cooperation.
Sec. 1270D. Plan to enhance the extended deterrence and assurance 
                            capabilities of the United States in the 
                            Asia-Pacific region.
Sec. 1270E. Report on Naval Port of Call Exchanges between the United 
                            States and Taiwan.
Sec. 1270F. Assessment on United States defense implications of China's 
                            expanding global access.
Sec. 1270G. Normalizing the transfer of defense articles and defense 
                            services to Taiwan.
                       Subtitle H--Other Matters

Sec. 1271. NATO Cooperative Cyber Defense Center of Excellence.
Sec. 1272. NATO Strategic Communications Center of Excellence.
Sec. 1273. Security and stability strategy for Somalia.
Sec. 1274. Assessment of Global Theater Security Cooperation Management 
                            Information System.
Sec. 1275. Future years plan for the European Deterrence Initiative.
Sec. 1276. Extension of authority to enter into agreements with 
                            participating countries in the American, 
                            British, Canadian, and Australian Armies' 
                            Program.
Sec. 1277. Security strategy for Yemen.
Sec. 1278. Limitation on transfer of excess defense articles that are 
                            high mobility multi-purpose wheeled 
                            vehicles.
Sec. 1279. Department of Defense program to protect United States 
                            students against foreign agents.
Sec. 1280. Extension of United States-Israel anti-tunnel cooperation 
                            authority.
Sec. 1281. Anticorruption strategy.
Sec. 1282. Report by Defense Intelligence Agency on certain military 
                            capabilities of China and Russia.
Sec. 1283. Sense of Congress on the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Sec. 1284. Sense of Congress on the export of defense articles to 
                            Turkey.
Sec. 1285. Strategy to improve defense institutions and security sector 
                            forces in Nigeria.
Sec. 1286. Sense of Congress regarding the Chibok schoolgirls and Boko 
                            Haram.
Sec. 1287. Modification of annual report on military and security 
                            developments involving the People's 
                            Republic of China.
Sec. 1288. Report on Iran and North Korea nuclear and ballistic missile 
                            cooperation.
Sec. 1289. Modification of annual update of Department of Defense 
                            Freedom of Navigation Operations report.
Sec. 1290. Contingency plans relating to South Sudan.
Sec. 1291. Report on strategy to defeat Al-Qaeda, the Taliban, the 
                            Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), and 
                            their associated forces and co-
                            belligerents.
Sec. 1292. Notice of changes to the legal and policy frameworks guiding 
                            the United States' use of military force 
                            and related national security operations.
Sec. 1293. Report on military action of Saudi Arabia and its coalitions 
                            partners in Yemen.
Sec. 1294. Sense of Congress on the Western Hemisphere region.
Sec. 1295. Sense of Congress relating to increases in defense 
                            capabilities of United States allies.
Sec. 1296. Limitation on availability of funds to implement the Arms 
                            Trade Treaty.
Sec. 1297. Cultural Heritage Protection Coordinator.
Sec. 1298. Prohibition on use of funds to conduct military operations 
                            in Yemen.
                TITLE XIII--COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION

Sec. 1301. Specification of cooperative threat reduction funds.
Sec. 1302. Funding allocations.
                    TITLE XIV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS

                     Subtitle A--Military Programs

Sec. 1401. Working capital funds.
Sec. 1402. Chemical agents and munitions destruction, defense.
Sec. 1403. Drug interdiction and counter-drug activities defense-wide.
Sec. 1404. Defense Inspector General.
Sec. 1405. Defense Health Program.
Sec. 1406. National Defense Sealift Fund.
                       Subtitle B--Other Matters

Sec. 1411. Authority for transfer of funds to joint Department of 
                            Defense-Department of Veterans Affairs 
                            Medical Facility Demonstration Fund for 
                            Captain James A. Lovell Health Care Center, 
                            Illinois.
Sec. 1412. Authorization of appropriations for Armed Forces Retirement 
                            Home.
   TITLE XV--AUTHORIZATION OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR OVERSEAS 
                         CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS

              Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations

Sec. 1501. Purpose and treatment of certain authorizations of 
                            appropriations.
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. Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide.
Sec. 1508. Defense Inspector General.
Sec. 1509. Defense Health program.
                     Subtitle B--Financial Matters

Sec. 1511. Treatment as additional authorizations.
Sec. 1512. Special transfer authority.
          Subtitle C--Limitations, Reports, and Other Matters

Sec. 1521. Afghanistan Security Forces Fund.
Sec. 1522. Joint Improvised-Threat Defeat Fund.
Sec. 1523. Separate account lines for overseas contingency operations 
                            funds.
Sec. 1524. Guidelines for budget items to be covered by overseas 
                            contingency operations accounts.
     TITLE XVI--STRATEGIC PROGRAMS, CYBER, AND INTELLIGENCE MATTERS

       Subtitle A--Management and Organization of Space Programs

Sec. 1601. Establishment of Space Corps in the Department of the Air 
                            Force.
Sec. 1602. Establishment of subordinate unified command of the United 
                            States Strategic Command.
                      Subtitle B--Space Activities

Sec. 1611. Codification, extension, and modification of limitation on 
                            construction on United States territory of 
                            satellite positioning ground monitoring 
                            stations of foreign governments.
Sec. 1612. Foreign commercial satellite services: cybersecurity threats 
                            and launches.
Sec. 1613. Extension of pilot program on commercial weather data.
Sec. 1614. Conditional transfer of acquisition and funding authority of 
                            certain weather missions to National 
                            Reconnaissance Office.
Sec. 1615. Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle modernization and 
                            sustainment of assured access to space.
Sec. 1616. Commercial satellite communications pathfinder program.
Sec. 1617. Demonstration of backup and complementary positioning, 
                            navigation, and timing capabilities of 
                            Global Positioning System.
Sec. 1618. Enhancement of positioning, navigation, and timing capacity.
Sec. 1619. Establishment of Space Flag training event.
Sec. 1620. Report on operational and contingency plans for loss or 
                            degradation of space capabilities.
Sec. 1621. Limitation on availability of funding for Joint Space 
                            Operations Center mission system.
Sec. 1622. Limitation on availability of funds relating to advanced 
                            extremely high frequency program.
Sec. 1623. Coordinating Efforts to Prepare for Space Weather Events.
Sec. 1624. Report on space-based nuclear detection.
Sec. 1625. Sense of Congress on new commercial satellite servicing 
                            activities.
  Subtitle C--Defense Intelligence and Intelligence-Related Activities

Sec. 1631. Security clearances for facilities of certain contractors.
Sec. 1632. Extension of authority to engage in certain commercial 
                            activities.
Sec. 1633. Submission of audits of commercial activity funds.
Sec. 1634. Clarification of annual briefing on the intelligence, 
                            surveillance, and reconnaissance 
                            requirements of the combatant commands.
Sec. 1635. Review of support provided by Defense intelligence elements 
                            to acquisition activities of the 
                            Department.
Sec. 1636. Limitation on availability of funds for certain offensive 
                            counterintelligence activities.
Sec. 1637. Prohibition on availability of funds for certain relocation 
                            activities for NATO intelligence fusion 
                            center.
Sec. 1638. Establishment of chairman's controlled activity within Joint 
                            Staff for intelligence, surveillance, and 
                            reconnaissance.
Sec. 1639. Sense of Congress and report on geospatial commercial 
                            activities for basic and applied research 
                            and development.
Sec. 1640. Department of Defense Counterintelligence polygraph program.
Sec. 1641. Security clearance for dual-nationals.
Sec. 1642. Suspension or revocation of security clearances based on 
                            unlawful or inappropriate contacts with 
                            representatives of a foreign government.
                 Subtitle D--Cyberspace-Related Matters

Sec. 1651. Notification requirements for sensitive military cyber 
                            operations and cyber weapons.
Sec. 1652. Modification to quarterly cyber operations briefings.
Sec. 1653. Cyber Scholarship Program.
Sec. 1654. Plan to increase cyber and information operations, 
                            deterrence, and defense.
Sec. 1655. Report on termination of dual-hat arrangement for Commander 
                            of the United States Cyber Command.
Sec. 1656. Strategy for the offensive use of cyber capabilities.
Sec. 1657. Department of Defense Cyber Workforce Development Pilot 
                            Program.
Sec. 1658. Definition of deterrence in the context of cyber operations.
                       Subtitle E--Nuclear Forces

Sec. 1661. Notifications regarding dual-capable F-35A aircraft.
Sec. 1662. Oversight of delayed acquisition programs by Council on 
                            Oversight of the National Leadership 
                            Command, Control, and Communications 
                            System.
Sec. 1663. Establishment of Nuclear Command and Control Intelligence 
                            Fusion Center.
Sec. 1664. Security of nuclear command, control, and communications 
                            system from commercial dependencies.
Sec. 1665. Oversight of aerial-layer programs by Council on Oversight 
                            of the National Leadership Command, 
                            Control, and Communications System.
Sec. 1666. Security classification guide for programs relating to 
                            nuclear command, control, and 
                            communications and nuclear deterrence.
Sec. 1667. Evaluation and enhanced security of supply chain for nuclear 
                            command, control, and communications and 
                            continuity of government programs.
Sec. 1668. Limitation on pursuit of certain command and control 
                            concept.
Sec. 1669. Procurement authority for certain parts of intercontinental 
                            ballistic missile fuzes.
Sec. 1670. Sense of Congress on importance of independent nuclear 
                            deterrent of United Kingdom.
Sec. 1671. Prohibition on availability of funds for mobile variant of 
                            ground-based strategic deterrent missile.
Sec. 1672. Report on impacts of nuclear proliferation.
Sec. 1673. Modification to annual report on plan for the nuclear 
                            weapons stockpile, nuclear weapons complex, 
                            nuclear weapons delivery systems, and 
                            nuclear weapons command and control system.
Sec. 1674.  Prohibition on reduction of the intercontinental ballistic 
                            missiles of the United States.
                  Subtitle F--Missile Defense Programs

Sec. 1681. Administration of missile defense and defeat programs.
Sec. 1682. Preservation of the ballistic missile defense capacity of 
                            the Army.
Sec. 1683. Modernization of Army lower tier air and missile defense 
                            sensor.
Sec. 1684. Enhancement of operational test and evaluation of ballistic 
                            missile defense system.
Sec. 1685. Defense of Hawaii from North Korean ballistic missile 
                            attack.
Sec. 1686. Aegis Ashore anti-air warfare capability.
Sec. 1687. Iron Dome short-range rocket defense system, Israeli 
                            cooperative missile defense program 
                            codevelopment and coproduction, and Arrow 3 
                            testing.
Sec. 1688. Review of proposed ground-based midcourse defense system 
                            contract.
Sec. 1689. Sense of Congress and plan for development of space-based 
                            sensor layer for ballistic missile defense.
Sec. 1690. Sense of Congress and plan for development of space-based 
                            ballistic missile intercept layer.
Sec. 1691. Limitation on availability of funds for ground-based 
                            midcourse defense element of the ballistic 
                            missile defense system.
Sec. 1692. Conventional prompt global strike weapons system.
Sec. 1693. Determination of location of continental United States 
                            interceptor site.
Sec. 1694. North Korean nuclear intercontinental ballistic missiles.
Sec. 1694A. Boost phase ballistic missile defense.
                       Subtitle G--Other Matters

Sec. 1695. Protection of certain facilities and assets from unmanned 
                            aircraft.
Sec. 1696. Use of commercial items in Distributed Common Ground 
                            Systems.
Sec. 1697. Independent assessment of costs relating to ammonium 
                            perchlorate.
Sec. 1698. Limitation and business case analysis regarding ammonium 
                            perchlorate.
Sec. 1699. Industrial base for large solid rocket motors and related 
                            technologies.
Sec. 1699A. Pilot program on enhancing information sharing for security 
                            of supply chain.
Sec. 1699B. Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States From 
                            Electromagnetic Pulse Attacks and Events.
Sec. 1699C. Pilot program on electromagnetic spectrum mapping.
      Subtitle H--Advancing America's Missile Defense Act of 2017

Sec. 1699D. Short title.
Sec. 1699E. Sense of Congress on current state of United States missile 
                            defense, future investment, and 
                            accelerating capabilities to outpace 
                            current threats.
Sec. 1699F. Authorization to increase current ground-based midcourse 
                            defense capacity by 28 ground-based 
                            interceptors.
Sec. 1699G. Missile Defense Agency report on increasing number of 
                            ground-based interceptors up to 100.
Sec. 1699H. Evaluation and evolution of terrestrial ground-based 
                            midcourse defense sensors.
Sec. 1699I. Authorization for more ground-based midcourse defense 
                            testing.
       TITLE XVII--MATTERS RELATING TO SMALL BUSINESS PROCUREMENT

  Subtitle A--Improving Transparency and Clarity for Small Businesses

Sec. 1701. Improving reporting on small business goals.
Sec. 1702. Uniformity in procurement terminology.
Sec. 1703. Responsibilities of commercial market representatives.
Sec. 1704. Responsibilities of Business Opportunity Specialists.
                 Subtitle B--Women's Business Programs

Sec. 1711. Office of Women's Business Ownership.
Sec. 1712. Women's Business Center Program.
Sec. 1713. Matching requirements under Women's Business Center Program.
                       Subtitle C--SCORE Program

Sec. 1721. SCORE reauthorization.
Sec. 1722. SCORE program.
Sec. 1723. Online component.
Sec. 1724. Study and report on the future role of the SCORE program.
Sec. 1725. Technical and conforming amendments.
      Subtitle D--Small Business Development Centers Improvements

Sec. 1731. Use of authorized entrepreneurial development programs.
Sec. 1732. Marketing of services.
Sec. 1733. Data collection.
Sec. 1734. Fees from private partnerships and cosponsorships.
Sec. 1735. Equity for small business development centers.
Sec. 1736. Confidentiality requirements.
Sec. 1737. Limitation on award of grants to small business development 
                            centers.
                       Subtitle E--Miscellaneous

Sec. 1741. Modification of past performance pilot program to include 
                            consideration of past performance with 
                            allies of the United States.
            DIVISION B--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATIONS

Sec. 2001. Short title.
Sec. 2002. Expiration of authorizations and amounts required to be 
                            specified by law.
Sec. 2003. Effective date.
                 TITLE XXI--ARMY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

Sec. 2101. Authorized Army construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2102. Family housing.
Sec. 2103. Improvements to military family housing units.
Sec. 2104. Authorization of appropriations, Army.
Sec. 2105. Modification of authority to carry out certain Fiscal Year 
                            2014 project.
Sec. 2106. Modification of authority to carry out certain Fiscal Year 
                            2015 project.
Sec. 2107. Extension of authorization of certain Fiscal Year 2014 
                            project.
Sec. 2108. Extension of authorizations of certain Fiscal Year 2015 
                            projects.
Sec. 2109. Additional authority to carry out certain Fiscal Year 2000, 
                            2005, 2006, and 2007 projects.
                 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. Extension of authorizations for certain Fiscal Year 2014 
                            projects.
Sec. 2206. Extension of authorizations of certain Fiscal Year 2015 
                            projects.
Sec. 2207. Modification of authority to carry out certain Fiscal Year 
                            2016 project.
              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. Modification of authority to carry out certain Fiscal Year 
                            2017 projects.
Sec. 2306. Extension of authorizations of certain fiscal year 2015 
                            projects.
           TITLE XXIV--DEFENSE AGENCIES MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

Sec. 2401. Authorized Defense Agencies construction and land 
                            acquisition projects.
Sec. 2402. Authorized energy resiliency and conservation projects.
Sec. 2403. Authorization of appropriations, Defense Agencies.
Sec. 2404. Modification of authority to carry out certain Fiscal Year 
                            2017 project.
Sec. 2405. Extension of authorizations of certain Fiscal Year 2014 
                            projects.
Sec. 2406. Extension of authorizations of certain Fiscal Year 2015 
                            projects.
                   TITLE XXV--INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS

  Subtitle A--North Atlantic Treaty Organization Security Investment 
                                Program

Sec. 2501. Authorized NATO construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2502. Authorization of appropriations, NATO.
             Subtitle B--Host Country In-Kind Contributions

Sec. 2511. Republic of Korea funded construction projects.
Sec. 2512. Modification of authority to carry out certain Fiscal Year 
                            2017 projects.
            TITLE XXVI--GUARD AND RESERVE FORCES FACILITIES

Subtitle A--Project Authorizations and Authorizations 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. Modification of authority to carry out certain Fiscal Year 
                            2015 project.
Sec. 2612. Extension of authorizations of certain Fiscal Year 2014 
                            projects.
Sec. 2613. Extension of authorizations of certain Fiscal Year 2015 
                            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.
Sec. 2702. Prohibition on conducting additional base realignment and 
                            closure (BRAC) round.
Sec. 2703. Update to report on infrastructure capacity.
         TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION GENERAL PROVISIONS

 Subtitle A--Military Construction Program and Military Family Housing

Sec. 2801. Elimination of written notice requirement for military 
                            construction activities and reliance on 
                            electronic submission of notifications and 
                            reports.
Sec. 2802. Modification of thresholds applicable to unspecified minor 
                            construction projects.
Sec. 2803. Extension of temporary, limited authority to use operation 
                            and maintenance funds for construction 
                            projects outside the United States.
Sec. 2804. Use of operation and maintenance funds for military 
                            construction projects to replace facilities 
                            damaged or destroyed by natural disasters 
                            or terrorism incidents.
        Subtitle B--Real Property and Facilities Administration

Sec. 2811. Elimination of written notice requirement for military real 
                            property transactions and reliance on 
                            electronic submission of notifications and 
                            reports.
Sec. 2812. Clarification of applicability of fair market value 
                            consideration in grants of easements on 
                            military lands for rights-of-way.
Sec. 2813. Criteria for exchanges of property at military 
                            installations.
Sec. 2814. Prohibiting use of updated assessment of public schools on 
                            Department of Defense installations to 
                            supersede funding of certain projects.
Sec. 2815. Requirements for window fall prevention devices in military 
                            family housing.
Sec. 2816. Authorizing reimbursement of States for costs of suppressing 
                            wildfires caused by Department of Defense 
                            activities on State lands; restoration of 
                            lands of other Federal agencies for damage 
                            caused by Department of Defense vehicle 
                            mishaps.
Sec. 2817. Prohibiting collection of additional amounts from members 
                            living in units under Military Housing 
                            Privatization Initiative.
Sec. 2818. Certification related to certain acquisitions or leases of 
                            real property.
Sec. 2819. Improved process for disposal of Department of Defense 
                            surplus real property located overseas.
                      Subtitle C--Land Conveyances

Sec. 2821. Land exchange, Naval Industrial Reserve Ordnance Plant, 
                            Sunnyvale, California.
Sec. 2822. Land conveyance, Naval Ship Repair Facility, Guam.
Sec. 2823. Land conveyance, Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho.
Sec. 2824. Lease of real property to the United States Naval Academy 
                            Alumni Association and Naval Academy 
                            Foundation at United States Naval Academy, 
                            Annapolis, Maryland.
Sec. 2825. Land Conveyance, Natick Soldier Systems Center, 
                            Massachusetts.
Sec. 2826. Imposition of additional conditions on land conveyance, 
                            Castner Range, Fort Bliss, Texas.
Sec. 2827. Removal of certain deed restrictions and reversions 
                            associated with conveyance of property of 
                            former Defense Depot Ogden, Utah.
Sec. 2828. Land conveyance, Wasatch-Cache National Forest, Rich County, 
                            Utah.
Sec. 2829. Land conveyance, former missile alert facility known as 
                            Quebec-01, Laramie County, Wyoming.
                 Subtitle D--Military Land Withdrawals

Sec. 2831. Indefinite duration of certain military land withdrawals and 
                            reservations and improved management of 
                            withdrawn and reserved lands.
Sec. 2832. Temporary segregation from public land laws of property 
                            subject to proposed military land 
                            withdrawal; temporary use permits and 
                            transfers of small parcels of land between 
                            Departments of Interior and military 
                            departments; more efficient surveying of 
                            lands.
         Subtitle E--Military Memorials, Monuments, and Museums

Sec. 2841. Modification of prohibition on transfer of veterans memorial 
                            objects to foreign governments without 
                            specific authorization in law.
Sec. 2842. Recognition of the National Museum of World War II Aviation.
Sec. 2843. Principal office of Aviation Hall of Fame.
Sec. 2844. Battleship preservation grant program.
               Subtitle F--Shiloh National Military Park

Sec. 2851. Short title.
Sec. 2852. Definitions.
Sec. 2853. Areas to be added to Shiloh National Military Park.
Sec. 2854. Establishment of affiliated area.
Sec. 2855. Private Property Protection.
                       Subtitle G--Other Matters

Sec. 2861. Modification of Department of Defense guidance on use of 
                            airfield pavement markings.
Sec. 2862. Authority of Chief Operating Officer of Armed Forces 
                            Retirement Home to acquire and lease 
                            property.
Sec. 2863. Restrictions on rehabilitation of Over-the-Horizon 
                            Backscatter Radar Station.
Sec. 2864. Permitting machine room-less elevators in Department of 
                            Defense facilities.
   TITLE XXIX--OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

Sec. 2901. Authorized Army construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2902. Authorized Navy construction and land acquisition project.
Sec. 2903. Authorized Air Force construction and land acquisition 
                            projects.
Sec. 2904. Authorized Defense Agencies construction and land 
                            acquisition project.
Sec. 2905. Authorization of appropriations.
Sec. 2906. Extension of authorization of certain Fiscal Year 2015 
                            projects.
 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.
Sec. 3104. Nuclear energy.
   Subtitle B--Program Authorizations, Restrictions, and Limitations

Sec. 3111. Nuclear security enterprise infrastructure recapitalization 
                            and repair.
Sec. 3112. Incorporation of integrated surety architecture in 
                            transportation.
Sec. 3113. Cost estimates for life extension program and major 
                            alteration projects.
Sec. 3114. Budget requests and certification regarding nuclear weapons 
                            dismantlement.
Sec. 3115. Improved information relating to defense nuclear 
                            nonproliferation research and development 
                            program.
Sec. 3116. Research and development of advanced naval reactor fuel 
                            based on low-enriched uranium.
Sec. 3117. Prohibition on availability of funds for programs in Russian 
                            Federation.
Sec. 3118. National Nuclear Security Administration pay and performance 
                            system.
Sec. 3119. Disposition of weapons-usable plutonium.
Sec. 3120. Modification of minor construction threshold for plant 
                            projects.
Sec. 3121. Design competition.
Sec. 3122. Department of Energy Counterintelligence polygraph program.
Sec. 3123. Security clearance for dual-nationals employed by National 
                            Nuclear Security Agency.
Sec. 3124. Annual reports on unfunded priorities of the National 
                            Nuclear Security Administration.
Sec. 3125. Plutonium capabilities.
Sec. 3126. Plan for verification, detection, and monitoring of nuclear 
                            weapons and fissile material.
                     Subtitle C--Plans and Reports

Sec. 3131. Modification of certain reporting requirements.
Sec. 3132. Assessment of management and operating contracts of national 
                            security laboratories.
Sec. 3133. Evaluation of classification of certain defense nuclear 
                            waste.
Sec. 3134. Report on Critical Decision-1 on Material Staging Facility 
                            project.
Sec. 3135. Modification to stockpile stewardship, management, and 
                            responsiveness plan.
Sec. 3136. Improved reporting for anti-smuggling radiation detection 
                            systems.
Sec. 3137. Annual selected acquisition reports on certain hardware 
                            relating to defense nuclear 
                            nonproliferation.
Sec. 3138. Assessment of design trade options of W80-4 warhead.
Sec. 3139. Sense of Congress regarding uranium mining and nuclear 
                            testing.
Sec. 3140. Plan to further minimize the use of highly enriched uranium 
                            for medical isotopes.
          TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD

Sec. 3201. Authorization.
                 TITLE XXXIV--NAVAL PETROLEUM RESERVES

Sec. 3401. Authorization of appropriations.
                  TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION

Sec. 3501. Authorization of the Maritime Administration.
Sec. 3502. Merchant Ship Sales Act of 1946.
Sec. 3503. Maritime Security Fleet Program; restriction on operation 
                            for new entrants.
Sec. 3504. Codification of sections relating to acquisition, charter, 
                            and requisition of vessels.
Sec. 3505. Assistance for small shipyards.
Sec. 3506. Report on sexual assault victim recovery in the Coast Guard.
Sec. 3507. Centers of excellence.
Sec. 3508. Foreign Spill Protection.
Sec. 3509. Application of law.
Sec. 3510. Recourse for non-U.S. seamen.
                       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.
Sec. 4103. Procurement for overseas contingency operations for base 
                            requirements.
        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.
Sec. 4203. Research, development, test, and evaluation for overseas 
                            contingency operations for base 
                            requirements.
                 TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE

Sec. 4301. Operation and maintenance.
Sec. 4302. Operation and maintenance for overseas contingency 
                            operations.
Sec. 4303. Operation and maintenance for overseas contingency 
                            operations for base requirements.
                     TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL

Sec. 4401. Military personnel.
Sec. 4402. Military personnel for overseas contingency operations.
Sec. 4403. Military personnel for overseas contingency operations for 
                            base requirements.
                    TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS

Sec. 4501. Other authorizations.
Sec. 4502. Other authorizations for overseas contingency operations.
                   TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

Sec. 4601. Military construction.
Sec. 4602. Military construction for overseas contingency operations.
      TITLE XLVII--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS

Sec. 4701. Department of Energy national security programs.

SEC. 3. CONGRESSIONAL DEFENSE COMMITTEES.

    In this Act, the term ``congressional defense committees'' has the 
meaning given that term in section 101(a)(16) of title 10, United 
States Code.

            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 2018 
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. REPORT ON ACCELERATION OF INCREMENT 2 OF THE WARFIGHTER 
              INFORMATION NETWORK-TACTICAL.

    (a) Report.--Not later than January 30, 2018, the Secretary of the 
Army shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report on 
options for the acceleration of the procurement and fielding of 
Increment 2 of the Warfighter Information Network-Tactical program of 
the Army (referred to in this section as ``WIN-T Increment 2'').
    (b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) An estimate of the level of funding required to procure 
        a sufficient quantity of WIN-T Increment 2 components to field 
        thirty Brigade Combat Teams or equivalent units in the period 
        beginning with fiscal year 2018 and ending with fiscal year 
        2022.
            (2) A plan for fielding WIN-T Increment 2 to all Armored 
        Brigade Combat Teams of the Army and associated combat 
        vehicles, including the Armored Multipurpose Vehicle.
            (3) A plan for integrating WIN-T Increment 2 on the Stryker 
        combat vehicles fielded to Stryker Brigade Combat Teams of the 
        Army.
            (4) A list of potential upgrades to WIN-T Increment 2 that 
        may improve program capabilities, including size, weight, and 
        complexity, and the impact of these improvements on the cost of 
        the program.
            (5) Options for fielding an Expeditionary Command Post 
        capability that effectively integrates WIN-T Increment 2 and 
        command post infrastructure.
            (6) A detailed plan for upgrading the existing WIN-T 
        Increment 1 system to the latest WIN-T Increment 2 
        configuration that includes--
                    (A) an estimate of the level of funding required to 
                implement the plan; and
                    (B) the effect of the plan on the fielding of 
                mobile mission command to the reserve components of the 
                Army.
            (7) Any other matters the Secretary determines to be 
        appropriate.

                       Subtitle C--Navy Programs

SEC. 121. AIRCRAFT CARRIERS.

    (a) Sense of Congress on Increase in Number of Operational Aircraft 
Carriers.--
            (1) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
                    (A) Aircraft carriers are an essential element of 
                the Navy's core missions of forward presence, sea 
                control, ensuring safe sea lanes, and power projection, 
                and provide the flexibility and versatility necessary 
                for the execution of a wide range of additional 
                missions.
                    (B) Forward airpower is integral to the security 
                and joint forces operations of the United States. 
                Carriers play a central role in delivering forward 
                airpower from sovereign territory of the United States 
                in both permissive and nonpermissive environments.
                    (C) Aircraft carriers provide the Nation the 
                ability to rapidly and decisively respond to national 
                threats, to conduct worldwide, on-station diplomacy, 
                and to deter threats to allies, partners, and friends 
                of the United States.
                    (D) Since the end of the cold war, aircraft carrier 
                deployments have increased while the aircraft carrier 
                force structure has declined.
                    (E) Due to the increased array of complex threats 
                across the globe, the Navy's aircraft carriers are 
                operating at maximum capacity, increasing deployment 
                lengths and decreasing maintenance periods in order to 
                meet operational requirements.
                    (F) To meet global peacetime and wartime 
                requirements, the Navy has indicated a requirement to 
                maintain two aircraft carriers deployed overseas and to 
                have three additional aircraft carriers capable of 
                deploying within 90 days. However, the Navy has 
                indicated that the existing aircraft carrier force 
                structure cannot support these military requirements.
                    (G) Despite the requirement to maintain an aircraft 
                carrier strike group in both the United States Central 
                Command and the United States Pacific Command, the Navy 
                has been unable to generate sufficient capacity to 
                support combatant commanders and has developed 
                significant carrier gaps in these critical areas.
                    (H) The continued use of a diminished aircraft 
                carrier force structure has resulted in extensive 
                maintenance availabilities which typically exceed 
                program costs and increase time in shipyards. These 
                expansive maintenance availabilities exacerbate 
                existing carrier gaps.
                    (I) Because of maintenance overhaul extensions, the 
                Navy is truncating basic aircraft carrier training to 
                expedite the deployment of available aircraft carriers. 
                Limiting aircraft carrier training decreases 
                operational capabilities and increases risks to 
                sailors.
                    (J) Despite the objections of the Navy, the Under 
                Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and 
                Logistics directed the Navy on August 7, 2015, to 
                perform shock trials on the U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford (CVN-
                78). The Assistant Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for 
                Operations, Plans and Strategy indicated that this 
                action could delay the introduction of the U.S.S. 
                Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) to the fleet by up to two 
                years, exacerbating existing carrier gaps.
                    (K) The Navy has adopted a two-phase acquisition 
                strategy for the U.S.S. John F. Kennedy (CVN-79), an 
                action that will delay the introduction of this 
                aircraft carrier by up to two years, exacerbating 
                existing carrier gaps.
                    (L) Developing an alternative design to the Ford 
                class aircraft carrier is not cost beneficial. A 
                smaller design is projected to incur significant design 
                and engineering cost while significantly reducing 
                magazine size, carrier air wing size, sortie rate, and 
                on-station effectiveness among other vital factors as 
                compared to the Ford class. Furthermore, a new design 
                will delay the introduction of future aircraft 
                carriers, exacerbating existing carrier gaps and 
                threatening the national security of the United States.
                    (M) The 2016 Navy Force Structure Assessment states 
                ``A minimum of 12 aircraft carriers are required to 
                meet the increased warfighting response requirements of 
                the Defense Planning Guidance Defeat/Deny force sizing 
                direction.'' Furthermore, a new National Defense 
                Strategy is being prepared that will assess the defeat/
                deny force sizing direction and may increase the force 
                structure associated with aircraft carriers.
            (2) Sense of congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
                    (A) the United States should expedite delivery of 
                12 aircraft carriers;
                    (B) an aircraft carrier should be authorized every 
                three years;
                    (C) shock trials should be conducted on the U.S.S. 
                John F. Kennedy (CVN-79), as initially proposed by the 
                Navy;
                    (D) construction for the U.S.S. John F. Kennedy 
                (CVN-79) should be accomplished in a single phase; and
                    (E) the United States should continue the Ford 
                class design for the aircraft carrier designated CVN-
                81.
    (b) Increase in Number of Operational Aircraft Carriers.--
            (1) Increase.--Section 5062(b) of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by striking ``11 operational aircraft 
        carriers'' and inserting ``12 operational aircraft carriers''.
            (2) Effective date.--The amendment made by paragraph (1) 
        shall take effect on September 30, 2023.
    (c) Shock Trials for CVN-78.--Section 128 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 
751) is amended--
            (1) by striking subsections (a) and (b); and
            (2) by redesignating subsections (c) and (d) as subsections 
        (a) and (b), respectively.
    (d) Procurement Authority for Aircraft Carrier Programs.--
            (1) Procurement authority in support of construction of 
        ford class aircraft carriers.--
                    (A) Authority for economic order quantity.--The 
                Secretary of the Navy may procure materiel and 
                equipment in support of the construction of the Ford 
                class aircraft carriers designated CVN-81 and CVN-82 in 
                economic order quantities when cost savings are 
                achievable.
                    (B) Liability.--Any contract entered into under 
                subparagraph (A) shall provide that any obligation of 
                the United States to make a payment under the contract 
                is subject to the availability of appropriations for 
                that purpose, and that total liability to the 
                Government for termination of any contract entered into 
                shall be limited to the total amount of funding 
                obligated at time of termination.
            (2) Refueling and complex overhaul of nimitz class aircraft 
        carriers.--
                    (A) In general.--The Secretary of the Navy may 
                carry out the nuclear refueling and complex overhaul of 
                each of the following Nimitz class aircraft carriers:
                            (i) U.S.S. John C. Stennis (CVN-74).
                            (ii) U.S.S. Harry S. Truman (CVN-75).
                            (iii) U.S.S. Ronald Reagan (CVN-76).
                            (iv) U.S.S. George H.W. Bush (CVN-77).
                    (B) Use of incremental funding.--With respect to 
                any contract entered into under subparagraph (A) for 
                the nuclear refueling and complex overhaul of a Nimitz 
                class aircraft carrier, the Secretary may use 
                incremental funding for a period not to exceed six 
                years after advance procurement funds for such nuclear 
                refueling and complex overhaul effort are first 
                obligated.
                    (C) Condition for out-year contract payments.--Any 
                contract entered into under subparagraph (A) shall 
                provide that any obligation of the United States to 
                make a payment under the contract for a fiscal year 
                after fiscal year 2018 is subject to the availability 
                of appropriations for that purpose for that later 
                fiscal year.

SEC. 122. PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR ICEBREAKER VESSELS.

    (a) Authority.--The Secretary of the Department in which the Coast 
Guard is operating may enter into a contract or other agreement with 
the Secretary of the Navy under which the Navy shall act as general 
agent for the Department in which the Coast Guard is operating for the 
purpose of entering into a contract on behalf of such Department, 
beginning with the fiscal year 2018 program year, for the procurement 
of the following:
            (1) Not more than three heavy icebreaker vessels.
            (2) Not more than three medium icebreaker vessels.
    (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 2018 is subject to the availability of appropriations 
for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) Heavy icebreaker vessel.--The term ``heavy icebreaker 
        vessel'' means a vessel that is able--
                    (A) to break through nonridged ice that is not less 
                than six feet thick at a speed of three knots;
                    (B) to break through ridged ice that is not less 
                than 21 feet thick; and
                    (C) to operate continuously for 80 days without 
                replenishment.
            (2) Medium icebreaker vessel.--The term ``medium icebreaker 
        vessel'' means a vessel that is able--
                    (A) to break through nonridged ice that is not less 
                than four and one-half feet thick at a speed of three 
                knots; and
                    (B) to operate continuously for 80 days without 
                replenishment.

SEC. 123. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR PROCUREMENT OF 
              ICEBREAKER VESSELS.

    (a) Limitation.--Except as provided in subsection (b), none of the 
funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made 
available for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2018 may be 
obligated or expended for the procurement of an icebreaker vessel.
    (b) Exception.--Notwithstanding the limitation in subsection (a), 
the Secretary of the Navy may use funds described in such subsection to 
act as general agent for the Department in which the Coast Guard is 
operating pursuant to a contract or other agreement entered into under 
section 122.

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 one or more multiyear contracts, beginning with the fiscal year 
2019 program year, for the procurement of up to 13 Virginia class 
submarines at a rate of not more than 3 submarines per year during the 
covered period.
    (b) Baseline Estimate.--Before entering into any contract for the 
procurement of a Virginia class submarine under subsection (a), the 
Secretary of Navy shall determine a baseline estimate for the submarine 
in accordance with section 2435 of title 10, United States Code.
    (c) Limitation.--The Secretary of the Navy may not enter into a 
contract for the procurement of a Virginia class submarine under 
subsection (a) if the contract would increase the cost of the submarine 
by more than 10 percent above the baseline estimate for the submarine 
determined under subsection (b).
    (d) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary may enter 
into one or more contracts, beginning in fiscal year 2018, for advance 
procurement--
            (1) associated with the vessels for which authorization to 
        enter into a multiyear procurement contract is provided under 
        subsection (a); and
            (2) for other equipment and subsystems associated with the 
        Virginia class submarine program.
    (e) 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 2018 is subject to the availability of appropriations 
or funds for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
    (f) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) Covered period.--The term ``covered period'' means the 
        5-year period beginning with the fiscal year 2019 program year 
        and ending with the fiscal year 2023 program year.
            (2) Virginia class submarine.--The term ``Virginia class 
        submarine'' means a block V configured Virginia class 
        submarine.

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 one or more multiyear contracts, beginning with the fiscal year 
2018 program year, for the procurement of--
            (1) up to 15 Arleigh Burke class Flight III guided missile 
        destroyers at a rate of not more than three such destroyers per 
        year during the covered period; and
            (2) the Aegis weapon systems, AN/SPY-6(v) air and missile 
        defense radar systems, MK 41 vertical launching systems, and 
        commercial broadband satellite systems associated with such 
        vessels.
    (b) Baseline Estimate.--Before entering into any contract for the 
procurement of an Arleigh Burke class destroyer under subsection (a), 
the Secretary of Navy shall determine a baseline estimate for the 
destroyer in accordance with section 2435 of title 10, United States 
Code.
    (c) Limitation.--The Secretary of the Navy may not enter into a 
contract for the procurement of a Arleigh Burke class destroyer or any 
major subprogram under subsection (a) if the contract would increase 
the cost of the destroyer by more than 10 percent above the baseline 
estimate for the destroyer determined under subsection (b).
    (d) Authority for Advance Procurement.--The Secretary may enter 
into one or more contracts, beginning in fiscal year 2018, for advance 
procurement associated with the vessels and systems for which 
authorization to enter into a multiyear procurement contract is 
provided under subsection (a).
    (e) 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 2018 is subject to the availability of appropriations 
or funds for that purpose for such later fiscal year.
    (f) Covered Period Defined.--The term ``covered period'' means the 
5-year period beginning with the fiscal year 2018 program year and 
ending with the fiscal year 2022 program year.

SEC. 126. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR ARLEIGH BURKE CLASS 
              DESTROYER.

    (a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2017 for 
procurement, that are unobligated as of the date of the enactment of 
this Act, may be obligated or expended to procure an Arleigh Burke 
class destroyer (DDG-51) unless the two covered destroyers include an 
AN/SPY-6(V) air and missile defense radar system.
    (b) Waiver.--The Secretary of the Navy may waive the limitation in 
subsection (a) if the Secretary determines that the cost or schedule 
risk associated with the integration of the AN/SPY-6(V) air and missile 
defense radar is unacceptable or incongruous with a business case that 
relies on stable design, technology maturity, and realistic cost and 
schedule estimates.
    (c) Covered Destroyer Defined.--In this section, the term ``covered 
destroyer'' means an Arleigh Burke class destroyer (DDG-51) for which 
funds were authorized to be appropriated by the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) and that 
was fully funded.
    (d) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) destroyers authorized to be appropriated by the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public 
        Law 114-92) should be configured as Arleigh Burke class Flight 
        IIA guided missile destroyers, as initially authorized in 
        section 123 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 1655 ); and
            (2) the Department of the Navy should bear the majority 
        risk associated with the share line on a covered destroyer.

SEC. 127. EXTENSIONS OF AUTHORITIES RELATING TO CONSTRUCTION OF CERTAIN 
              VESSELS.

    (a) Extension of Authority to Use Incremental Funding for LHA 
Replacement.--Section 122(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act 
for fiscal year 2017 (114-328; 130 Stat. 2030) is amended by striking 
``for fiscal years 2017 and 2018'' and inserting ``for fiscal years 
2017, 2018, and 2019''.
    (b) Extension of Ford Class Aircraft Carrier Construction 
Authority.--Section 121(a) of the John Warner National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law 109-364; 120 Stat. 
2104), as most recently amended by section 121 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 
1654), is amended by striking ``five fiscal years'' and inserting 
``seven fiscal years''.

SEC. 128. MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR V-22 OSPREY AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Authority for Multiyear Procurement.--Subject to section 2306b 
of title 10, United States Code (except as provided in subsection (b)), 
the Secretary of the Navy may enter into one or more multiyear 
contracts, beginning with the 2018 program year, for the procurement of 
the following:
            (1) V-22 Osprey aircraft.
            (2) Common configuration-readiness and modernization 
        upgrades for V-22 Osprey aircraft.
    (b) Contract Period.--Notwithstanding section 2306b(k) of title 10, 
United States Code, the period covered by a contract entered into on a 
multiyear basis under the authority of subsection (a) may exceed five 
years, but may not exceed seven years.
    (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 2018 is subject to the availability of appropriations 
or funds for that purpose for such later fiscal year.

SEC. 129. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR THE ENHANCED MULTI 
              MISSION PARACHUTE SYSTEM.

    (a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act or otherwise made available for the Department of Defense for 
fiscal year 2018 for the enhanced multi mission parachute system may be 
used to enter into, or to prepare to enter into, a contract for the 
procurement of such parachute system until the date on which the 
Secretary of the Navy submits to the congressional defense committees 
the certification described in subsection (b) and the report described 
in subsection (c).
    (b) Certification.--The certification described in this subsection 
is a certification by the Secretary of the Navy that--
            (1) neither the Marine Corps' currently fielded enhanced 
        multi mission parachute system nor the Army's RA-1 parachute 
        system meet the Marine Corps requirements;
            (2) the Marine Corps' PARIS, Special Application Parachute 
        does not meet the Marine Corps requirements;
            (3) the testing plan for the enhanced multi mission 
        parachute system meets all regulatory requirements; and
            (4) the Department of the Navy has performed an analysis 
        and determined that a high glide canopy parachute system is not 
        more prone to malfunctions than the currently fielded free fall 
        parachute systems.
    (c) Report.--The report described in this subsection is a report 
that includes--
            (1) an explanation of the rationale for using the Parachute 
        Industry Association specification normally used for sports 
        parachutes that are employed from relatively slow flying 
        civilian aircraft at altitudes below 10,000 feet for a military 
        parachute;
            (2) an inventory and cost estimate for any new equipment 
        and training that the Marine Corps will have to be acquire in 
        order to employ a high glide parachute;
            (3) an explanation of why the Department of the Navy is 
        conducting a paper down select and not conducting any testing 
        until first article testing; and
            (4) a discussion of the risk assessment for high glide 
        canopies, and specifically how the Department of the Navy is 
        mitigating the risk for malfunctions experienced in other high 
        glide canopy programs.

                     Subtitle D--Air Force Programs

SEC. 131. STREAMLINING ACQUISITION OF INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC 
              MISSILE SECURITY CAPABILITY.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) On September 25, 2014, then Secretary of the Air Force, 
        Deborah Lee James, submitted a report to Congress on the 
        replacement strategy of the Air Force for the UH-1N helicopter, 
        which included the following information:
                    (A) On the age of the airframe: ``The UH-1N is a 
                versatile utility helicopter that was accepted into 
                service from 1968-1969.''.
                    (B) On the ability to meet requirements: ``The 
                entire fleet supports five general homeland security 
                missions. . .The ability of the UH-1N to accomplish 
                these missions was evaluated in 2006, and the aircraft 
                was found to be `not effective.' The shortcomings of 
                the UH-1N were derived from specific mission 
                requirements for carrying capacity, airspeed, 
                unrefueled endurance, mission range, force protection 
                for the floor, specific protection for all aircrew and 
                passengers, survivability, and materiel 
                availability.''.
                    (C) Regarding previous efforts to acquire a 
                replacement aircraft, the report identified efforts 
                that date back to 2006, including--
                            (i) an initial analysis of alternatives by 
                        Air Force Space Command in 2006;
                            (ii) the common vertical lift support 
                        platform program, which was cancelled in 2013;
                            (iii) two RAND corporation studies funded 
                        in 2013; and
                            (iv) the then-current proposal of the Air 
                        Force to procure modified Army UH-60 
                        helicopters.
            (2) On February 24, 2016, at a hearing before the Committee 
        on Armed Services of the House of Representatives, in response 
        to concerns related to lift, capacity, and hover time of the 
        UH-1N, then Commander of the United States Strategic Command, 
        Admiral Cecil Haney stated: ``Congressman, absolutely, in terms 
        of thinking very crisply associated with what we need to do to 
        improve security of our missile fields. . . the attributes you 
        listed are the attributes that concern me in terms of the 
        capability, not just now, but into the future.''.
            (3) On March 2, 2016, at a hearing before the Committee on 
        Armed Services of the House of Representatives, the Commander 
        of Air Force Global Strike Command, General Robin Rand stated: 
        ``We will not meet the emergency security response with the 
        present helicopter.''.
            (4) On April 4, 2017, at a hearing before the Committee on 
        Armed Services of the Senate, the Commander of the United 
        States Strategic Command, General John E. Hyten stated: ``Of 
        all the things in my portfolio, I can't even describe how upset 
        I get about the helicopter replacement program. It's a 
        helicopter, for gosh sakes. We ought to be able to go out and 
        buy a helicopter and put it in the hands of the people that 
        need it. And we should be able to do that quickly. We've been 
        building combat helicopters for a long time in this country. I 
        don't understand why the heck it is so hard to buy a 
        helicopter.''.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that, based on 
the findings under subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense should have 
the authority to expedite the procurement of a replacement aircraft for 
the UH-1N helicopter.
    (c) Waiver and Contract Authority.--Subject to subsection (d), in 
procuring a replacement aircraft for the UH-1N helicopter, the 
Secretary of Defense may--
            (1) waive any provision of law requiring the use of 
        competitive procedures for the procurement; and
            (2) enter into a contract for the procurement on a sole-
        source basis.
    (d) Notice and Certification.--Not later than 15 days before 
exercising the authority under subsection (c), the Secretary shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees, in writing--
            (1) notice of the intent of the Secretary to exercise such 
        authority; and
            (2) a certification that--
                    (A) the Secretary has reviewed--
                            (i) the threshold requirements for the UH-
                        1N replacement aircraft program; and
                            (ii) any delays that may have occurred 
                        while the Air Force pursued strategies for the 
                        procurement of such aircraft on an other than 
                        sole-source basis; and
                    (B) after conducting such review, the Secretary has 
                determined that entering into a contract on a sole-
                source basis under subsection (c)--
                            (i) is in the national security interests 
                        of the United States; and
                            (ii) is necessary to ensure that a UH-1N 
                        replacement aircraft enters service by not 
                        later than September 30, 2020.

SEC. 132. LIMITATION ON SELECTION OF SINGLE CONTRACTOR FOR C-130H 
              AVIONICS MODERNIZATION PROGRAM INCREMENT 2.

    (a) Limitation.--The Secretary of the Air Force may not select only 
a single prime contractor to carry out increment 2 of the C-130H 
avionics modernization program until the Secretary submits to the 
congressional defense committees a written certification that, in 
selecting such a single prime contractor--
            (1) the Secretary will ensure, to the extent practicable, 
        that commercially available off-the-shelf items are used under 
        the program, including technology solutions and 
        nondevelopmental items; and
            (2) excessively restrictive military specification 
        standards will not be used to restrict or eliminate full and 
        open competition in the selection process.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section, the terms ``commercially 
available off-the-shelf item'', ``full and open competition'', and 
``nondevelopmental item'' have the meanings given the terms in chapter 
1 of title 41, United States Code.

SEC. 133. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR EC-130H COMPASS CALL 
              RECAPITALIZATION PROGRAM.

    (a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act or otherwise made available for any fiscal year for the EC-
130H Compass Call recapitalization program of the Air Force may be 
obligated or expended until a period of 30 days has elapsed following 
the date on which the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
Technology, and Logistics submits to the congressional defense 
committees the certification described in subsection (b).
    (b) Certification.--The certification described in this subsection 
is a written statement certifying that--
            (1) an independent review of the acquisition process for 
        the EC-130H Compass Call recapitalization program of the Air 
        Force has been conducted; and
            (2) as a result of such review, it has been determined that 
        the acquisition process for such program complies with all 
        applicable laws, guidelines, and best practices.

SEC. 134. COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS OF UPGRADES TO MQ-9 REAPER AIRCRAFT.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the 
Secretary of the Air Force, shall conduct an analysis that compares the 
costs and benefits of the following:
            (1) Upgrading fielded MQ-9 Reaper aircraft to a Block 5 
        configuration.
            (2) Proceeding with the procurement of MQ-9B aircraft 
        instead of upgrading fielded MQ-9 Reaper aircraft to a Block 5 
        configuration.
    (b) Report 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 congressional defense committees a report that 
        includes the results of the cost-benefit analysis conducted 
        under subsection (a).
            (2) Form of report.--The report required by paragraph (1) 
        shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a 
        classified annex.

SEC. 135. INCREASE IN AMOUNTS FOR ENHANCING INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, 
              AND RECONNAISSANCE CAPABILITY.

    (a) Increase.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated in 
section 101 for aircraft procurement, Air Force, as specified in the 
corresponding funding table in division D, for BA 05: Modification of 
Inservice Aircraft: E-8 (line 056) is hereby increased by $23,091,000.
    (b) Offset.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated in 
section 101 for aircraft procurement, Air Force, as specified in the 
corresponding funding table in division D, for BA 05: Modification of 
Inservice Aircraft / BSA 5: Other Aircraft (line 050) is hereby reduced 
by $23,091,000.

       Subtitle E--Defense-wide, Joint, and Multiservice Matters

SEC. 141. AUTHORITY FOR PROCUREMENT OF ECONOMIC ORDER QUANTITIES FOR 
              THE F-35 AIRCRAFT PROGRAM.

    (a) Authority for Procurement of Economic Order Quantities.--
Subject to subsection (c), the Secretary of Defense may enter into one 
or more contracts, beginning with the fiscal year 2018 program year, 
for the procurement of economic order quantities of the material and 
equipment described in subsection (b).
    (b) Material and Equipment Described.--The material and equipment 
described in this subsection is material and equipment--
            (1) that has completed formal hardware qualification 
        testing for the F-35 aircraft program; and
            (2) is to be used in procurement contracts to be awarded 
        under the F-35 aircraft program in fiscal years 2019 and 2020.
    (c) Limitations.--
            (1) Maximum amount.--Of the funds authorized to be 
        appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for the 
        Department of Defense for fiscal year 2018 or any fiscal year 
        thereafter for the F-35 aircraft program, not more than 
        $661,000,000 may be obligated or expended to enter into 
        contracts under subsection (a).
            (2) Certification.--The Secretary of Defense may not enter 
        into a contract under subsection (a) until a period of 15 days 
        has elapsed following the date on which the Secretary submits 
        to the congressional defense committees a written certification 
        that the contract to be entered into under such subsection 
        meets the following conditions:
                    (A) The contract will result in significant cost 
                savings as compared to the total anticipated costs of 
                procuring the property through contracts that are not 
                for economic order quantities.
                    (B) The estimates of the cost of the contract and 
                the anticipated cost savings resulting from the 
                contract are realistic.
                    (C) The minimum need for the property that is to be 
                procured under the contract is expected to remain 
                substantially unchanged during the contract period.
                    (D) There is a reasonable expectation that, 
                throughout the contract period, the head of the 
                relevant military department or defense agency will 
                request funding for the contract at the level required 
                to avoid contract cancellation.
                    (E) The design of the property that is to be 
                procured under the contract is expected to remain 
                substantially unchanged and the technical risks 
                associated with such design are not excessive.
                    (F) Entering into the contract will promote the 
                national security interests of the United States.
                    (G) The contract satisfies the conditions described 
                in subparagraphs (C) through (F) of section 2306b(i)(3) 
                of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 142. LIMITATION ON DEMILITARIZATION OF CERTAIN CLUSTER MUNITIONS.

    (a) Limitation.--Except as provided in subsection (c), the 
Secretary of Defense may not demilitarize any cluster munitions until 
the date on which the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional 
defense committees the certification described in subsection (b).
    (b) Certification.--The certification described in this subsection 
is a written certification that the Department of Defense has an 
inventory of covered munitions that meets not less than 75 percent of 
the operational requirements of the Department with respect to cluster 
munitions across the full range of military operational environments.
    (c) Exception for Safety.--The limitation under subsection (a) 
shall not apply to the demilitarization of cluster munitions that the 
Secretary determines--
            (1) are unserviceable as a result of an inspection, test, 
        field incident, or other significant failure to meet 
        performance or logistics requirements; or
            (2) are unsafe or could pose a safety risk if not 
        demilitarized or destroyed.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) Cluster munition.--The term ``cluster munition'' means 
        a munition that is composed of a nonreusable canister or 
        delivery body that contains multiple, conventional 
        submunitions, without regard to the mode by which the munition 
        is delivered. The term does not include--
                    (A) nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons;
                    (B) obscurants;
                    (C) pyrotechnics;
                    (D) non-lethal systems;
                    (E) non-explosive kinetic effect submunitions;
                    (F) electronic effects; or
                    (G) landmines.
            (2) Covered munitions.--The term ``covered munitions'' 
        means cluster munitions containing submunitions that, after 
        arming, do not result in more than 1 percent unexploded 
        ordnance (as that term is defined in section 101(e)(5) of title 
        10, United States Code) across the range of intended 
        operational environments.
            (3) Demilitarize.--The term ``demilitarize'', when used 
        with respect to a cluster munition or components of a cluster 
        munition--
                    (A) means to destroy the military offensive or 
                defensive advantages inherent in the munition or its 
                components; and
                    (B) includes any mutilation, scrapping, melting, 
                burning, or alteration that prevents the use of the 
                munition or its components for the military purposes 
                for which the munition or its components was designed 
                or for a lethal purpose.

SEC. 143. REINSTATEMENT OF REQUIREMENT TO PRESERVE CERTAIN C-5 
              AIRCRAFT.

    Section 141 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 1659), as amended by section 
132 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
(Public Law 114-328), is amended by inserting after subsection (c) the 
following:
    ``(d) Preservation of Certain Retired C-5 Aircraft.--The Secretary 
of the Air Force shall preserve each C-5 aircraft that is retired by 
the Secretary during a period in which the total inventory of strategic 
airlift aircraft of the Secretary is less than 301, such that the 
retired 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. 144. REQUIREMENT THAT CERTAIN AIRCRAFT AND UNMANNED AERIAL 
              VEHICLES USE SPECIFIED STANDARD DATA LINK.

    Section 157 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 1667) is amended--
            (1) by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
    ``(b) Solicitations.--The Secretary of Defense shall--
            ``(1) ensure that any solicitation issued for a Common Data 
        Link described in subsection (a), regardless of whether the 
        solicitation is issued by a military department or a contractor 
        with respect to a subcontract--
                    ``(A) conforms to a Department of Defense 
                specification standard, including interfaces and 
                waveforms, existing as of the date of the solicitation; 
                and
                    ``(B) does not include any proprietary or 
                undocumented waveforms or control interfaces or data 
                interfaces as a requirement or criterion for 
                evaluation; and
            ``(2) notify the congressional defense committees not later 
        than 15 days after issuing a solicitation for a Common Data 
        Link to be sunset (CDL-TBS) waveform.''; and
            (2) in subsection (c), in the matter preceding paragraph 
        (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``Under Secretary of Defense for 
                Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics'' and inserting 
                ``Deputy Secretary of Defense'';
                    (B) by striking ``Under Secretary'' and inserting 
                ``Deputy Secretary of Defense'' ; and
                    (C) by inserting ``before October 1, 2023'' after 
                ``committees''.

         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 2018 
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. COST CONTROLS FOR PRESIDENTIAL AIRCRAFT RECAPITALIZATION 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) Fixed Capability Requirements.--Except as provided in 
subsection (b), the capability requirements for aircraft procured under 
the presidential aircraft recapitalization program of the Air Force 
(referred to in this section as the ``PAR Program'') shall be the 
capability requirements identified in version 7.0 of the system 
requirement document for the PAR Program dated December 14, 2016.
    (b) Adjustments.--The Secretary of the Air Force may adjust the 
capability requirements described in subsection (a) only if the 
Secretary submits to the congressional defense committees a written 
determination that such adjustment is necessary--
            (1) to resolve an ambiguity relating to the capability 
        requirement;
            (2) to address a problem with the administration of the 
        capability requirement;
            (3) to lower the development cost or life-cycle cost of the 
        PAR program;
            (4) to comply with a change in international, Federal, 
        State, or local law or regulation that takes effect after 
        September 30, 2017;
            (5) to address a safety issue; or
            (6) subject to subsection (c), to address an emerging 
        threat or vulnerability.
    (c) Limitation on Adjustment for Emerging Threat or 
Vulnerability.--The Secretary of the Air Force may use the authority 
under paragraph (6) of subsection (b) to adjust the requirements 
described in subsection (a) only if the Secretary and the Chief of 
Staff of the Air Force, on a nondelegable basis--
            (1) jointly determine that such adjustment is necessary and 
        in the interests of the national security of the United States; 
        and
            (2) submit to the congressional defense committees notice 
        of such joint determination.
    (d) Form of Contracts.--
            (1) Requirement for fixed-price type contracts.--The 
        contract awarded for the procurement of the unmodified 
        commercial aircraft under the PAR program shall be a fixed 
        price type contract.
            (2) Analysis for fixed-price type contracts.--The Secretary 
        of the Air Force shall work with the contractor and conduct an 
        analysis of risk and explore opportunities to enter into 
        additional fixed price type contracts for engineering and 
        manufacturing development beyond the procurement of the 
        unmodified commercial aircraft as described in paragraph (1).
    (e) Quarterly Briefings.--
            (1) In general.--Beginning not later than October 1, 2017, 
        and on a quarterly basis thereafter through October 1, 2022, 
        the Secretary of the Air Force shall provide to the Committee 
        on Armed Services of the House of Representatives a briefing on 
        the efforts of the Secretary to control costs under the PAR 
        Program.
            (2) Elements.--Each briefing under paragraph (1) shall 
        include, with respect to the PAR Program, the following:
                    (A) An overview of the program schedule.
                    (B) A description of each contract awarded under 
                the program, including a description of the type of 
                contract and the status of the contract.
                    (C) An assessment of the status of the program with 
                respect to--
                            (i) modification;
                            (ii) testing;
                            (iii) delivery; and
                            (iv) sustainment.
    (f) Service Acquisition Executive Defined.--In this section, the 
term ``service acquisition executive'' has the meaning given that term 
in section 101(a)(10) of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 212. CAPITAL INVESTMENT AUTHORITY.

    Section 2208(k)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``$250,000'' and inserting ``$500,000''.

SEC. 213. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO AWARD PRIZES FOR ADVANCED 
              TECHNOLOGY ACHIEVEMENTS.

    Section 2374a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``to award cash prizes'' 
        and inserting ``to award prizes, which may be cash prizes or 
        nonmonetary prizes,'';
            (2) in subsection (b), by striking ``cash prizes'' and 
        inserting ``prizes'';
            (3) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``cash prize of'' 
                and inserting ``prize valued at''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(3) No prize competition may result in the award of a nonmonetary 
prize valued at more than $10,000 without the approval of the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics.'';
            (4) in subsection (e)--
                    (A) by inserting ``or nonmonetary items'' after 
                ``accept funds''; and
                    (B) by striking ``and from State and local 
                governments,'' and inserting ``from State and local 
                governments, and from other nongovernmental sources,''; 
                and
            (5) by striking subsection (f).

SEC. 214. CRITICAL TECHNOLOGIES FOR COLUMBIA CLASS SUBMARINE.

    (a) In General.--For purposes of sections 2366b and 2448b(a)(2) of 
title 10, United States Code, the components identified in subsection 
(b) are deemed to be critical technologies for the Columbia class 
ballistic missile submarine construction program.
    (b) Critical Technologies.--The components identified in this 
subsection are--
            (1) the coordinated stern for the Columbia class ballistic 
        missile submarine;
            (2) the electric drive system for the submarine; and
            (3) the nuclear reactor for the submarine.

SEC. 215. JOINT HYPERSONICS TRANSITION OFFICE.

    (a) Redesignation.--The joint technology office on hypersonics in 
the Office of the Secretary of Defense is redesignated as the ``Joint 
Hypersonics Transition Office''. Any reference in a law (other than 
this section), map, regulation, document, paper, or other record of the 
United States to the joint technology office on hypersonics shall be 
deemed to be a reference to the Joint Hypersonics Transition Office.
    (b) Hypersonics Development.--Section 218 of the John Warner 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law 
109-364; 10 U.S.C. 2358 note), as amended by section 1079(f) of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 
114-192; 129 Stat. 999), is amended--
            (1) in the heading of subsection (a), by striking ``Joint 
        Technology Office on Hypersonics'' and inserting ``Joint 
        Hypersonics Transition Office'';
            (2) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in the first sentence, by striking ``joint 
                technology office on hypersonics'' and inserting 
                ``Joint Hypersonics Transition Office (in this section 
                referred to as the `Office')''; and
                    (B) in the second sentence, by striking ``office'' 
                and inserting ``Office'';
            (3) in subsection (b), by striking ``joint technology 
        office established under subsection (a)'' and inserting 
        ``Office''; and
            (4) by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
    ``(c) Responsibilities.--In carrying out the program required by 
subsection (b), the Office shall do the following:
            ``(1) Coordinate and integrate current and future research, 
        development, test, and evaluation programs and system 
        demonstration programs of the Department of Defense on 
        hypersonics.
            ``(2) Undertake appropriate actions to ensure--
                    ``(A) close and continuous integration of the 
                programs on hypersonics of the military departments and 
                the Defense Agencies with the programs on hypersonics 
                across the Federal Government; and
                    ``(B) that both foundational research and 
                developmental testing resources are adequate and well 
                funded, and that facilities are made available in a 
                timely manner to support hypersonics research, 
                demonstration programs, and system development.
            ``(3) Approve demonstration programs on hypersonic systems 
        to speed the maturation and deployment of the systems to the 
        warfighter,.
            ``(4) Ensure that any demonstration program on hypersonic 
        systems that is carried out in any year after its approval 
        under paragraph (3) is carried out only if certified under 
        subsection (e) as being consistent with the roadmap under 
        subsection (d).
            ``(5) Develop a well-defined path for hypersonic 
        technologies to transition to operational capabilities for the 
        warfighter.'';
            (5) in subsection (d)(1), by striking ``joint technology 
        office established under subsection (a)'' and inserting 
        ``Office''; and
            (6) in subsection (e)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``joint 
                technology office established under subsection (a)'' 
                and inserting ``Office''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``joint 
                technology office'' and inserting ``Office''.

SEC. 216. HYPERSONIC AIRBREATHING WEAPONS CAPABILITIES.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may transfer oversight 
and management of the Hypersonic Airbreathing Weapons Concept from the 
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to a responsible entity of 
the Air Force. The Secretary of the Air Force, acting through the head 
of the Air Force Research Laboratory, shall continue--
            (1) to develop a reusable hypersonics test bed to further 
        probe the high speed flight corridor and to facilitate the 
        testing and development of hypersonic airbreathing weapon 
        systems;
            (2) to explore emerging concepts and technologies for 
        reusable hypersonics weapons systems beyond current hypersonics 
        programs, focused on experimental flight test capabilities; and
            (3) to develop defensive technologies and countermeasures 
        against potential and identified hypersonic threats.
    (b) Hypersonic Airbreathing Weapon System Defined.--In this 
section, the term ``hypersonic airbreathing weapon system'' means a 
missile or platform with military utility that operates at speeds near 
or beyond approximately five times the speed of sound, and that is 
propelled through the atmosphere with an engine that burns fuel with 
oxygen from the atmosphere that is collected in an inlet.

SEC. 217. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR MQ-25 UNMANNED AIR 
              SYSTEM.

    (a) Limitation.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this 
Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for research, 
development, test, and evaluation, Navy, for the MQ-25 unmanned air 
system, not more than 75 percent may be obligated or expended until a 
period of 60 days has elapsed following the date on which the 
certification and report under subsection (b) have been submitted to 
the congressional defense committees.
    (b) Certification and Report.--
            (1) Certification.--The Secretary of the Navy shall submit 
        to the congressional defense committees a written certification 
        that--
                    (A) the MQ-25 unmanned air system is required to 
                fill a validated capability gap of the Department of 
                the Navy;
                    (B) the Chief of Naval Operations has reviewed and 
                approved the initial capability document and the 
                capability development document relating to such 
                system; and
                    (C) the initial capability document and the 
                capability development document have been provided to 
                the congressional defense committees.
            (2) Report.--The Assistant Secretary of the Navy for 
        Research, Development, and Acquisition shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a report that includes--
                    (A) an identification of threshold and objective 
                key performance parameters for the MQ-25 unmanned air 
                system;
                    (B) a certification that the threshold and 
                objective key performance parameters for such system 
                have been established and are achievable; and
                    (C) a description of the requirements of such 
                system with respect to--
                            (i) fuel transfer;
                            (ii) equipment for intelligence, 
                        surveillance, and reconnaissance;
                            (iii) equipment for electronic attack and 
                        electronic protection;
                            (iv) communications equipment;
                            (v) weapons payload;
                            (vi) range;
                            (vii) mission endurance for unrefueled and 
                        aerial refueled operations;
                            (viii) affordability;
                            (ix) survivability; and
                            (x) interoperability with other Navy and 
                        joint-service unmanned aerial systems and 
                        mission control stations.

SEC. 218. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR CONTRACT WRITING 
              SYSTEMS.

    (a) Limitation.--Of the funds specified in subsection (c), not more 
than 75 percent may be obligated or expended until the date on which 
the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional defense 
committees the assessment required under subsection (b).
    (b) Assessment Required.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination 
with the Secretaries of the military departments, shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a written assessment of the 
requirements for each contract writing information technology system of 
the Department of Defense and the military departments. Such assessment 
shall include the following:
            (1) Analysis of the requirements for each such contract 
        writing system, including identification of common requirements 
        and any requirements unique to each military department.
            (2) Identification of legacy systems that provide data to, 
        or receive data from, such contract writing systems.
            (3) Projected timelines showing when each contract writing 
        system is expected to become fully operationally capable and 
        when each legacy system is expected to terminate, based on 
        budget projections included in the most recent future-years 
        defense program submitted to Congress under section 221 of 
        title 10, United States Code.
            (4) Assessment of how a shared services model might be 
        applied to replace specific contract writing systems, including 
        analysis of the business process reengineering necessary to 
        move to a shared services model and how shared services can be 
        integrated into the business enterprise architecture of the 
        Department.
            (5) Identification of available shared services for 
        contract writing systems, such as those offered by the General 
        Services Administration or by other sources, that might provide 
        viable alternatives to current contract writing systems.
            (6) Identification of any gaps in the capabilities of 
        available shared services for contract writing systems, and 
        recommendations for addressing such gaps.
            (7) Identification of any policy, legal, or statutory 
        constraints that would have to be addressed in order to move to 
        a share services model for contract writing systems.
    (c) Funds Specified.--The funds specified in this subsection are 
the following--
            (1) Funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
        otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for research, 
        development, test, and evaluation for each system described in 
        subsection (d).
            (2) Funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
        otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for procurement 
        for each system described in subsection (d).
    (d) Systems Described.--The systems described in this subsection 
are the following:
            (1) The Contract Writing System of the Army.
            (2) The Electronic Procurement System of the Navy.
            (3) The Automated Contract Preparation System of the Air 
        Force.
            (4) The Contract Writing and Administration System of the 
        Defense Contract Management Agency.
            (5) The Standard Procurement System of the Defense 
        Logistics Agency.

SEC. 219. STRATEGY FOR USE OF VIRTUAL TRAINING TECHNOLOGY.

    (a) Strategy Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall direct the 
head of each military department--
            (1) to establish a comprehensive strategy to determine what 
        capability gaps exist in the department that can be rectified 
        with virtual training;
            (2) to review the virtual training possibilities for this 
        gap to determine what virtual training would rectify this gap 
        most efficiently; and
            (3) to determine what acquisitions would need to be made to 
        acquire the correct amount of technology to achieve desired 
        goals.
    (b) Post-fielding Analysis.--The head of each military department 
concerned shall create a post-fielding training effectiveness analysis 
before commencing training using any virtual training technology 
acquired pursuant to subsection (a).

SEC. 220. INCREASE IN FUNDING FOR ELECTRONICS AND ELECTRONIC DEVICES OF 
              THE ARMY.

    (a) Increase.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated in 
section 4201 for research, development, test, and evaluation, Army, as 
specified in the corresponding funding table in section 4201, for 
Applied Research, Electronics and Electronic Devices, Line 018, is 
hereby increased by $2,000,000.
    (b) Offset.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated in 
section 4201 for research, development, test, and evaluation, Army, as 
specified in the corresponding funding table in section 4201, for 
Advanced Component Development and Prototypes, Technology Maturation 
Initiatives, Line 072, is hereby reduced by $2,000,000.

SEC. 221. INCREASE IN FUNDING FOR HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES AND 
              UNIVERSITIES AND MINORITY INSTITUTIONS.

    (a) Increase.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated in 
section 4201 for research, development, test, and evaluation, Defense-
wide, as specified in the corresponding funding table in section 4201, 
for Basic Research, Historically Black Colleges and Universities/
Minority Institutions, Line 006, is hereby increased by $4,135,000.
    (b) Offset.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated in 
section 4201 for research, development, test, and evaluation, Defense-
wide, as specified in the corresponding funding table in section 4201, 
for Advanced Technology Development, Advanced Innovative Analysis and 
Concepts, Line 038, is hereby reduced by $4,135,000.

SEC. 222. ESTABLISHMENT AND EXPANSION OF HACKING FOR DEFENSE PROGRAM.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) The MD5 Hacking for Defense Program enables 
        universities nationwide to provide valuable entrepreneurial and 
        innovation education to students, providing formal training for 
        scientists and engineers to pursue careers in business or 
        government organizations.
            (2) The MD5 Hacking for Defense Program is successful in 
        part due to its focus on ensuring that government problems are 
        well-defined and suitable for university courses, ensuring that 
        educators are trained and certified in course methodology and 
        curriculum, and providing an ecosystem of government and 
        corporate mentors to student teams to enhance their education 
        and access to clients familiar with specific problems.
            (3) Hacking for Defense programs provide a unique pathway 
        for veteran students to leverage their military expertise to 
        solve rapidly emerging national security challenges while 
        learning cutting-edge business innovation methodology.
            (4) The MD5 Hacking for Defense Program's success in the 
        early stages of the innovation continuum should be expanded to 
        offer training to universities nationwide, and government 
        personnel and organizations charged with innovation.
    (b) Establishment and Expansion of Hacking for Defense Program.--
            (1) Authorization.--The Secretary of Defense is authorized 
        to establish a Hacking for Defense Program under which the 
        Secretary may obligate or expend up to $15,000,000 to support 
        university-based entrepreneurial education programs, 
        including--
                    (A) materials to recruit veterans for such 
                programs;
                    (B) model curriculum for such programs;
                    (C) training materials for such programs; and
                    (D) best practices for the conduct of such 
                programs.
            (2) Consultation.--In carrying out paragraph (1), the 
        Secretary of Defense may consult with the heads of such Federal 
        agencies, universities, and public and private entities engaged 
        in the development of advanced technologies as the Secretary 
        determines to be appropriate.
            (3) Eligibility.--The Secretary of Defense shall--
                    (A) develop and maintain eligibility criteria for 
                programs to become recognized as Hacking for Defense 
                education sites; and
                    (B) ensure that any recipient of a grant under the 
                Small Business Technology Transfer program or the Small 
                Business Innovation Research program has the option to 
                participate in training under the MD5 Hacking for 
                Defense Program.

SEC. 223. PILOT PROGRAM ON INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES.

    The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of 
Energy, shall conduct a pilot program among defense laboratories (as 
defined in section 2199 of title 10, United States Code), national 
laboratories (as defined in section 188(f) of title 10, United States 
Code), and private entities to facilitate the licensure, transfer, and 
commercialization of innovative technologies.

SEC. 224. STEM(MM) JOBS ACTION PLAN.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Jobs in science, technology, engineering, and math in 
        addition to maintenance and manufacturing (collectively 
        referred to in this section as ``STEM(MM)'') make up a 
        significant portion of the workforce of the Department of 
        Defense.
            (2) These jobs exist within the organic industrial base, 
        research, development, and engineering centers, life-cycle 
        management commands, and logistics centers of the Department.
            (3) Vital to the continued support of the mission of all of 
        the military services, the Department needs to maintain its 
        STEM(MM) workforce.
            (4) It is known that the demographics of personnel of the 
        Department indicate that many of the STEM(MM) personnel of the 
        Department will be eligible to retire in the next few years.
            (5) Decisive action is needed to replace STEM(MM) personnel 
        as they retire to ensure that the military does not further 
        suffer a skill and knowledge gap and thus a serious readiness 
        gap.
    (b) Assessments and Plan of Action.--The Secretary of Defense, in 
conjunction with the Secretary of each military department, shall --
            (1) perform an assessment of the STEM(MM) workforce for 
        organizations within the Department of Defense, including the 
        numbers and types of positions and the expectations for losses 
        due to retirements and voluntary departures;
            (2) identify the types and quantities of STEM(MM) jobs 
        needed to support future mission work;
            (3) determine the shortfall between lost STEM(MM) personnel 
        and future requirements;
            (4) analyze and explain the appropriateness and impact of 
        using reimbursable and working capital fund dollars for new 
        STEM(MM) hires;
            (5) identify a plan of action to address the STEM(MM) jobs 
        gap, including hiring strategies and timelines for replacement 
        of STEM(MM) employees; and
            (6) deliver to Congress, not later than December 31, 2018, 
        a report specifying such plan of action.

SEC. 225. APPROPRIATE USE OF AUTHORITY FOR PROTOTYPE PROJECTS.

    Section 2371b(d)(1)(A) of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
by inserting ``or nonprofit research institution'' after ``defense 
contractor''.

SEC. 226. JET NOISE REDUCTION PROGRAM OF THE NAVY.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of the Navy, acting through the 
Director of the Office of Naval Research, may carry out a jet noise 
reduction program to study the physics of, and reduce, jet noise 
produced by high-performance military aircraft.
    (b) Elements.--In carrying out the program under subsection (a), 
the Secretary may--
            (1) identify material and non-material solutions to reduce 
        jet noise;
            (2) develop and transition such solutions to the fleet;
            (3) communicate relevant discoveries to the civilian 
        aviation community; and
            (4) support the development of theoretical noise models, 
        computational prediction tools, noise control strategies, 
        diagnostic tools, and enhanced source localization.

SEC. 227. PROCESS FOR COORDINATION OF STUDIES AND ANALYSIS RESEARCH OF 
              THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    The Secretary of Defense shall implement a Department of Defense-
wide process under which the heads of the military departments and 
Defense Agencies responsible for managing requests for studies and 
analysis research are required to coordinate annual research requests 
and ongoing research efforts to minimize duplication and reduce costs.

                  TITLE III--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE

              Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations

SEC. 301. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    Funds are here by authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 
2018 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 Environment

SEC. 311. CODIFICATION OF AND IMPROVEMENTS TO DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              CLEARINGHOUSE TO COORDINATE DEPARTMENT REVIEW OF 
              APPLICATIONS FOR CERTAIN PROJECTS THAT MAY HAVE ADVERSE 
              IMPACT ON MILITARY OPERATIONS AND READINESS.

    (a) Establishment of Military Aviation, Range, and Installation 
Assurance Program Office.--
            (1) Codification and improvement of existing law.--Chapter 
        7 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
        after section 183 the following new section:
``Sec. 183a. Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance 
              Program Office for review of mission obstructions
    ``(a) Establishment.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall establish 
a Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance Program Office.
    ``(2) The Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance 
Program Office shall be--
            ``(A) organized under the authority, direction, and control 
        of an Assistant Secretary of Defense designated by the 
        Secretary; and
            ``(B) assigned such personnel and resources as the 
        Secretary considers appropriate to carry out this section.
    ``(b) Functions.--(1)(A) The Military Aviation, Range, and 
Installation Assurance Program Office shall serve as a clearinghouse to 
coordinate Department of Defense review of applications for energy 
projects filed with the Secretary of Transportation pursuant to section 
44718 of title 49 and received by the Department of Defense from the 
Secretary of Transportation.
    ``(B) To facilitate the review of an application for an energy 
project submitted pursuant to such section, the Military Aviation, 
Range, and Installation Assurance Program Office shall accelerate the 
development, in coordination with other departments and agencies of the 
Federal Government, of--
            ``(i) an integrated review process to ensure timely 
        notification and consideration of any application that may have 
        an adverse impact on military operations and readiness; and
            ``(ii) planning tools necessary to determine the 
        acceptability to the Department of Defense of the energy 
        project proposal included in the application.
    ``(2) The Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance 
Program Office shall establish procedures for the Department of Defense 
for the coordinated consideration of and response to a request for a 
review received from another Federal agency, a State government, an 
Indian tribal government, a local government, a landowner, or the 
developer of an energy project, including guidance to personnel at each 
military installation in the United States on how to initiate such 
procedures and ensure a coordinated Department response.
    ``(3) The Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance 
Program Office shall consult with affected military installations for 
the review and consideration of proposed energy projects.
    ``(4) The Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance 
Program Office shall develop procedures for conducting early outreach 
to parties carrying out energy projects that could have an adverse 
impact on military operations and readiness and to clearly communicate 
to such parties actions being taken by the Department under this 
section.
    ``(5) The Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance 
Program Office shall perform such other functions as the Secretary of 
Defense assigns.
    ``(c) Review of Proposed Actions.--(1) Not later than 30 days after 
receiving from the Secretary of Transportation a proper application for 
an energy project under section 44718 of title 49 that may have an 
adverse impact on military operations and readiness, the Military 
Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance Program Office shall 
conduct a preliminary review of such application. Such review shall--
            ``(A) assess the likely scope, duration, and level of risk 
        of any adverse impact of such energy project on military 
        operations and readiness; and
            ``(B) identify any feasible and affordable actions that 
        could be taken by the Department, the developer of such energy 
        project, or others to mitigate such adverse impact and to 
        minimize risks to national security while allowing such energy 
        project to proceed with development.
    ``(2) If the Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance 
Program Office determines under paragraph (1) that an energy project 
will have an adverse impact on military operations and readiness, the 
Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance Program Office, 
with the approval of the Secretary of Defense, shall issue to the 
applicant a notice of presumed risk that describes the concerns 
identified by the Department in the preliminary review and requests a 
discussion of possible mitigation actions.
    ``(d) Comprehensive Review.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall 
develop a comprehensive strategy for addressing the military impacts of 
projects filed with the Secretary of Transportation pursuant to section 
44718 of title 49.
    ``(2) In developing the strategy required by paragraph (1), the 
Secretary of Defense shall--
            ``(A) assess the magnitude of interference posed by 
        projects filed with the Secretary of Transportation pursuant to 
        section 44718 of title 49;
            ``(B) identify geographic areas in which projects filed, or 
        which may be filed in the future, with the Secretary of 
        Transportation pursuant to section 44718 of title 49, could 
        have an adverse impact on military operations and readiness, 
        including military training routes, and categorize the risk of 
        adverse impact in each geographic area for the purpose of 
        informing preliminary reviews under subsection (c)(1), early 
        outreach efforts under subsection (b)(4), and online 
        dissemination efforts under paragraph (3);
            ``(C) develop procedures to periodically review and modify 
        geographic areas identified under subparagraph (B) and to 
        solicit and identify additional geographic areas as 
        appropriate; and
            ``(D) specifically identify feasible and affordable long-
        term actions that may be taken to mitigate adverse impacts of 
        projects filed, or which may be filed in the future, with the 
        Secretary of Transportation pursuant to section 44718 of title 
        49, on military operations and readiness, including--
                    ``(i) investment priorities of the Department of 
                Defense with respect to research and development;
                    ``(ii) modifications to military operations to 
                accommodate applications for such projects;
                    ``(iii) recommended upgrades or modifications to 
                existing systems or procedures by the Department of 
                Defense;
                    ``(iv) acquisition of new systems by the Department 
                and other departments and agencies of the Federal 
                Government and timelines for fielding such new systems; 
                and
                    ``(v) modifications to the projects for which such 
                applications are filed, including changes in size, 
                location, or technology.
    ``(3) The Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance 
Program Office shall make available online access to data reflecting 
geographic areas identified under subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) and 
reviewed and modified under subparagraph (C) of such paragraph.
    ``(e) Department of Defense Determination of Unacceptable Risk.--
(1) The Secretary of Defense may not object to an energy project filed 
with the Secretary of Transportation pursuant to section 44718 of title 
49 unless the Secretary of Defense determines, after giving full 
consideration to mitigation actions identified pursuant to this 
section, that the project would result in an unacceptable risk to the 
national security of the United States. Such a determination shall 
constitute a finding pursuant to section 44718(f) of title 49.
    ``(2) Not later than 30 days after making a determination under 
paragraph (1), the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees, the Committee on Transportation and 
Infrastructure of the House of Representatives, and the Committee on 
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate a report on such 
determination and the basis for such determination. Such report shall 
include an explanation of the basis of the determination, a discussion 
of the mitigation options considered, and an explanation of why, in the 
case of a determination of unacceptable risk, the mitigation options 
were not feasible or did not resolve the conflict. The Secretary of 
Defense may provide public notice through the Federal Register of the 
determination.
    ``(3) The Secretary of Defense may only delegate the responsibility 
for making a determination under paragraph (1) to the Deputy Secretary 
of Defense, an Under Secretary of Defense, or a Principal Deputy Under 
Secretary of Defense.
    ``(f) Authority to Accept Contributions of Funds.--The Secretary of 
Defense is authorized to request and accept a voluntary contribution of 
funds from an applicant for a project filed with the Secretary of 
Transportation pursuant to section 44718 of title 49. Amounts so 
accepted shall remain available until expended for the purpose of 
offsetting the cost of measures undertaken by the Secretary of Defense 
to mitigate adverse impacts of such a project on military operations 
and readiness or to conduct studies of potential measures to mitigate 
such impacts.
    ``(g) Effect of Department of Defense Hazard Assessment.--An action 
taken pursuant to this section shall not be considered to be a 
substitute for any assessment or determination required of the 
Secretary of Transportation under section 44718 of title 49.
    ``(h) Savings Clause.--Nothing in this section shall be construed 
to affect or limit the application of, or any obligation to comply 
with, any environmental law, including the National Environmental 
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
    ``(i) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `adverse impact on military operations and 
        readiness' means any adverse impact upon military operations 
        and readiness, including flight operations, research, 
        development, testing, and evaluation, and training, that is 
        demonstrable and is likely to impair or degrade the ability of 
        the armed forces to perform their warfighting missions.
            ``(2) The term `energy project' means a project that 
        provides for the generation or transmission of electrical 
        energy.
            ``(3) The term `landowner' means a person that owns a fee 
        interest in real property on which a proposed energy project is 
        planned to be located.
            ``(4) The term `military installation' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 2801(c)(4) of this title.
            ``(5) The term `military readiness' includes any training 
        or operation that could be related to combat readiness, 
        including testing and evaluation activities.
            ``(6) The term `military training route' means a training 
        route developed as part of the Military Training Route Program, 
        carried out jointly by the Federal Aviation Administration and 
        the Secretary of Defense, for use by the armed forces for the 
        purpose of conducting low-altitude, high-speed military 
        training.
            ``(7) The term `unacceptable risk to the national security 
        of the United States' means the construction, alteration, 
        establishment, or expansion, or the proposed construction, 
        alteration, establishment, or expansion, of a structure or 
        sanitary landfill that would--
                    ``(A) endanger safety in air commerce, related to 
                the activities of the Department of Defense;
                    ``(B) interfere with the efficient use and 
                preservation of the navigable airspace and of airport 
                traffic capacity at public-use airports, related to the 
                activities of the Department of Defense; or
                    ``(C) impair or degrade the capability of the 
                Department of Defense to conduct training, research, 
                development, testing, evaluation, and operations or to 
                maintain military readiness.''.
            (2) Conforming and clerical amendments.--
                    (A) Repeal of existing provision.--Section 358 of 
                the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for 
                Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 49 U.S.C. 44718 
                note) is repealed.
                    (B) Reference to definitions.--Section 44718(g) of 
                title 49, United States Code, is amended by striking 
                ``211.3 of title 32, Code of Federal Regulations, as in 
                effect on January 6, 2014'' both places it appears and 
                inserting ``183a(i) of title 10''.
                    (C) Table of sections amendment.--The table of 
                sections at the beginning of chapter 7 of title 10, 
                United States Code, is amended by inserting after the 
                item relating to section 183 the following new item:

``183a. Military Aviation, Range, and Installation Assurance Program 
                            Office for review of mission 
                            obstructions.''.
            (3) Deadline for initial identification of geographic 
        areas.--The initial identification of geographic areas under 
        subsection (d)(2)(B) of section 183a of title 10, United States 
        Code, as added by paragraph (1), shall be completed not later 
        than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act.
            (4) Applicability of existing rules and regulations.--
        Notwithstanding the amendments made by paragraphs (1) and (2), 
        any rule or regulation promulgated to carry out section 358 of 
        the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
        Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 49 U.S.C. 44718 note) that is in 
        effect on the day before the date of the enactment of this Act 
        shall continue in effect and apply to the extent such rule or 
        regulation is consistent with the authority under section 183a 
        of title 10, United States Code, as added by paragraph (1), 
        until such rule or regulation is otherwise amended or repealed.
    (b) Conforming Amendment Regarding Critical Military-use Airspace 
Areas.--Section 44718 of title 49, United States Code, as amended by 
subsection (a)(2)(B), is further amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection (h); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (f) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(g) Special Rule for Identified Geographic Areas.--In the case of 
a proposed structure to be located within a geographic area identified 
under subsection (d)(2)(B) of section 183a of title 10, the Secretary 
of Transportation may not issue a determination until the Secretary of 
Defense issues a determination under subsection (e) of such section as 
to whether or not the proposed structure represents an unacceptable 
risk to the national security of the United States (as defined in 
subsection (i)(7) of such section).''.

SEC. 312. ENERGY PERFORMANCE GOALS AND MASTER PLAN.

    Section 2911(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by inserting before the period at the 
        end the following: ``, the future demand for energy, and the 
        requirements for the use of energy'';
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``reduce the future 
        demand and the requirements for the use of energy'' and 
        inserting ``enhance energy resilience to ensure the Department 
        of Defense has the ability to prepare for and recover from 
        energy disruptions that affect mission assurance on military 
        installations''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(13) Opportunities to leverage financing provided by a 
        non-Department entity to address installation energy needs.''.

SEC. 313. PAYMENT TO ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY OF STIPULATED 
              PENALTY IN CONNECTION WITH UMATILLA CHEMICAL DEPOT, 
              OREGON.

    (a) Authority to Transfer Funds.--
            (1) Transfer amount.--The Secretary of the Army may 
        transfer an amount of not more than $125,000 to the Hazardous 
        Substance Superfund established under subchapter A of chapter 
        98 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. Any such transfer 
        shall be made without regard to section 2215 of title 10, 
        United States Code.
            (2) Source of funds.--Any transfer under subsection (a) 
        shall be made using funds authorized to be appropriated by this 
        Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for Base 
        Realignment and Closure, Army.
    (b) Purpose of Transfer.--A transfer under subsection (a) shall be 
for the purpose of satisfying a stipulated penalty assessed by the 
Environmental Protection Agency in the settlement agreement approved by 
the Army on July 14, 2016, against the Umatilla Chemical Depot, Oregon 
under the Federal Facility Agreement between the Army and the 
Environmental Protection Agency dated September 19, 1989.
    (c) Acceptance of Payment.--If the Secretary of the Army makes a 
transfer under subsection (a), the Administrator of the Environmental 
Protection Agency shall accept the amount transferred as payment in 
full of the penalty referred to in subsection (b).

SEC. 314. PAYMENT TO ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY OF STIPULATED 
              PENALTY IN CONNECTION WITH LONGHORN ARMY AMMUNITION 
              PLANT, TEXAS.

    (a) Authority to Transfer Funds.--
            (1) Transfer amount.--The Secretary of the Army may 
        transfer an amount of not more than $1,185,000 to the Hazardous 
        Substance Superfund established under subchapter A of chapter 
        98 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. Any such transfer 
        shall be made without regard to section 2215 of title 10, 
        United States Code.
            (2) Source of funds.--Any transfer under subsection (a) 
        shall be made using funds authorized to be appropriated by this 
        Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for 
        Environmental Restoration, Army.
    (b) Purpose of Transfer.--A transfer under subsection (a) shall be 
for the purpose of satisfying a stipulated penalty assessed by the 
Environmental Protection Agency on April 5, 2013, against Longhorn Army 
Ammunition Plant, Texas, under the Federal Facility Agreement for 
Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant, which was entered into between the Army 
and the Environmental Protection Agency in 1991.
    (c) Acceptance of Payment.--If the Secretary of the Army makes a 
transfer under subsection (a), the Administrator of the Environmental 
Protection Agency shall accept the amount transferred as payment in 
full of the penalty referred to in subsection (b).

SEC. 315. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CLEANUP AND REMOVAL OF PETROLEUM, OIL, 
              AND LUBRICANT ASSOCIATED WITH THE PRINZ EUGEN.

    Amounts authorized to be appropriated for the Department of Defense 
may by used for all necessary expenses for the removal and cleanup of 
petroleum, oil, and lubricants associated with the heavy cruiser Prinz 
Eugen, which was transferred from the United States to the Republic of 
the Marshall Islands in 1986.

                 Subtitle C--Logistics and Sustainment

SEC. 321. REAUTHORIZATION OF MULTI-TRADES DEMONSTRATION PROJECT.

    Section 338 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2004 (Public Law 108-136; 10 U.S.C. 5013 note), as most recently 
amended by section 321 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 1694) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (d), by striking ``2018'' and inserting 
        ``2023''; and
            (2) in subsection (e), by striking ``2019'' and inserting 
        ``2024''.

SEC. 322. GUIDANCE REGARDING USE OF ORGANIC INDUSTRIAL BASE.

    The Secretary of the Army shall maintain the arsenals with 
sufficient workloads to ensure affordability and technical competence 
in all critical capability areas by establishing, not later than 90 
days after the enactment of this Act, clear, step-by-step, prescriptive 
guidance on the process for conducting make-or-buy analyses, including 
the use of the organic industrial base.

SEC. 323. PROHIBITION ON APPLICATION OF HIRING FREEZES AT DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE FACILITIES.

    Any memorandum, Executive order, or other action by the President 
to prevent a department or agency of the Federal Government from 
filling vacant Federal civilian employee positions or creating new such 
positions, shall have no force or effect with respect to any Department 
of Defense civilian position at, or in support of--
            (1) any facility at which depot-level maintenance and 
        repair (as that term is defined in section 2460 of title 10, 
        United States Code) is carried out; or
            (2) any facility designated under section 2474 of such 
        title as a center for industrial and technical excellence.

                          Subtitle D--Reports

SEC. 331. QUARTERLY REPORTS ON PERSONNEL AND UNIT READINESS.

    (a) Modification and Improvement.--Section 482 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking ``Each report'' and inserting ``The 
                reports for the first and third quarters of a calendar 
                year''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                sentence: ``The reports for the second and fourth 
                quarters of a calendar year shall contain the 
                information required by subsection (j).'';
            (2) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) in the subsection heading, by striking ``and 
                Remedial Actions'';
                    (B) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by 
                striking ``Each report'' and inserting ``A report for 
                the second or fourth quarter of a calendar year'';
                    (C) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``and'' after 
                the semicolon;
                    (D) by striking paragraph (2); and
                    (E) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph 
                (2);
            (3) in subsection (d)(1), by striking ``Each report'' and 
        inserting ``A report for the second or fourth quarter of a 
        calendar year'';
            (4) in subsection (e), by striking ``Each report'' and 
        inserting ``A report for the second or fourth quarter of a 
        calendar year'';
            (5) in subsection (f)(1), by striking ``Each report'' and 
        inserting ``A report for the second or fourth quarter of a 
        calendar year'';
            (6) in subsection (g)(1), by striking ``Each report'' and 
        inserting ``A report for the second or fourth quarter of a 
        calendar year''; and
            (7) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(j) Remedial Actions.--A report for the first or third quarter of 
a calendar year shall include--
            ``(1) a description of the mitigation plans of the 
        Secretary to address readiness shortfalls and operational 
        deficiencies identified in the report submitted for the 
        preceding calendar quarter; and
            ``(2) for each such shortfall or deficiency, a timeline for 
        resolution, the cost necessary for such resolution, the 
        mitigation strategy the Department will employ until the 
        resolution is in place, and any legislative remedies 
        required.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 117 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (d)--
                    (A) in the subsection heading, by striking 
                ``Quarterly''and inserting ``Semi-annual''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (1)(A), by striking ``quarterly'' 
                and inserting ``semi-annual''; and
            (2) in subsection (e), by striking ``each quarter'' and 
        inserting ``semi-annually''.

SEC. 332. BIENNIAL REPORT ON CORE DEPOT-LEVEL MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR 
              CAPABILITY.

    Section 2464(d) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
            ``(4) Any workload shortfalls at any work breakdown 
        structure category designated as a lower-level category 
        pursuant to Department of Defense Instruction 4151.20, or any 
        successor instruction.
            ``(5) A description of any workload executed at a category 
        designated as a first-level category pursuant to such 
        Instruction, or any successor instruction, that could be used 
        to mitigate shortfalls in similar categories.
            ``(6) A description of any progress made on implementing 
        mitigation plans developed pursuant to paragraph (3).
            ``(7) A description of core capability requirements and 
        corresponding workloads at the first level category.
            ``(8) In the case of any shortfall that is identified, a 
        description of the shortfall and an identification of the 
        subcategory of the work breakdown structure in which the 
        shortfall occurred.
            ``(9) In the case of any work breakdown structure category 
        designated as a special interest item or other pursuant to such 
        Instruction, or any successor instruction, an explanation for 
        such designation.
            ``(10) Whether the core depot-level maintenance and repair 
        capability requirements described in the report submitted under 
        this subsection for the preceding fiscal year have been 
        executed.''.

SEC. 333. ANNUAL REPORT ON PERSONNEL, TRAINING, AND EQUIPMENT NEEDS OF 
              NON-FEDERALIZED NATIONAL GUARD.

    (a) Annual Report Required.--Section 10504 of title 10, United 
States Code, as amended by section 1051, is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in the subsection heading, by striking 
                ``Report.--'' and inserting ``Report on State of the 
                National Guard.--(1)''; and
                    (B) by striking ``The report'''' and inserting the 
                following:
    ``(2) The annual report required by paragraph (1)''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(b) Annual Report on Non-Federalized Service National Guard 
Personnel, Training, and Equipment Requirements.--(1) Not later than 
January 31 of each of calendar years 2018 through 2022, the Chief of 
the National Guard Bureau shall submit to the recipients described in 
paragraph (3) a report that identifies the personnel, training, and 
equipment required by the non-federalized National Guard--
            ``(A) to support civilian authorities in connection with 
        natural and man-made disasters during the covered period; and
            ``(B) to carry out prevention, protection, mitigation, 
        response, and recovery activities relating to such disasters 
        during the covered period.
    ``(2) In preparing each report under paragraph (1), the Chief of 
the National Guard Bureau shall--
            ``(A) consult with the chief executive of each State, the 
        Council of Governors, and other appropriate civilian 
        authorities;
            ``(B) collect and validate information from each State 
        relating to the personnel, training, and equipment requirements 
        described in paragraph (1);
            ``(C) set forth separately the personnel, training, and 
        equipment requirements for--
                    ``(i) each of the emergency support functions of 
                the National Response Framework; and
                    ``(ii) each of the Federal Emergency Management 
                Agency regions;
            ``(D) assess core civilian capability gaps relating to 
        natural and man-made disasters, as identified by States in 
        submissions to the Department of Homeland Security; and
            ``(E) take into account threat and hazard identifications 
        and risk assessments of the Department of Defense, the 
        Department of Homeland Security, and the States.
    ``(3) The annual report required by paragraph (1) shall be 
submitted to the following officials:
            ``(A) The congressional defense committees, the Committee 
        on Homeland Security of the House of Representatives, and the 
        Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the 
        Senate.
            ``(B) The Secretary of Defense.
            ``(C) The Secretary of Homeland Security.
            ``(D) The Council of Governors.
            ``(E) The Secretary of the Army.
            ``(F) The Secretary of the Air Force.
            ``(G) The Commander of the United States Northern Command.
            ``(H) The Commander of the United States Pacific Command.
            ``(I) The Commander of the United States Cyber Command.
    ``(4) In this subsection, the term `covered period' means the 
fiscal year beginning after the date on which a report is submitted 
under paragraph (1).''.
    (b) Clerical Amendments.--
            (1) Section heading.--The heading of such section is 
        amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 10504. Chief of National Guard Bureau: annual reports''.
            (2) Table of contents.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 1011 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended by striking the item relating to section 10504 and 
        inserting the following:

``10504. Chief of National Guard Bureau: annual reports.''.

SEC. 334. ANNUAL REPORT ON MILITARY WORKING DOGS USED BY THE DEPARTMENT 
              OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Capacity.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through the 
Executive Agent for Military Working Dogs (hereinafter in this section 
referred to as the ``Executive Agent''), shall--
            (1) identify the number of military working dogs required 
        to fulfill the various missions of the Department of Defense 
        for which such dogs are used, including force protection, 
        facility and check point security, and explosives and drug 
        detection;
            (2) take such steps as are practicable to ensure an 
        adequate number of military working dog teams are available to 
        meet and sustain the mission requirements identified in 
        paragraph (1);
            (3) ensure that the Department's needs and performance 
        standards with respect to military working dogs are readily 
        available to dog breeders and trainers; and
            (4) coordinate with other Federal, State, and local 
        agencies, nonprofit organizations, universities, and private 
        sector entities, as appropriate, to increase the training 
        capacity for military working dog teams.
    (b) Military Working Dog Procurement.--The Secretary, acting 
through the Executive Agent, shall work to ensure that military working 
dogs are procured as efficiently as possible and at the best value to 
the Government, while maintaining the necessary level of quality and 
encouraging increased domestic breeding.
    (c) Annual Report.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2018, and annually thereafter until September 30, 2021, the Secretary, 
acting through the Executive Agent, shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report on the procurement and retirement of 
military working dogs for the fiscal year preceding the fiscal year 
during which the report is submitted. Each report under this subsection 
shall include the following for the fiscal year covered by the report:
            (1) The number of military working dogs procured, by 
        source, by each military department or Defense Agency.
            (2) The cost of procuring military working dogs incurred by 
        each military department or Defense Agency.
            (3) The number of domestically bred and sourced military 
        working dogs procured by each military department or Defense 
        Agency, including a list of vendors, their location, cost, and 
        the quantity of dogs procured from each vendor.
            (4) The number of non-domestically bred military working 
        dogs procured from non-domestic sources by each military 
        department or Defense Agency, including a list of vendors, 
        their location, cost, and the quantity of dogs procured from 
        each vendor.
            (5) The cost of procuring pre-trained and green dogs for 
        force protection, facility and checkpoint security, and 
        improvised explosive device, other explosives, and drug 
        detection.
            (6) An analysis of the procurement practices of each 
        military department or Defense Agency that limit market access 
        for domestic canine vendors and breeders.
            (7) The total cost of procuring domestically bred military 
        working dogs versus the total cost of procuring dogs from non-
        domestic sources.
            (8) The total number of domestically bred dogs and the 
        number of dogs from foreign sources procured by each military 
        department or Defense Agency and the number and percentage of 
        those dogs that are ultimately deployed for their intended use.
            (9) An explanation for any significant difference in the 
        cost of procuring military working dogs from different sources.
            (10) An estimate of the number of military working dogs 
        expected to retire annually and an identification of the 
        primary cause of the retirement of such dogs.
            (11) An identification of the final disposition of military 
        working dogs no longer in service.
    (d) Military Working Dog Defined.--For purposes of this section, 
the term ``military working dog'' means a dog used in any official 
military capacity, as defined by the Secretary of Defense.

SEC. 335. ANNUAL BRIEFINGS ON ARMY EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL.

    Not later than 60 days after the last day of each of fiscal years 
2018 through 2021, the Secretary of the Army shall provide to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of Representatives 
briefings on the actions the Army has taken to address the following:
            (1) Programmed funding and manpower to establish and 
        implement the explosive ordnance disposal (hereinafter referred 
        to as ``EOD'') assistant commandant position in the Army 
        Ordnance School.
            (2) EOD personnel talent management, including command 
        opportunities and promotion within the Army logistics cohort, 
        and career broadening opportunities, including participation in 
        joint, interagency, and multinational EOD commissioned officer 
        and non-commissioned officer positions.
            (3) How the EOD career path ensures and maintains technical 
        proficiency for EOD-qualified personnel.
            (4) Efforts to improve EOD proponency and advocacy across 
        the Army, including activities of the EOD Board of Advisors.
            (5) Efforts to enhance synchronization of EOD with other 
        Army missions and functions and retain critical 
        interdependencies.
            (6) Annual funding programmed through the future-years 
        defense program and executed during the preceding fiscal year 
        for EOD requirements including personnel, training, and 
        equipment.

SEC. 336. REPORT ON EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) Secretary of Defense James Mattis has stated: ``It is 
        appropriate for the Combatant Commands to incorporate drivers 
        of instability that impact the security environment in their 
        areas into their planning.''.
            (2) Secretary of Defense James Mattis has stated: ``I agree 
        that the effects of a changing climate -- such as increased 
        maritime access to the Arctic, rising sea levels, 
        desertification, among others -- impact our security 
        situation.''.
            (3) Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Joseph Dunford 
        has stated: ``It's a question, once again, of being forward 
        deployed, forward engaged, and be in a position to respond to 
        the kinds of natural disasters that I think we see as a second 
        or third order effect of climate change.''.
            (4) Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has stated: 
        ``Over the next 20 years and more, certain pressures-
        population, energy, climate, economic, environmental-could 
        combine with rapid cultural, social, and technological change 
        to produce new sources of deprivation, rage, and 
        instability.''.
            (5) Former Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army Gordon Sullivan 
        has stated: ``Climate change is a national security issue. We 
        found that climate instability will lead to instability in 
        geopolitics and impact American military operations around the 
        world.''.
            (6) The Office of the Director of National Intelligence 
        (ODNI) has stated: ``Many countries will encounter climate-
        induced disruptions--such as weather-related disasters, 
        drought, famine, or damage to infrastructure--that stress their 
        capacity to respond, cope with, or adapt. Climate-related 
        impacts will also contribute to increased migration, which can 
        be particularly disruptive if, for example, demand for food and 
        shelter outstrips the resources available to assist those in 
        need.''.
            (7) The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has stated: 
        ``DOD links changes in precipitation patterns with potential 
        climate change impacts such as changes in the number of 
        consecutive days of high or low precipitation as well as 
        increases in the extent and duration of droughts, with an 
        associated increase in the risk of wildfire. . . this may 
        result in mission vulnerabilities such as reduced live-fire 
        training due to drought and increased wildfire risk.''.
            (8) A three-foot rise in sea levels will threaten the 
        operations of more than 128 United States military sites, and 
        it is possible that many of these at-risk bases could be 
        submerged in the coming years.
            (9) As global temperatures rise, droughts and famines can 
        lead to more failed states, which are breeding grounds of 
        extremist and terrorist organizations.
            (10) In the Marshall Islands, an Air Force radar 
        installation built on an atoll at a cost of $1,000,000,000 is 
        projected to be underwater within two decades.
            (11) In the western United States, drought has amplified 
        the threat of wildfires, and floods have damaged roads, 
        runways, and buildings on military bases.
            (12) In the Arctic, the combination of melting sea ice, 
        thawing permafrost, and sea-level rise is eroding shorelines, 
        which is damaging radar and communication installations, 
        runways, seawalls, and training areas.
            (13) In the Yukon Training Area, units conducting artillery 
        training accidentally started a wildfire despite observing the 
        necessary practices during red flag warning conditions.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) climate change is a direct threat to the national 
        security of the United States and is impacting stability in 
        areas of the world both where the United States Armed Forces 
        are operating today, and where strategic implications for 
        future conflict exist;
            (2) there are complexities in quantifying the cost of 
        climate change on mission resiliency, but the Department of 
        Defense must ensure that it is prepared to conduct operations 
        both today and in the future and that it is prepared to address 
        the effects of a changing climate on threat assessments, 
        resources, and readiness; and
            (3) military installations must be able to effectively 
        prepare to mitigate climate damage in their master planning and 
        infrastructure planning and design, so that they might best 
        consider the weather and natural resources most pertinent to 
        them.
    (c) Report.--
            (1) Report required.--Not later than one year 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 vulnerabilities to 
        military installations and combatant commander requirements 
        resulting from climate change over the next 20 years.
            (2) Elements.--The report on vulnerabilities to military 
        installations and combatant commander requirements required by 
        paragraph (1) shall include the following:
                    (A) A list of the ten most vulnerable military 
                installations within each service based on the effects 
                of rising sea tides, increased flooding, drought, 
                desertification, wildfires, thawing permafrost, and any 
                other categories the Secretary determines necessary.
                    (B) An overview of mitigations that may be 
                necessary to ensure the continued operational viability 
                and to increase the resiliency of the identified 
                vulnerable military installations and the cost of such 
                mitigations.
                    (C) A discussion of the climate-change related 
                effects on the Department, including the increase in 
                the frequency of humanitarian assistance and disaster 
                relief missions and the theater campaign plans, 
                contingency plans, and global posture of the combatant 
                commanders.
                    (D) An overview of mitigations that may be 
                necessary to ensure mission resiliency and the cost of 
                such mitigations.
            (3) Form.--The report required subparagraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form, but may contain a classified 
        annex.

SEC. 337. UPDATED GUIDANCE REGARDING BIENNIAL CORE REPORT.

    To ensure that the biennial core reporting procedures of the 
Department of Defense align with the requirements of section 2464 of 
title 10, United States Code, and that each reporting agency provides 
accurate and complete information, the Secretary of Defense should 
direct the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and 
Logistics to update the Department of Defense Guidance, in particular 
Department of Defense Instruction 4151.20, to require future biennial 
core reports include instructions to the reporting agencies on how to--
            (1) report additional depot workload performed that has not 
        been identified as a core requirement;
            (2) accurately capture inter-service workload;
            (3) calculate shortfalls; and
            (4) estimate the cost of planned workload.

SEC. 338. REPORT ON ARCTIC READINESS.

    (a) Report Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall submit to 
Congress a report on arctic readiness. Such report shall include--
            (1) an analysis of the challenges posed by the rapidly 
        changing arctic region, including the reasons why the arctic 
        region is changing at such a rapid rate;
            (2) an analysis of how the changes will affect other 
        regions, particularly coastal communities;
            (3) an analysis of how the changes will affect military 
        infrastructure; and
            (4) recommendations for congressional action to address the 
        needs of the Armed Forces, in consultation with the Secretary 
        of Homeland Security with respect to the Coast Guard when it is 
        not operating as a service in the Navy, resulting from changes 
        in the arctic.
    (b) Form of Report.--The report required under this section shall 
be unclassified, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 339. REPORT ON CYBER CAPABILITY AND READINESS SHORTFALLS.

    Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to Congress a report on the 
Army Combat Training Centers and the current resident cyber 
capabilities and training at such centers to examine potential training 
readiness shortfalls and ensure that pre-rotational cyber training 
needs are met. In preparing the report, the Secretary shall take into 
account nearby cyber assets that could contribute to addressing 
potential cyber capability and readiness shortfalls.

SEC. 340. REPORT ON EFFECTS OF INCREASED AUTOMATION OF DEFENSE 
              INDUSTRIAL BASE ON MANUFACTURING WORKFORCE.

    Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to Congress a report on the 
effects of the increased automation of the defense industrial base over 
the ten-year period beginning on the date that is 30 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act. Such report shall include, for the 
period covered by the report--
            (1) an estimate of the number of jobs in the United States 
        manufacturing workforce expected to be eliminated due to 
        automation in the defense sector;
            (2) an analysis describing any new types of jobs that are 
        expected to be established as a result of an increasingly 
        automated process, including an estimate of the number of these 
        types of jobs that are expect to be created;
            (3) an analysis of the potential threats to the national 
        security of the United States that are unique to the automation 
        of the defense industry;
            (4) a strategy to assist in providing workforce training 
        and transition preparation for workers who may lose 
        manufacturing jobs in the defense industry due to automation;
            (5) a description of any training necessary for workers 
        affected by automation to more easily transition to new types 
        of jobs within the defense manufacturing industry; and
            (6) any actions taken, or planned to be taken, by the 
        Department of Defense to assist in worker transition.

SEC. 340A. COMPTROLLER GENERAL REVIEW OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COST 
              MODELS USED IN MAKING PERSONNEL DECISIONS.

    (a) Review Required.--The Comptroller General of the United States 
shall conduct a review of--
            (1) the extent to which the Department of Defense has 
        incorporated feedback and lessons learned from cost comparisons 
        of the performance of Department of Defense functions by 
        members of the Armed Forces, Department of Defense employees, 
        and contractor personnel in making workforce decisions;
            (2) the extent to which the Department has used such 
        feedback and lessons learned to improve guidance, including 
        DODI 7041.04 and the full cost of manpower tool; and
            (3) any other related matter the Comptroller determines 
        appropriate.
    (b) Report and Briefing.--
            (1) Briefing.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the 
        Comptroller General shall provide to the Committees on Armed 
        Services of the Senate and House of Representatives an interim 
        briefing on the review required by subsection (a).
            (2) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Comptroller General shall submit to 
        such committees a report on such review.

                       Subtitle E--Other Matters

SEC. 341. EXPLOSIVE SAFETY BOARD.

    (a) Modification and Improvement of Ammunition Storage Board.--
Section 172 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``Secretaries of the military departments'' 
        and inserting ``Secretary of Defense'';
            (2) by inserting ``that includes members'' after ``joint 
        board'';
            (3) by striking ``selected by them'' and inserting 
        ``selected by the Secretaries of the military departments,'';
            (4) by inserting ``military'' before ``officers'';
            (5) by inserting ``designated as the chair and voting 
        members of the board for each military department'' after 
        ``officers'';
            (6) by inserting ``and other'' before ``civilian 
        officers'';
            (7) by striking ``or both'' and inserting ``as necessary''; 
        and
            (8) by striking ``keep informed on stored'' and inserting 
        ``provide oversight on storage and transportation of''.
    (b) Clerical Amendments.--
            (1) Section heading.--The heading of section 172 of title 
        10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``Ammunition 
        storage'' and inserting ``Explosive safety''.
            (2) Table of sections.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 7 of such title is amended by striking the 
        item relating to section 172 and inserting the following new 
        item:

``172. Explosive safety board.''.

SEC. 342. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE SUPPORT FOR MILITARY SERVICE MEMORIALS 
              AND MUSEUMS THAT HIGHLIGHT THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN THE ARMED 
              FORCES.

    The Secretary of Defense may provide financial support for the 
acquisition, installation, and maintenance of exhibits, facilities, 
historical displays, and programs at military service memorials and 
museums that highlight the role of women in the Armed Forces. The 
Secretary may enter into a contract with a nonprofit organization for 
the purpose of performing such acquisition, installation, and 
maintenance.

SEC. 343. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR ADVANCED SKILLS 
              MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE SYSTEM OF THE NAVY.

    (a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the 
Department of Defense may be obligated or expended for the enhancement 
of the advanced skills management software system of the Navy until a 
period of 60 days has elapsed following the date on which Secretary of 
the Navy makes the submission required under subsection (b)(3).
    (b) Briefing and Certification.--The Secretary of the Navy shall--
            (1) provide to the Committee on Armed Services of the House 
        of Representatives a briefing on any enhancements that are 
        needed for the advanced skills management software system of 
        the Navy;
            (2) after providing the briefing under paragraph (1), issue 
        a request for information for such enhancements in accordance 
        with part 15.2 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation; and
            (3) submit to the Committee on Armed Services of the House 
        of Representatives--
                    (A) the results of the request for information 
                issued under paragraph (2); and
                    (B) a written certification that--
                            (i) as part of the request for information, 
                        the Secretary solicited information on 
                        commercially available off-the-shelf software 
                        solutions that may be used to enhance the 
                        advanced skills management software system of 
                        the Navy; and
                            (ii) the Secretary has considered using 
                        such solutions.
    (c) Advanced Skills Management Software System Defined.--In this 
section, the term ``advanced skills management software system'' means 
a software application designed to--
            (1) identify job task requirements for Navy personnel;
            (2) assist in determining the proficiencies of such 
        personnel;
            (3) document qualifications and certifications of such 
        personnel; and
            (4) track the technical training completed by Navy aviation 
        maintenance personnel.

SEC. 344. COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS OF UNIFORM SPECIFICATIONS FOR AFGHAN 
              MILITARY OR SECURITY FORCES.

    Beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act, whenever the 
Secretary of Defense enters into a contract for the provision of 
uniforms for Afghan military or security forces, the Secretary shall 
conduct a cost-benefit analysis of the uniform specification for the 
Afghan military or security forces uniform. Such analysis shall 
determine--
            (1) whether there is a more effective alternative uniform 
        specification, considering both operational environment and 
        cost, available to the Afghan military or security forces;
            (2) the efficacy of the existing pattern compared to other 
        alternatives (both proprietary and non-proprietary patterns; 
        and
            (3) the costs and feasibility of transitioning the uniforms 
        of the Afghan military or security forces to a pattern owned by 
        the United States, using existing excess inventory where 
        available, and acquiring the rights to the Spec4ce Forest 
        pattern.

SEC. 345. INCREASE IN FUNDING FOR CIVIL MILITARY PROGRAMS.

    (a) Increase.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated for 
operation and maintenance, Defense-wide, as specified in the 
corresponding funding table in section 4301, for Civil Military 
Programs is hereby increased by $25,000,000 (to be used in support of 
the National Guard Youth Challenge Program).
    (b) Offset.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated for 
operation and maintenance, Defense-wide, as specified in the 
corresponding funding table in section 4301, for Operation and 
Maintenance, Defense-wide is hereby reduced by $25,000,000.

SEC. 346. REPORT ON MATERNITY UNIFORMS.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue to the 
congressional defense committees a report regarding maternity uniforms 
for pregnant members of the Armed Forces.
    (b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall address the 
following:
            (1) The design of maternity uniforms.
            (2) Materials used in the fabrication of maternity 
        uniforms.
            (3) The sizing of maternity uniforms.
            (4) Prices of maternity uniforms.
            (5) The availability of maternity uniforms.
            (6) The quality of maternity uniforms.
            (7) The utility of maternity uniforms.

SEC. 347. STATUS OF COMPLIANCE WITH PROCESS FOR COMMUNICATING 
              AVAILABILITY OF SURPLUS AMMUNITION.

    Not later than 30 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, 
the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and 
Logistics shall provide to the congressional defense committees a 
briefing on the status of compliance with section 344 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 
Stat. 2084).

SEC. 348. INCREASE IN FUNDING FOR NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER-DRUG PROGRAMS.

    (a) Increase.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated in 
section 1403 for drug interdiction and counter-drug activities, 
Defense-wide, as specified in the corresponding funding table in 
section 4501, for drug interdiction and counter-drug activities, 
Defense-wide, is hereby increased by $10,000,000 (to be used in support 
of the National Guard counter-drug programs).
    (b) Offset.--Notwithstanding the amounts set forth in the funding 
tables in division D, the amount authorized to be appropriated in 
section 201 for research, development, test, and evaluation, Defense-
wide, as specified in the corresponding funding table in section 4201, 
for Operational System Development, Global Command and Control System, 
Line 210, is hereby reduced by $10,000,000.

              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, 2018, as follows:
            (1) The Army, 486,000.
            (2) The Navy, 327,900.
            (3) The Marine Corps, 185,000.
            (4) The Air Force, 325,100.

SEC. 402. REVISIONS IN PERMANENT ACTIVE DUTY END STRENGTH MINIMUM 
              LEVELS.

    Section 691(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking paragraphs (1) through (4) and inserting the following new 
paragraphs:
            ``(1) For the Army, 486,000.
            ``(2) For the Navy, 327,900.
            ``(3) For the Marine Corps, 185,000.
            ``(4) For the Air Force, 325,100.''.

                       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, 2018, as follows:
            (1) The Army National Guard of the United States, 347,000.
            (2) The Army Reserve, 202,000.
            (3) The Navy Reserve, 59,000.
            (4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 38,500.
            (5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 106,600.
            (6) The Air Force Reserve, 69,800.
            (7) The Coast Guard Reserve, 7,000.
    (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 for 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, 
2018, 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, 30,155.
            (2) The Army Reserve, 16,261.
            (3) The Navy Reserve, 10,101.
            (4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 2,261.
            (5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 16,260.
            (6) The Air Force Reserve, 3,588.

SEC. 413. END STRENGTHS FOR MILITARY TECHNICIANS (DUAL STATUS).

    (a) In General.--The authorized number of military technicians 
(dual status) as of September 30, 2018, 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 National Guard of the United States, 
        25,507.
            (2) For the Army Reserve, 7,427.
            (3) For the Air National Guard of the United States, 
        21,893.
            (4) For the Air Force Reserve, 10,160.
    (b) Variance.--Notwithstanding section 115 of title 10, United 
States Code, the end strength prescribed by subsection (a) for a 
reserve component specified in that subsection may be increased--
            (1) by 3 percent, upon determination by the Secretary of 
        Defense that such action is in the national interest; and
            (2) by 2 percent, upon determination by the Secretary of 
        the military department concerned that such action would 
        enhance manning and readiness in essential units or in critical 
        specialties or ratings.

SEC. 414. FISCAL YEAR 2018 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, 2018, 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, 
        2018, may not exceed 420.
            (3) Air force reserve.--The number of non-dual status 
        technicians employed by the Air Force Reserve as of September 
        30, 2018, 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 2018, 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 2018 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 2018.

                   TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY

          Subtitle A--Regular and Reserve Component Management

SEC. 501. MODIFICATION OF REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO CONVERSION OF 
              CERTAIN MILITARY TECHNICIAN (DUAL STATUS) POSITIONS TO 
              CIVILIAN POSITIONS.

    (a) Revised Reduction and Deadline.--Section 1053(a)(1) of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 
114-92; 10 U.S.C. 10216 note), as amended by section 1084(a)(1) of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 
114-328; 130 Stat. 2421), is further amended--
            (1) by striking ``October 1, 2017'' and inserting ``October 
        1, 2018''; and
            (2) by striking ``20 percent'' and inserting ``4.8 
        percent''.
    (b) Reporting Requirement.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the 
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services 
of the Senate and the House of Representatives and the Committee on 
Oversight and Government Reform of the House of Representatives a 
report containing such recommendations as the Secretary considers 
appropriate for revising section 709 of title 32, United States Code, 
regarding the employment, use, and status of military technicians in 
the National Guard. The Secretary shall prepare the recommendations in 
consultation with the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Air 
Force, and the Chief of the National Guard Bureau.

SEC. 502. PILOT PROGRAM ON USE OF RETIRED SENIOR ENLISTED MEMBERS OF 
              THE ARMY NATIONAL GUARD AS ARMY NATIONAL GUARD 
              RECRUITERS.

    (a) Pilot Program Authorized.--The Secretary of the Army may carry 
out a pilot program for the Army National Guard under which retired 
senior enlisted members of the Army National Guard would serve as 
contract recruiters for the Army National Guard.
    (b) Objectives of Pilot Program.--The Secretary of the Army shall 
design any pilot program conducted under this section to determine the 
following:
            (1) The feasibility and effectiveness of hiring retired 
        senior enlisted members of the Army National Guard who have 
        retired within the previous two years to serve as recruiters.
            (2) The merits of hiring such retired senior enlisted 
        members as contractors or as employees of the Department of 
        Defense.
            (3) The best method of providing a competitive compensation 
        package for such retired senior enlisted members.
            (4) The merits of requiring such retired senior enlisted 
        members to wear a military uniform while performing recruiting 
        duties under the pilot program.
    (c) Consultation.--In developing a pilot program under this 
section, the Secretary of the Army shall consult with the operators of 
a previous pilot program carried out by the Army involving the use of 
contract recruiters.
    (d) Commencement and Duration.--The Secretary of the Army may 
commence a pilot program under this section on or after January 1, 
2018, and all activities under such a pilot program shall terminate no 
later than December 31, 2022.
    (e) Reporting Requirement.--If a pilot program is conducted under 
this section, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to the Committees 
on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate a 
report containing an evaluation of the success of the pilot program, 
including the determinations described in subsection (b). The report 
shall be submitted not later than January 1, 2020.

SEC. 503. EQUAL TREATMENT OF ORDERS TO SERVE ON ACTIVE DUTY UNDER 
              SECTION 12304A AND 12304B OF TITLE 10, UNITED STATES 
              CODE.

    (a) Eligibility of Reserve Component Members for Pre-mobilization 
Health Care.--Section 1074(d)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by striking ``in support of a contingency operation under'' and 
inserting ``under section 12304b of this title or''.
    (b) Eligibility of Reserve Component Members for Transitional 
Health Care.--Section 1145(a)(2)(B) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by striking ``in support of a contingency operation'' and 
inserting ``under section 12304b of this title or a provision of law 
referred to in section 101(a)(13)(B) of this title''.

SEC. 504. DIRECT EMPLOYMENT PILOT PROGRAM FOR MEMBERS OF THE NATIONAL 
              GUARD AND RESERVE.

    (a) Program Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out a 
pilot program to enhance the efforts of the Department of Defense to 
provide job placement assistance and related employment services 
directly to members in the National Guard and Reserves.
    (b) Administration.--The pilot program shall be offered to, and 
administered by, the adjutants general appointed under section 314 of 
title 32, United States Code.
    (c) Cost-sharing Requirement.--As a condition on the provision of 
funds under this section to a State to support the operation of the 
pilot program in the State, the State must agree to contribute an 
amount, derived from non-Federal sources, equal to at least 30 percent 
of the funds provided by the Secretary of Defense under this section.
    (d) Direct Employment Program Model.--The pilot program should 
follow a job placement program model that focuses on working one-on-one 
with a member of a reserve component to cost-effectively provide job 
placement services, including services such as identifying unemployed 
and under employed members, job matching services, resume editing, 
interview preparation, and post-employment follow up. Development of 
the pilot program should be informed by State direct employment 
programs for members of the reserve components, such as the programs 
conducted in California and South Carolina.
    (e) Evaluation.--The Secretary of Defense shall develop outcome 
measurements to evaluate the success of the pilot program.
    (f) Reporting Requirements.--
            (1) Report required.--Not later than January 31, 2022, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed 
        Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a 
        report describing the results of the pilot program. The 
        Secretary shall prepare the report in coordination with the 
        Chief of the National Guard Bureau.
            (2) Elements of report.--A report under paragraph (1) shall 
        include the following:
                    (A) A description and assessment of the 
                effectiveness and achievements of the pilot program, 
                including the number of members of the reserve 
                components hired and the cost-per-placement of 
                participating members.
                    (B) An assessment of the impact of the pilot 
                program and increased reserve component employment 
                levels on the readiness of members of the reserve 
                components.
                    (C) Any other matters considered appropriate by the 
                Secretary.
    (g) Duration of Authority.--
            (1) In general.--The authority to carry out the pilot 
        program expires September 30, 2020.
            (2) Extension.--Upon the expiration of the authority under 
        paragraph (1), the Secretary of Defense may extend the pilot 
        program for not more than two additional fiscal years.

SEC. 505. DESIGNATING THE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL CORPS AS A BASIC 
              BRANCH OF THE ARMY.

    Section 3063(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (12), by striking ``and'';
            (2) by redesignating paragraph (13) as paragraph (14); and
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (12) the following new 
        pargraph (13):
            ``(13) Explosive Ordnance Disposal Corps; and''.

  Subtitle B--General Service Authorities and Correction of Military 
                                Records

SEC. 511. CONSIDERATION OF ADDITIONAL MEDICAL EVIDENCE BY BOARDS FOR 
              THE CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS AND LIBERAL 
              CONSIDERATION OF EVIDENCE RELATING TO POST-TRAUMATIC 
              STRESS DISORDER OR TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY.

    (a) In General.--Section 1552 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (h) and (i) as subsections 
        (i) and (j), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (g) the following new 
        subsection (h):
    ``(h)(1) This subsection applies to a former member of the armed 
forces whose claim under this section for review of a discharge or 
dismissal is based in whole or in part on matters relating to post-
traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury as supporting 
rationale, or as justification for priority consideration, and whose 
post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury is related to 
combat or military sexual trauma, as determined by the Secretary 
concerned.
    ``(2) In the case of a claimant described in paragraph (1), a board 
established under subsection (a)(1) shall--
            ``(A) review medical evidence of the Secretary of Veterans 
        Affairs or a civilian health care provider that is presented by 
        the claimant; and
            ``(B) review the claim with liberal consideration to the 
        claimant that post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain 
        injury potentially contributed to the circumstances resulting 
        in the discharge or dismissal or to the original 
        characterization of the claimant's discharge or dismissal.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 1553(d)(3)(A)(ii) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by striking ``discharge of a lesser 
characterization'' and inserting ``discharge or dismissal or to the 
original characterization of the member's discharge or dismissal''.

SEC. 512. PUBLIC AVAILABILITY OF INFORMATION RELATED TO DISPOSITION OF 
              CLAIMS REGARDING DISCHARGE OR RELEASE OF MEMBERS OF THE 
              ARMED FORCES WHEN THE CLAIMS INVOLVE SEXUAL ASSAULT.

    (a) Boards for the Correction of Military Records.--Subsection (i) 
of section 1552, United States Code, as redesignated by section 511, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(4) The number and disposition of claims decided during 
        the calendar quarter preceding the calendar quarter in which 
        such information is made available in which sexual assault is 
        alleged to have contributed, whether in whole or in part, to 
        the original characterization of the discharge or release of 
        the claimant.''.
    (b) Discharge Review Boards.--Section 1553(f) of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
            ``(4) The number and disposition of claims decided during 
        the calendar quarter preceding the calendar quarter in which 
        such information is made available in which sexual assault is 
        alleged to have contributed, whether in whole or in part, to 
        the original characterization of the discharge or release of 
        the claimant.''.

SEC. 513. PILOT PROGRAM ON USE OF VIDEO TELECONFERENCING TECHNOLOGY BY 
              BOARDS FOR THE CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS AND 
              DISCHARGE REVIEW BOARDS.

    (a) Pilot Program Authorized.--The Secretary of Defense may carry 
out a pilot program under which boards for the correction of military 
records established under section 1552 of title 10, United States Code, 
and discharge review boards established under section 1553 of such 
title are authorized to utilize video teleconferencing technology in 
the performance of their duties.
    (b) Purpose.--The purpose of the pilot program is to evaluate the 
feasibility and cost-effectiveness of utilizing video teleconferencing 
technology to allow persons who raise a claim before a board for the 
correction of military records, persons who request a review by a 
discharge review board, and witnesses who present evidence to such a 
board to appear before such a board without being physically present.
    (c) Implementation.--As part of the pilot program, the Secretary of 
Defense shall make funds available to develop the capabilities of 
boards for the correction of military records and discharge review 
boards to effectively use video teleconferencing technology.
    (d) No Expansion of Eligibility.--Nothing in the pilot program is 
intended to alter the eligibility criteria of persons who may raise a 
claim before a board for the correction of military records, request a 
review by a discharge review board, or present evidence to such a 
board.
    (e) Termination.--The authority of the Secretary of Defense to 
carry out the pilot program shall terminate on December 31, 2020.

SEC. 514. INCLUSION OF SPECIFIC EMAIL ADDRESS BLOCK ON CERTIFICATE OF 
              RELEASE OR DISCHARGE FROM ACTIVE DUTY (DD FORM 214).

    (a) Modification Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall modify 
the Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty (DD Form 214) 
to include a specific block explicitly identified as the location in 
which a member of the Armed Forces may provide one or more email 
addresses by which the member may be contacted after discharge or 
release from active duty in the Armed Forces.
    (b) Deadline for Modification.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
release a revised Certificate of Release or Discharge from Active Duty 
(DD Form 214), modified as required by subsection (a), not later than 
one year after the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 515. PROVISION OF INFORMATION ON NATURALIZATION THROUGH MILITARY 
              SERVICE.

    The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that members of the Army, 
Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps who are aliens lawfully admitted to 
the United States for permanent residence are informed of the 
availability of naturalization through service in the Armed Forces 
under section 328 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 
1439) and the process by which to pursue naturalization. The Secretary 
shall ensure that resources are available to assist qualified members 
of the Armed Forces to navigate the application and naturalization 
process.

SEC. 516. TRAINING REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) Members of Boards for the Correction of Military Records.--
Section 534(c)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 10 U.S.C. 1552 note) is amended by 
adding at the end the following new sentence: ``This curriculum shall 
also address the proper handling of claims in which a sex-related 
offense is alleged to have contributed to the original characterization 
of the discharge or release of the claimant, including guidelines for 
the consideration of evidence substantiating such allegations in 
accordance with the requirements of section 1554b(b)(3) of title 10, 
United States Code.''.
    (b) Department of Defense Personnel Who Investigate Claims of 
Retaliation.--Section 546(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) is amended by striking 
``section.'' and inserting ``section, including guidelines for the 
consideration of evidence substantiating such allegations in accordance 
with the requirements of section 1554b(b)(3) of title 10, United States 
Code.''.

SEC. 517. CONFIDENTIAL REVIEW OF CHARACTERIZATION OF TERMS OF DISCHARGE 
              OF MEMBERS WHO ARE SURVIVORS OF SEX-RELATED OFFENSES.

    (a) Codification of Current Confidential Process.--
            (1) Codification.--Chapter 79 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by inserting after section 1554a a new section 
        1554b consisting of--
                    (A) a heading as follows:
``Sec. 1554b. Confidential review of characterization of terms of 
              discharge of members of the armed forces who are 
              survivors of sex-related offenses''; and
                    (B) a text consisting of the text of section 547 of 
                the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
                2015 (10 U.S.C. 1553 note, Public Law 113-291).
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 79 of such title is amended by inserting 
        after the item relating to section 1554a the following new 
        item:

``1554b. Confidential review of characterization of terms of discharge 
                            of members of the armed forces who are 
                            survivors of sex-related offenses.''.
            (3) Conforming repeal.--Section 547 of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (10 U.S.C. 1553 note, 
        Public Law 113-291) is repealed.
    (b) Clarification of Applicability to Individuals Who Allege Sex-
related Offenses During Military Service.--Subsection (a) of section 
1554b of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection (a) of 
this section, is amended by striking ``sex-related offense'' and 
inserting the following: ``sex-related offense, or alleges that the 
individual was the survivor of a sex-related offense,''.
    (c) Conforming Amendments.--Section 1554b of title 10, United 
States Code, as added by subsection (a), is further amended--
            (1) by striking ``Armed Forces'' each place it appears in 
        subsections (a) and (b) and inserting ``armed forces'';
            (2) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) by striking ``boards for the correction of 
                military records of the military department concerned'' 
                and inserting ``boards of the military department 
                concerned established in accordance with this 
                chapter''; and
                    (B) by striking ``such an offense'' and inserting 
                ``a sex-related offense'';
            (3) in subsection (b), striking ``boards for the correction 
        of military records'' in the matter preceding paragraph (1) and 
        inserting ``boards of the military department concerned 
        established in accordance with this chapter''; and
            (4) in subsection (e), as redesignated by subsection 
        (d)(1)--
                    (B) in paragraph (1), by striking ``title 10, 
                United States Code'' and inserting ``this title''; and
                    (C) in paragraphs (2) and (3), by striking ``such 
                title'' and inserting ``this title''.

          Subtitle C--Military Justice and Other Legal Issues

SEC. 521. CLARIFYING AMENDMENTS RELATED TO THE UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY 
              JUSTICE REFORM BY THE MILITARY JUSTICE ACT OF 2016.

    (a) Enforcement of Rights of Victims of Offenses Under UCMJ.--
Section 806b(e)(3) of title 10, United States Code (article 6b(e)(3) of 
the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(A)'' after ``(3)'';
            (2) by striking ``President, and, to the extent 
        practicable, shall have priority over all other proceedings 
        before the court.'' and inserting the following; ``President, 
        subject to section 830a of this title (article 30a).''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraphs:
    ``(B) To the extent practicable, a petition for a writ of mandamus 
described in this subsection shall have priority over all other 
proceedings before the Court of Criminal Appeals.
    ``(C) Review of any decision by the Court of Criminal Appeals on a 
petition for a writ of mandamus described in this subsection shall have 
priority in the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, as determined 
under the rules of the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.''.
    (b) Review of Certain Matters Before Referral of Charges and 
Specifications.--Subsection (a)(1) of section 830a of title 10, United 
States Code (article 30a of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), as 
added by section 5202 of the Military Justice Act of 2016 (division E 
of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2904), is amended by adding at the end 
the following new subparagraph:
            ``(D) Pre-referral matters under subsection (c) or (e) of 
        section 806b of this title (article 6b).''.
    (c) Defense Counsel Assistance in Post-trial Matters for Accused 
Convicted by Court-martial.--Section 838(c)(2) of title 10, United 
States Code (article 38(c)(2) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), 
is amended by striking ``section 860 of this title (article 60)'' and 
inserting ``section 860, 860a, or 860b of this title (article 60, 60a, 
or 60b)''.
    (d) Limitation on Acceptance of Plea Agreements.--Subsection (b) of 
section 853a of title 10, United States Code (article 53a of the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice), as added by section 5237 of the 
Military Justice Act of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-328; 130 
Stat. 2917), is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``or'' after the 
        semicolon;
            (2) in paragraph (3), by striking the period and inserting 
        a semicolon; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
            ``(4) is prohibited by law; or
            ``(5) is contrary to, or is inconsistent with, a regulation 
        prescribed by the President with respect to terms, conditions, 
        or other aspects of plea agreements.''.
    (e) Applicability of Standards and Procedures to Sentence Appeal by 
the United States.--Subsection (d)(1) of section 856 of title 10, 
United States Code (article 56 of the Uniform Code of Military 
Justice), as added by section 5301 of the Military Justice Act of 2016 
(division E of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2919), is amended--
            (1) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by inserting 
        after ``concerned,'' the following: ``and consistent with 
        standards and procedures set forth in regulations prescribed by 
        the President,''; and
            (2) in subparagraph (B), by inserting before the period at 
        the end the following: ``, as determined in accordance with 
        standards and procedures prescribed by the President''.
    (f) Sentence of Reduction in Enlisted Grade.--
            (1) In general.--Subsection (a) of section 858a of title 
        10, United States Code (article 58a of the Uniform Code of 
        Military Justice), as amended by section 5303(1) of the 
        Military Justice Act of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-328; 
        130 Stat. 2923), is further amended in the matter after 
        paragraph (3) by striking ``, effective on the date'' and 
        inserting the following: ``, if such a reduction is authorized 
        by regulation prescribed by the President. The reduction in pay 
        grade shall take effect on the date''.
            (2) Section heading.--The heading of section 858a of title 
        10, United States Code (article 58a of the Uniform Code of 
        Military Justice), is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 858a. Art 58a. Sentences: reduction in enlisted grade''.
            (3) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of subchapter VIII of chapter 47 of title 10, United 
        States Code (the Uniform Code of Military Justice) is amended 
        by striking the item relating to section 858a (article 58a) and 
        inserting the following new item:

``858a. 58a. Sentences: reduction in enlisted grade.''.
    (g) Convening Authority Authorities.--Section 858b(b) of title 10, 
United States Code (article 58b(b) of the Uniform Code of Military 
Justice), is amended in the first sentence by striking ``section 860 of 
this title (article 60)'' and inserting ``section 860a or 860b of this 
title (article 60a or 60b)''.
    (h) Appeal by the United State.--Section 862(b) of title 10, United 
States Code (article 62(b) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is 
amended by striking ``, notwithstanding section 866(c) of this title 
(article 66(c))''.
    (i) Rehearing and Sentencing.--Subsection (b) of section 863 of 
title 10, United States Code (article 63 of the Uniform Code of 
Military Justice), as added by section 5327 of the Military Justice Act 
of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2929), is amended 
by inserting before the period at the end the following: ``, subject to 
such limitations as the President may prescribe by regulation''.
    (j) Courts of Criminal Appeals.--Section 866 of title 10, United 
States Code (article 66 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), as 
amended by section 5330 of the Military Justice Act of 2016 (division E 
of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2932), is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (e)(2)(C), by inserting after 
        ``required'' the following: ``by regulation prescribed by the 
        President or''; and
            (2) in subsection (f)(3), by adding at the end the 
        following new sentence: ``If the Court of Appeals for the Armed 
        Forces determines that additional proceedings are warranted, 
        the Court of Criminal Appeals shall order a hearing or other 
        proceeding in accordance with the direction of the Court of 
        Appeals for the Armed Forces.''.
    (k) Military Justice Review Panel.--Subsection (f) of section 946 
of title 10, United States Code (article 146 of the Uniform Code of 
Military Justice), as added by section 5521 of the Military Justice Act 
of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2962), is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``fiscal year 2020'' in 
        the first sentence and inserting ``fiscal year 2021'';
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking the sentence beginning 
        ``Not later than'' and inserting the following new sentence: 
        ``The analysis under this paragraph shall be included in the 
        assessment required by paragraph (1).''; and
            (3) by striking paragraph (5) and inserting the following 
        new paragraph (5):
            ``(5) Reports.--With respect to each review and assessment 
        under this subsection, the Panel shall submit a report to the 
        Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
        Representatives. Each report--
                    ``(A) shall set forth the results of the review and 
                assessment concerned, including the findings and 
                recommendations of the Panel; and
                    ``(B) shall be submitted not later than December 31 
                of the calendar year in which the review and assessment 
                is concluded.''.
    (l) Transitional Compensation for Dependents of Members Separated 
for Dependent Abuse.--Section 1059(e) of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)(A)(ii), by striking ``the approval 
        of'' and all that follows through ``as approved,'' and 
        inserting ``entry of judgment under section 860c of this title 
        (article 60c of the Uniform Code of Military Justice) if the 
        sentence''; and
            (2) in paragraph (3)(A), by striking ``by a court-martial'' 
        the second place it appears and all that follows through 
        ``include any such punishment,'' and inserting ``for a 
        dependent-abuse offense and the conviction is disapproved or is 
        otherwise not part of the judgment under section 860c of this 
        title (article 60c of the Uniform Code of Military Justice) or 
        the punishment is disapproved or is otherwise not part of the 
        judgment under such section (article),''.
    (m) Benefits for Dependents Who Are Victims of Abuse by Members 
Losing Right to Retired Pay.--Section 1408(h)(10)(A) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by striking ``the approval'' and all 
that follows through the end of the subparagraph and inserting ``entry 
of judgment under section 860c of this title (article 60c of the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice).''.
    (n) Treatment of Certain Offenses Pending Execution of Military 
Justice Act of 2016 Amendments.--
            (1) Child abuse offenses.--With respect to offenses 
        committed before the date designated by the President under 
        section 5542(a) of the Military Justice Act of 2016 (division E 
        of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2967), subsection (b)(2)(B) of 
        section 843 of title 10, United States Code (article 43 of the 
        Uniform Code of Military Justice), shall be applied as in 
        effect on December 22, 2016.
            (2) Fraudulent enlistment or appointment offenses.--With 
        respect to the period beginning on December 23, 2016, and 
        ending on the day before the date designated by the President 
        under section 5542(a) of the Military Justice Act of 2016 
        (division E of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2967), in the 
        application of subsection (h) of section 843 of title 10, 
        United States Code (article 43 of the Uniform Code of Military 
        Justice), as added by section 5225(b) of that Act (130 Stat. 
        2909), the reference in such subsection (h) to section 904a(1) 
        of title 10, United States Code (article 104a(1) of the Uniform 
        Code of Military Justice), shall be deemed to be a reference to 
        section 883(1) of title 10, United States Code (article 83(1) 
        of the Uniform Code of Military Justice).
    (o) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take 
effect immediately after the amendments made by the Military Justice 
Act of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-328) take effect as provided 
for in section 5542 of that Act (130 Stat. 2967).

SEC. 522. MINIMUM CONFINEMENT PERIOD REQUIRED FOR CONVICTION OF CERTAIN 
              SEX-RELATED OFFENSES COMMITTED BY MEMBERS OF THE ARMED 
              FORCES.

    (a) Mandatory Punishments.--Section 856(b)(1) of title 10, United 
States Code (article 56(b)(1) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), 
as amended by section 5301 of the Military Justice Act of 2016 
(division E of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2919), is further amended 
by striking ``shall include dismissal or dishonorable discharge, as 
applicable.'' and inserting the following: ``shall include, at a 
minimum--
            ``(A) dismissal or dishonorable discharge, as applicable; 
        and
            ``(B) confinement for two years.''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall 
take effect immediately after the amendments made by the Military 
Justice Act of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-328) take effect as 
provided for in section 5542 of that Act (130 Stat. 2967).

SEC. 523. PROHIBITION ON WRONGFUL BROADCAST OR DISTRIBUTION OF INTIMATE 
              VISUAL IMAGES.

    (a) Prohibition.--Subchapter X of chapter 47 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 917 (article 117 of 
the Uniform Code of Military Justice) the following new section 
(article):
``Sec. 917a. Art. 117a. Wrongful broadcast or distribution of intimate 
              visual images
    ``(a) Prohibition.--Any person subject to this chapter who--
            ``(1) knowingly and wrongfully broadcasts or distributes an 
        intimate visual image of a private area of another person who--
                    ``(A) is at least 18 years of age at the time the 
                intimate visual image was created;
                    ``(B) is identifiable from the image itself or from 
                information displayed in connection with the image; and
                    ``(C) does not explicitly consent to the broadcast 
                or distribution of the intimate visual image;
            ``(2) knows or reasonably should have known that the 
        intimate visual image was made under circumstances in which the 
        person depicted in the intimate visual image retained a 
        reasonable expectation of privacy regarding any broadcast or 
        distribution of the intimate visual image; and
            ``(3) knows or reasonably should have known that the 
        broadcast or distribution of the intimate visual image is 
        likely--
                    ``(A) to cause harm, harassment, intimidation, 
                emotional distress, or financial loss for the person 
                depicted in the intimate visual image; or
                    ``(B) to harm substantially the depicted person 
                with respect to that person's health, safety, business, 
                calling, career, financial condition, reputation, or 
                personal relationships;
is guilty of wrongful distribution of intimate visual images and shall 
by punished as a court-martial may direct.
    ``(b) Definitions.--In this section (article):
            ``(1) Broadcast.--The term `broadcast' means to 
        electronically transmit a visual image with the intent that it 
        be viewed by a person or persons.
            ``(2) Distribute.--The term `distribute' means to deliver 
        to the actual or constructive possession of another person, 
        including transmission by mail or electronic means.
            ``(3) Intimate visual image.--The term `intimate visual 
        image' means a photograph, video, film, or recording made by 
        any means that depicts a private area of a person.
            ``(4) Private area.--The term `private area' means the 
        naked or underwear-clad genitalia, anus, buttocks, or female 
        areola or nipple.
            ``(5) Reasonable expectation of privacy.--The term 
        `reasonable expectation of privacy' refers to circumstances in 
        which a reasonable person would believe that an intimate visual 
        image of a private area of the person would not be broadcast or 
        distributed to another person.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
subchapter X of chapter 47 of title 10, United States Code (the Uniform 
Code of Military Justice), is amended by inserting after the item 
relating to section 917 (article 117) the following new item:

``917a. 117a. Wrongful broadcast or distribution of intimate visual 
                            images.''.

SEC. 524. INFORMATION FOR THE SPECIAL VICTIMS' COUNSEL OR VICTIMS' 
              LEGAL COUNSEL.

    Section 1044e(b)(6) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new sentence: ``If there is a military 
prosecution of the alleged sex-related offense, the Special Victims' 
Counsel or Victims' Legal Counsel shall be entitled to a copy of all 
case information and documentation that is in the possession of the 
prosecutor, relevant to such military prosecution, and not 
privileged.''

SEC. 525. SPECIAL VICTIMS' COUNSEL TRAINING REGARDING THE UNIQUE 
              CHALLENGES OFTEN FACED BY MALE VICTIMS OF SEXUAL ASSAULT.

    The baseline Special Victims' Counsel training established under 
section 1044e(d)(2) of title 10, United States Code, shall include 
training for Special Victims' Counsel to recognize and deal with the 
unique challenges often faced by male victims of sexual assault.

SEC. 526. GARNISHMENT TO SATISFY JUDGMENT RENDERED FOR PHYSICALLY, 
              SEXUALLY, OR EMOTIONALLY ABUSING A CHILD.

    (a) Garnishment Authority.--Section 1408 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(l) Garnishment to Satisfy a Judgment Rendered for Physically, 
Sexually, or Emotionally Abusing a Child.--(1) Subject to paragraph 
(2), any payment of retired pay that would otherwise be made to a 
member shall be paid (in whole or in part) by the Secretary concerned 
to another person if and to the extent expressly provided for in the 
terms of a child abuse garnishment order.
    ``(2) A court order providing for the payment of child support or 
alimony or, with respect to a division of property, specifically 
providing for the payment of an amount of the disposable retired pay 
from a member to the spouse or a former spouse of the member, shall be 
given priority over a child abuse garnishment order. However, the 
limitations on the amount of disposable retired pay available for 
payments set forth in paragraphs (1) and (4)(B) of subsection (e) do 
not apply to a child abuse garnishment order.
    ``(3) In this section, the term `court order' includes a child 
abuse garnishment order.
    ``(4) In this subsection, the term `child abuse garnishment order' 
means a final decree issued by a court that--
            ``(A) is issued in accordance with the laws of the 
        jurisdiction of that court; and
            ``(B) provides in the nature of garnishment for the 
        enforcement of a judgment rendered against the member for 
        physically, sexually, or emotionally abusing a child.
    ``(5) For purposes of this subsection, a judgment rendered for 
physically, sexually, or emotionally abusing a child is any legal claim 
perfected through a final enforceable judgment, which claim is based in 
whole or in part upon the physical, sexual, or emotional abuse of an 
individual under 18 years of age, whether or not that abuse is 
accompanied by other actionable wrongdoing, such as sexual exploitation 
or gross negligence.
    ``(6) If the Secretary concerned is served with more than one court 
order with respect to the retired pay of a member, the disposable 
retired pay of the member shall be available to satisfy such court 
orders on a first-come, first-served basis, with any such process being 
satisfied out of such moneys as remain after the satisfaction of all 
such processes which have been previously served.
    ``(7) The Secretary concerned shall not be required to vary normal 
pay and disbursement cycles for retired pay in order to comply with a 
child abuse garnishment order.''.
    (b) Application of Amendment.--Subsection (l) of section 1408 of 
title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection (a), shall apply 
with respect to a court order received by the Secretary concerned on or 
after the date of the enactment of this Act, regardless of the date of 
the court order.

SEC. 527. INCLUSION OF INFORMATION IN ANNUAL SAPRO REPORTS REGARDING 
              MILITARY SEXUAL HARASSMENT AND INCIDENTS INVOLVING 
              NONCONSENSUAL DISTRIBUTION OF PRIVATE SEXUAL IMAGES.

    (a) Additional Reporting Requirements.--Section 1631(b) of the Ike 
Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public 
Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. 1561 note) is amended by adding at the end the 
following new paragraphs:
            ``(13) Information and data collected on official and 
        unofficial reports of sexual harassment involving members of 
        the Armed Forces during the year covered by the report, as 
        follows:
                    ``(A) The number of substantiated and 
                unsubstantiated reports.
                    ``(B) A synopsis of each substantiated report.
                    ``(C) The action taken in the case of each 
                substantiated report, including the type of 
                disciplinary or administrative sanction imposed, if 
                any, such as--
                            ``(i) conviction and sentence by court-
                        martial;
                            ``(ii) imposition of non-judicial 
                        punishment under section 815 of title 10, 
                        United States Code (article 15 of the Uniform 
                        Code of Military Justice); or
                            ``(iii) administrative separation or other 
                        type of administrative action imposed.
            ``(14) Information and data collected during the year 
        covered by the report on each reported incident involving the 
        nonconsensual distribution by a person subject to chapter 47 of 
        title 10, United States Code (the Uniform Code of Military 
        Justice) of a private sexual image of another person, including 
        the following:
                    ``(A) The number of substantiated and 
                unsubstantiated reports.
                    ``(B) A synopsis of each substantiated report.
                    ``(C) The action taken in the case of each 
                substantiated report, including the type of 
                disciplinary or administrative sanction imposed, if 
                any, such as--
                            ``(i) conviction and sentence by court-
                        martial;
                            ``(ii) imposition of non-judicial 
                        punishment under section 815 of title 10, 
                        United States Code (article 15 of the Uniform 
                        Code of Military Justice); or
                            ``(iii) administrative separation or other 
                        type of administrative action imposed.''.
    (b) Application of Amendment.--The amendment made by this section 
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act and apply 
beginning with the reports required to be submitted by March 1, 2018, 
under section 1631 of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. 1561 note).

SEC. 528. INCLUSION OF INFORMATION IN ANNUAL SAPRO REPORTS REGARDING 
              SEXUAL ASSAULTS COMMITTED BY A MEMBER OF THE ARMED FORCES 
              AGAINST THE MEMBER'S SPOUSE OR OTHER FAMILY MEMBER.

    Beginning with the reports required to be submitted by March 1, 
2018, under section 1631 of the Ike Skelton National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. 
1561 note), information regarding a sexual assault committed by a 
member of the Armed Forces against the spouse or intimate partner of 
the member or another dependent of the member shall be included in such 
reports in addition to the annual Family Advocacy Program report. The 
information shall be provided in such reports in the same manner as 
information is provided with respect to other official and unofficial 
reports of sexual assault.

SEC. 529. NOTIFICATION OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES UNDERGOING 
              CERTAIN ADMINISTRATIVE SEPARATIONS OF POTENTIAL 
              ELIGIBILITY FOR VETERANS BENEFITS.

    (a) Notification Required.--A member of the Armed Forces who 
receives an administrative separation or mandatory discharge under 
conditions other than honorable shall be provided written notification 
that the member may petition the Veterans Benefits Administration of 
the Department of Veterans Affairs to receive, despite the 
characterization of the member's service, certain benefits under the 
laws administered by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
    (b) Deadline for Notification.--Notification under subsection (a) 
shall be provided to a member described in such subsection in 
conjunction with the member's notification of the administrative 
separation or mandatory discharge or as soon thereafter as practicable.

SEC. 530. CONSISTENT ACCESS TO SPECIAL VICTIMS' COUNSEL FOR FORMER 
              DEPENDENTS OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.

    Not later than one year after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall revise Navy policy regarding the 
eligibility of former dependents of members of the Armed Forces to 
representation by a Victims' Legal Counsel so that Navy policy is 
consistent with Army and Air Force policy regarding Special Victims' 
Counsel, which provides that a former dependent is eligible for such 
representation if, while entitled to legal assistance, the dependent 
was the victim of an alleged sex-related offense by a member of the 
Armed Forces.

SEC. 531. INCLUSION OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION IN ANNUAL SAPRO REPORTS.

    Section 1631 of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. 1561 note) is 
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(h) Definitions.--
            ``(1) Sexual assault defined.--In this section, the term 
        `sexual assault' includes rape, sexual assault, forcible 
        sodomy, aggravated sexual contact, abusive sexual contact, and 
        attempts to commit such offenses, as those terms are defined in 
        the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
            ``(2) Sexual coercion defined.--In this section, the term 
        `sexual coercion' includes unwanted vaginal, oral, or anal sex 
        after the perpetrator pressured the victim by means including--
                    ``(A) repeated requests to the victim for sex;
                    ``(B) expressions of unhappiness due to the victim 
                refusing to have sex with the perpetrator;
                    ``(C) lies;
                    ``(D) threats; and
                    ``(E) sexual harassment as that term is defined in 
                section 1561(e) of title 10, United States Code.''.

SEC. 532. SEXUAL ASSAULT PREVENTION AND RESPONSE.

    (a) Army.--The Secretary of the Army, in coordination with the 
Chiefs of the National Guard Bureau and the Army Reserve shall--
            (1) conduct an evaluation of staffing approaches used to 
        administer the sexual assault prevention and response program 
        in the Army National Guard and the Army Reserve. In conducting 
        such evaluation, the Secretary consider opportunities to 
        leverage resources across all Army components and shall conduct 
        an assessment of the number and allocation of full-time and 
        collateral-duty personnel, the fill rates for program 
        positions, and the types of positions used; and
            (2) direct the Chief of the Army Reserve to develop and 
        implement an expedited line-of-duty determination process for 
        Army Reserve sexual assault victims, along with a method for 
        tracking the length of time to make the determinations, that 
        ensure members of the Armed Forces who wish to file a 
        confidential or restricted report are able to go through the 
        determination process without disclosing their circumstances to 
        the chain of command.
    (b) SHARP Program Office.--The Director of the SHARP Program Office 
of the Army National Guard shall--
            (1) communicate and disseminate its guidance on budget 
        development and execution for the SHARP program to all full-
        time SHARP program personnel;
            (2) develop clear guidance on budget development and 
        execution for the SHARP program and disseminate this guidance 
        to its full-time SHARP program personnel; and
            (3) expand the scope of the midyear review to include 
        monitoring and providing oversight of SHARP program 
        expenditures at the Army National Guard state and Army Reserve 
        command level.
    (c) National Guard Bureau.--The Chief of the National Guard Bureau, 
in collaboration with the Secretaries of the military departments 
concerned, shall reassess the Office of Complex Administrative 
Investigation's timeliness and resources to determine how to improve 
the timeliness of processing sexual assault investigations involving 
members of the Army National Guard and identify the resources needed to 
improve the timeliness of such investigations.

   Subtitle D--Member Education, Training, Resilience, and Transition

SEC. 541. PROHIBITION ON RELEASE OF MILITARY SERVICE ACADEMY GRADUATES 
              TO PARTICIPATE IN PROFESSIONAL ATHLETICS.

    (a) United States Military Academy.--Section 4348(a) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
            ``(5) That the cadet will not seek release from the 
        commissioned service obligation of the cadet to pursue a career 
        as a professional athlete and understands that the appointment 
        alternative described in paragraph (3) will not be used to 
        allow the cadet to pursue such a career.''.
    (b) United States Naval Academy.--Section 6959(a) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
            ``(5) That the midshipman will not seek release from the 
        commissioned service obligation of the midshipman to pursue a 
        career as a professional athlete and understands that the 
        appointment alternative described in paragraph (3) will not be 
        used to allow the midshipman to pursue such a career.''.
    (c) United States Air Force Academy.--Section 9348(a) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
            ``(5) That the cadet will not seek release from the 
        commissioned service obligation of the cadet to pursue a career 
        as a professional athlete and understands that the appointment 
        alternative described in paragraph (2) will not be used to 
        allow the cadet to pursue such a career.''.
    (d) Application of Amendments.--The Secretaries of the military 
departments shall promptly revise the cadet and midshipman service 
agreements under sections 4348, 6959, and 9348 of title 10, United 
States Code, to reflect the amendments made by this section. The 
revised agreement shall apply to cadets and midshipmen who are 
attending the United States Military Academy, the United States Naval 
Academy, or the United States Air Force Academy on the date of the 
enactment of this Act and to persons who begin attendance at such 
military service academies on or after that date.

SEC. 542. ROTC CYBER INSTITUTES AT THE SENIOR MILITARY COLLEGES.

    (a) Program Authorized.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out a 
program to establish a Reserve Officers' Training Corps Cyber Institute 
(referred to in this Act as an ``ROTC Cyber Institute'') at each of the 
senior military colleges for purposes of accelerating the development 
of foundational expertise in critical cyber operational skills for 
future military and civilian leaders of the Armed Forces and Department 
of Defense including such leaders of the reserve components.
    (b) Elements.--Each ROTC Cyber Institute established under the 
program authorized by subsection (a) shall include the following:
            (1) Programs to provide future military and civilian 
        leaders of the Armed Forces or the Department of Defense, as 
        the case may be, who possess cyber operational expertise from 
        beginning through advanced skill levels. Such programs shall 
        include instruction and practical experiences that lead to 
        recognized certifications in the cyber field.
            (2) Programs of targeted strategic foreign language 
        proficiency training for such future leaders that--
                    (A) are designed to significantly enhance critical 
                cyber operational capabilities; and
                    (B) are tailored to current and anticipated 
                readiness requirements.
            (3) Programs related to mathematical foundations of 
        cryptography and courses in cryptographic theory and practice 
        designed to complement and reinforce cyber education along with 
        the strategic language programs critical to cyber operations.
            (4) Programs designed to develop early interest and cyber 
        talent through summer programs for elementary school and 
        secondary school students and dual enrollment opportunities for 
        cyber, strategic language, and cryptography related courses.
            (5) Training and education programs to expand the pool of 
        qualified cyber instructors necessary to support cyber 
        education in regional school systems.
    (c) Partnerships With Department of Defense and the Armed Forces.--
Any ROTC Cyber Institute established under the program authorized by 
subsection (a) may enter into a partnership with one or more components 
of the Armed Forces, active or reserve, or any agency of the Department 
of Defense to facilitate the development of critical cyber skills for 
students who may pursue a military career.
    (d) Partnerships With Other Schools.--Any ROTC Cyber Institute 
established under the program authorized by subsection (a) may enter 
into a partnership with one or more local educational agencies to 
facilitate the development of critical cyber skills under the program 
among students attending the elementary schools and secondary schools 
of such agencies who may pursue a military career.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) ESEA terms.--The terms ``elementary school'', 
        ``secondary school'', and ``local educational agency'' have the 
        meanings given the terms in section 8101 of the Elementary and 
        Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7801).
            (2) Senior military colleges.--The term ``senior military 
        colleges'' means the senior military colleges described in 
        section 2111a(f) of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 543. LIEUTENANT HENRY OSSIAN FLIPPER LEADERSHIP SCHOLARSHIP 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) Authority.--The Secretary of the Army shall carry out a program 
to be known as the ``Lieutenant Henry Ossian Flipper Leadership 
Scholarship Program'' under which the Secretary may provide financial 
assistance, in accordance with this section, to a person--
            (1) who is pursuing a recognized postsecondary credential 
        at a minority-serving institution; and
            (2) who enters into an agreement with the Secretary as 
        described in subsection (b).
    (b) Service Agreement for Scholarship Recipients.--
            (1) In general.--To receive financial assistance under this 
        section--
                    (A) a member of the Army shall enter into an 
                agreement to serve on active duty in the Army for the 
                period of obligated service determined under paragraph 
                (2); and
                    (B) a person who is not a member of the Army shall 
                enter into an agreement to enlist or accept a 
                commission in the Army and to serve on active duty in 
                Army for the period of obligated service determined 
                under paragraph (2).
            (2) Period of obligated service.--The period of obligated 
        service for a recipient of financial assistance under this 
        section shall be the period determined by the Secretary of Army 
        as being appropriate to obtain adequate service in exchange for 
        the financial assistance. The period of service required of a 
        recipient shall be not less than the period equal to three-
        fourths of the total period of pursuit of a credential for 
        which the Secretary agrees to provide the recipient with 
        financial assistance under this section. The period of 
        obligated service is in addition to any other period for which 
        the recipient is obligated to serve on active duty.
            (3) Terms of agreement.--An agreement entered into under 
        this section by a person pursuing a recognized postsecondary 
        credential shall include the following terms:
                    (A) Service start date.--The period of obligated 
                service will begin on a date after the award of the 
                credential, as determined by the Secretary of the Army.
                    (B) Academic progress.--The person will maintain 
                satisfactory academic progress, as determined by the 
                Secretary, and that failure to maintain such progress 
                constitutes grounds for termination of the financial 
                assistance for the person under this section.
                    (C) Other terms.--Any other terms and conditions 
                that the Secretary determines to be appropriate for 
                carrying out this section.
    (c) Amount of Assistance.--The amount of the financial assistance 
provided for a person under this section shall be the amount determined 
by the Secretary of the Army as being necessary to pay the person's 
cost of attendance at the minority-serving institution.
    (d) Use of Assistance for Support of Internships.--The financial 
assistance for a person under this section may also be provided to 
support internship activities of the person at the Department of 
Defense in periods between the academic years leading to the credential 
for which assistance is provided the person under this section.
    (e) Repayment for Period of Unserved Obligated Service.--A member 
of the Army who does not complete the period of active duty specified 
in the service agreement under subsection (b) shall be subject to the 
repayment provisions of section 303a(e) of title 37.
    (f) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Army shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) an assessment of the progress of the Secretary in 
        carrying out the scholarship program under this section;
            (2) the number of scholarships that the Secretary intends 
        to award in the academic year beginning after the date of the 
        submission of the report; and
            (3) a description of the Secretary's efforts to promote the 
        scholarship program at minority-serving institutions.
    (g) Definitions.--In this Act:
            (1) Cost of attendance.--The term ``cost of attendance'' 
        has the meaning given the term in section 472 of the Higher 
        Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1087ll).
            (2) Minority-serving institution.--The term ``minority-
        serving institution'' means an institution of higher education 
        described in section 371(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965 
        (20 U.S.C. 1067q(a)).
            (3) Recognized postsecondary credential.--The term 
        ``recognized postsecondary credential'' has the meaning given 
        the term in section 3 of the Workforce Innovation and 
        Opportunity Act (29 U.S.C. 3102).

SEC. 544. EXTENSION OF SUICIDE PREVENTION AND RESILIENCE PROGRAM.

    Section 10219(g) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``October 1, 2018'' and inserting ``October 1, 2019''.

SEC. 545. ANNUAL TRAINING REGARDING THE INFLUENCE CAMPAIGN OF THE 
              RUSSIAN FEDERATION.

    In addition to any currently mandated training, the Secretary of 
Defense may furnish annual training to all members of the Armed Forces 
and all civilian employees of the Department of Defense, regarding 
attempts by the Russian Federation and its proxies and agents to 
influence and recruit members of the Armed Forces as part of its 
influence campaign.

SEC. 546. PROGRAM TO ASSIST MEMBERS IN OBTAINING PROFESSIONAL 
              CREDENTIALS.

    Section 2015(a)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``and'' and inserting ``or''.

SEC. 547. EXPANDING ELIGIBILITY FOR THE UNITED STATES MILITARY 
              APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAM.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall expand 
eligibility for the United Services Military Apprenticeship Program to 
include any member of the uniformed services.
    (b) Definition.--In this section, the term ``uniformed services'' 
has the meaning given such term in section 101 of title 10, United 
States Code.

Subtitle E--Defense Dependents' Education and Military Family Readiness 
                                Matters

SEC. 551. 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 2018 by section 301 and available for operation and 
maintenance for Defense-wide activities as specified in the funding 
table in division D, $50,000,000 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 
7013(9) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (20 
U.S.C. 7713(9)).

SEC. 552. EDUCATION FOR DEPENDENTS OF CERTAIN RETIRED MEMBERS OF THE 
              ARMED FORCES.

    Section 2164(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by inserting ``, dependents of retirees,'' 
                after ``dependents of members of the armed forces''; 
                and
                    (B) by inserting ``and the dependents of such 
                retirees'' after ``such members of the armed forces''; 
                and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(4) For purposes of this subsection, the term `retiree' means a 
member or former member of the armed forces who is entitled to retired 
or retainer pay under this title, or who, but for age, would be 
eligible for retired or retainer pay under chapter 1223 of this 
title.''.

SEC. 553. CODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CONDUCT FAMILY SUPPORT PROGRAMS 
              FOR IMMEDIATE FAMILY MEMBERS OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED 
              FORCES ASSIGNED TO SPECIAL OPERATIONS FORCES.

    (a) Codification of Existing Authority.--Chapter 88 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by inserting after section 1788 a new 
section 1788a consisting of--
            (1) a heading as follows:
``Sec. 1788a. Family support programs: immediate family members of 
              members of special operations forces''; and
            (2) a text consisting of subsections (a), (b), (d), and (e) 
        of section 554 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 113-66; 10 U.S.C. 1788 note), 
        redesignated as subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d), 
        respectively.
    (b) Funding.--Subsection (c) of section 1788a of title 10, United 
States Code, as added and redesignated by subsection (a) of this 
section, is amended by striking ``specified'' and all that follows 
through the end of the subsection and inserting ``, from funds 
available for Major Force Program 11, to carry out family support 
programs under this section.''.
    (c) Elimination of Pilot Program References and Other Conforming 
Amendments.--Section 1788a of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
subsection (a) of this section, is further amended--
            (1) by striking ``Armed Forces'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``armed forces'';
            (2) by striking ``pilot'' each place it appears;
            (3) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in the subsection heading, by striking 
                ``Pilot''; and
                    (B) by striking ``up to three'' and all that 
                follows through ``providing'' and inserting ``programs 
                to provide''; and
            (4) in subsection (d), as redesignated by subsection (a) of 
        this section--
                    (A) in paragraph (2). by striking ``title 10, 
                United States Code'' and inserting ``this title''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (3), by striking ``such title'' 
                and inserting ``this title''.
    (d) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
subchapter I of chapter 88 of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
by inserting after the item relating to section 1788 the following new 
item:

``1788a. Family support programs: immediate family members of members 
                            of special operations forces.''.
    (e) Conforming Repeal.--Section 554 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 113-66; 10 U.S.C. 
1788 note) is repealed.

SEC. 554. REIMBURSEMENT FOR STATE LICENSURE AND CERTIFICATION COSTS OF 
              A SPOUSE OF A MEMBER OF THE ARMED FORCES ARISING FROM 
              RELOCATION TO ANOTHER STATE.

    (a) Reimbursement Authorized.--Section 476 of title 37, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
subsection:
    ``(p)(1) The Secretary concerned may reimburse a member of the 
armed forces for qualified relicensing costs of the spouse of the 
member when--
            ``(A) the member is reassigned, either as a permanent 
        change of station or permanent change of assignment, from a 
        duty station in one State to a duty station in another State; 
        and
            ``(B) the movement of the member's dependents is authorized 
        at the expense of the United States under this section as part 
        of the reassignment.
    ``(2) Reimbursement provided to a member under this subsection may 
not exceed $500 in connection with each reassignment described in 
paragraph (1).
    ``(3) In this subsection, the term `qualified relicensing costs' 
means costs, including exam and registration fees, that--
            ``(A) are imposed by the State of the new duty station to 
        secure a license or certification to engage in the same 
        profession that the spouse of the member engaged in while in 
        the State of the original duty station; and
            ``(B) are paid or incurred by the member or spouse to 
        secure the license or certification from the State of the new 
        duty station after the date on which the orders directing the 
        reassignment described in paragraph (1) are issued.''.
    (b) Development of Recommendations to Expedite License Portability 
for Military Spouses.--
            (1) Consultation with states.--The Secretary of Defense, 
        and the Secretary of Homeland Security with respect to the 
        Coast Guard, shall consult with States--
                    (A) to identify barriers to the portability between 
                States of a license, certification, or other grant of 
                permission held by the spouse of a member of the Armed 
                Forces to engage in an occupation when the spouse moves 
                between States as part of a permanent change of station 
                or permanent change of assignment of the member; and
                    (B) to develop recommendations for the Federal 
                Government and the States, together or separately, to 
                expedite the portability of such licenses, 
                certifications, and other grants of permission for 
                military spouses.
            (2) Specific considerations.--In conducting the 
        consultation and preparing the recommendations under paragraph 
        (1), the Secretaries shall consider the feasibility of--
                    (A) States accepting licenses, certifications, and 
                other grants of permission described in paragraph (1) 
                issued by another State and in good standing in that 
                State;
                    (B) the issuance of a temporary license pending 
                completion of State-specific requirements; and
                    (C) the establishment of an expedited review 
                process for military spouses.
            (3) Report required.--Not later than March 15, 2018, the 
        Secretaries shall submit to the appropriate congressional 
        committees and the States a report containing the 
        recommendations developed under this subsection.
            (4) Appropriate congressional committees.--In this 
        subsection, the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means the congressional defense committees, the Committee on 
        Homeland Security and Government Affairs of the Senate, and the 
        Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 555. FIVE-YEAR EXTENSION OF AUTHORITIES RELATING TO THE TRANSITION 
              AND SUPPORT OF MILITARY DEPENDENT STUDENTS TO LOCAL 
              EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES.

    Section 574(c)(3) of the John Warner National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (20 U.S.C. 7703b note), as most recently 
amended by section 572 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2141), is amended by 
striking ``September 30, 2017'' and inserting ``September 30, 2022''.

SEC. 556. ENHANCING MILITARY CHILDCARE PROGRAMS AND ACTIVITIES OF THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Hours of Operation of Childcare Development Centers of the 
Department of Defense.--
            (1) In general.--The hours of operation of each childcare 
        development center (CDC) of the Department of Defense shall, to 
        the extent practicable, be set and maintained in manner that 
        takes into account the demands and circumstances of members of 
        the Armed Forces, including members of the reserve components, 
        who use such center in facilitation of the performance of their 
        military duties.
            (2) Matters to be taken into account.--The demands and 
        circumstances to be taken into account under paragraph (1) for 
        purposes of setting and maintaining the hours of operation of a 
        childcare development center shall include the following:
                    (A) Mission requirements of units whose members use 
                such center.
                    (B) The unpredictability of work schedules, and 
                fluctuations in day-to-day work hours, of such members.
                    (C) The potential for frequent and prolonged 
                absences of such members for training, operations, and 
                deployments.
                    (D) The location of such center on the military 
                installation concerned, including the location in 
                connection with duty locations of members and 
                applicable military family housing.
                    (E) The geographic separation of such members from 
                their extended family.
                    (F) The extent to which spouses of such members are 
                employed or pursuing educational opportunities, whether 
                on a full-time basis or a part-time basis.
                    (G) Such other matters as the Secretary of the 
                military department concerned considers appropriate for 
                purposes of this section.
    (b) Childcare Coordinators for Military Installations.--
            (1) Childcare coordinators.--Each Secretary of a military 
        department shall provide for a childcare coordinator at each 
        military installation under the jurisdiction of such Secretary 
        at which are stationed significant numbers of members of the 
        Armed Forces with accompanying dependent children, as 
        determined by such Secretary.
            (2) Nature of position.--The childcare coordinator for a 
        military installation may be an individual appointed to that 
        position on full-time or part-time basis or an individual 
        appointed to another position whose duties in such other 
        position are consistent with the discharge by the person of the 
        duties of childcare coordinator.
            (3) Duties.--Each childcare coordinator for an installation 
        shall carry out the duties as follows:
                    (A) Act as an advocate for military families at the 
                installation on childcare matters both on-installation 
                and off-installation.
                    (B) Work with the commander of the installation in 
                order to seek to ensure that the childcare development 
                centers at the installation, together with any other 
                available childcare options on or in the vicinity of 
                the installation--
                            (i) provide a quality of care (including a 
                        caregiver-to-child ratio) commensurate with 
                        best practices of private providers of 
                        childcare services; and
                            (ii) are responsive to the childcare needs 
                        of members stationed at the installation and 
                        their families.
                    (C) Work with private providers of childcare 
                services in the vicinity of the installation in order 
                to---
                            (i) track vacancies in the childcare 
                        facilities of such providers;
                            (ii) seek to obtain favorable prices for 
                        the use of such services by members stationed 
                        at the installation; and
                            (iii) otherwise ease the use of such 
                        services by such members.
                    (D) Such other duties as the Secretary of the 
                military department concerned shall specify.

                   Subtitle F--Decorations and Awards

SEC. 561. REPLACEMENT OF MILITARY DECORATIONS AT THE REQUEST OF 
              RELATIVES OF DECEASED MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.

    Subsection (a) of section 1135 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
    ``(a) Replacement.--(1) The Secretary concerned shall replace, on a 
one-time basis, a military decoration upon the request of--
            ``(A) the recipient of the military decoration;
            ``(B) the immediate next of kin of a deceased recipient of 
        a military decoration; or
            ``(C) a relative of a deceased recipient of a military 
        decoration who is related within the second or third degree of 
        consanguinity to the deceased recipient.
    ``(2) The replacement of a military decoration under subparagraph 
(A) or (B) of paragraph (1) shall be provided without charge. The 
replacement of a military decoration under subparagraph (C) of such 
paragraph shall be provided at no cost to the Department of Defense.
    ``(3) The authority provided by this subsection is in addition to 
any other authority available to the Secretary concerned to replace a 
military decoration.''.

SEC. 562. CONGRESSIONAL DEFENSE SERVICE MEDAL.

    (a) Establishment.--Chapter 57 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 1136. Congressional Defense Service Medal
    ``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense shall award, at the 
behest of and on behalf of Congress, a Congressional Defense Service 
Medal to a group or other entity to recognize, subject to subsection 
(c)(1), the exemplary service or significant achievement of the group 
or other entity in furtherance of the defense and national security of 
the United States.
    ``(b) Design and Content.--A Congressional Defense Service Medal 
shall be a gold medal of appropriate design, with suitable emblems, 
devices, and inscriptions. The Secretary of Defense may design a 
Congressional Defense Service Medal to recognize the specific group or 
other entity and the service or achievement for which the Congressional 
Defense Service Medal is being awarded.
    ``(c) Eligibility Limitations.--
            ``(1) Nature of service or achievement.--For a group or 
        other entity to be eligible for the award of a Congressional 
        Defense Service Medal, the service or achievement to be 
        recognized must--
                    ``(A) be in the field of endeavor of the group or 
                other entity; and
                    ``(B) represent either a lengthy period of 
                continuous superior service or achievement or a single 
                act of service or achievement so significant that the 
                group or other entity is recognized and acclaimed by 
                others in the same field of endeavor, as evidenced by 
                the recipient having received the highest honors in the 
                field.
            ``(2) Effect of other federal recognition.--A group or 
        other entity may not receive a Congressional Defense Service 
        Medal in recognition of service or achievement for which the 
        group or other entity received a medal from the United States 
        previously for the same or substantially the same service or 
        achievement.
            ``(3) Prohibition on award to an individual.--A 
        Congressional Defense Service Medal may not be awarded to a 
        single individual.
    ``(d) Time Limitations.--A Congressional Defense Service Medal may 
not be awarded to a group or entity--
            ``(1) until at least five years after the conclusion of the 
        exemplary service or significant achievement for which the 
        Congressional Defense Service Medal is being awarded; and
            ``(2) unless the award is made within 25 years after the 
        conclusion of the exemplary service or significant achievement 
        for which the Congressional Defense Service Medal is being 
        awarded.
    ``(e) Duplicate Medals.--The Secretary of Defense may arrange for 
the striking and sale of duplicates in bronze of a Congressional 
Defense Service Medal, at a price sufficient to cover the cost thereof, 
including labor, materials, dies, use of machinery, and overhead 
expenses, and the cost of the gold Congressional Defense Service 
Medal.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
chapter 57 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the 
end the following new item:

``1136. Congressional Defense Service Medal.''.

SEC. 563. LIMITATIONS ON AUTHORITY TO REVOKE CERTAIN MILITARY 
              DECORATIONS AWARDED TO MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.

    (a) Army.--
            (1) Limitations.--Chapter 357 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 3757. Military decorations: limitations on revocation
    ``(a) Limitations.--Except as provided in subsection (b), the 
President or the Secretary of the Army may not authorize the revocation 
of a military decoration after the actual award of the military 
decoration to a member of the armed forces under the jurisdiction of 
the Secretary.
    ``(b) Exceptions.--(1) Subsection (a) does not apply to the 
revocation of a military decoration if the revocation is ordered on 
account of --
            ``(A) the acquisition of new or additional information that 
        calls into question the service for which the member was 
        awarded the military decoration; or
            ``(B) the conviction of the member for a serious violent 
        felony.
    ``(2) In applying the exception described in paragraph (1)(B), the 
President and the Secretary of the Army shall take into account, as an 
extenuating factor, whether the member has been diagnosed with 
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) or Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `military decoration' means the 
        distinguished-service cross, distinguished-service medal, 
        silver star, distinguished flying cross, or Soldier's Medal. 
        The term does not include the medal of honor.
            ``(2) The term `serious violent felony' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 3559(c)(2)(F) of title 18.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of such chapter is amended by adding at the end the 
        following new item:

``3757. Military decorations: limitations on revocation.''.
    (b) Navy and Marine Corps.--
            (1) Limitations.--Chapter 567 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 6259. Military decorations: limitations on revocation
    ``(a) Limitations.--Except as provided in subsection (b), the 
President or the Secretary of the Navy may not authorize the revocation 
of a military decoration after the actual award of the military 
decoration to a member of the armed forces under the jurisdiction of 
the Secretary.
    ``(b) Exceptions.--(1) Subsection (a) does not apply to the 
revocation of a military decoration if the revocation is ordered on 
account of --
            ``(A) the acquisition of new or additional information that 
        calls into question the service for which the member was 
        awarded the military decoration; or
            ``(B) the conviction of the member for a serious violent 
        felony.
    ``(2) In applying the exception described in paragraph (1)(B), the 
President and the Secretary of the Navy shall take into account, as an 
extenuating factor, whether the member has been diagnosed with 
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) or Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `military decoration' means the Navy cross, 
        distinguished-service medal, silver star medal, distinguished 
        flying cross, or Navy and Marine Corps Medal. The term does not 
        include the medal of honor.
            ``(2) The term `serious violent felony' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 3559(c)(2)(F) of title 18.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of such chapter is amended by adding at the end the 
        following new item:

``6259. Military decorations: limitations on revocation.''.
    (c) Air Force.--
            (1) Limitations.--Chapter 857 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 8757. Military decorations: limitations on revocation
    ``(a) Limitations.--Except as provided in subsection (b), the 
President or the Secretary of the Air Force may not authorize the 
revocation of a military decoration after the actual award of the 
military decoration to a member of the armed forces under the 
jurisdiction of the Secretary.
    ``(b) Exceptions.--(1) Subsection (a) does not apply to the 
revocation of a military decoration if the revocation is ordered on 
account of --
            ``(A) the acquisition of new or additional information that 
        calls into question the service for which the member was 
        awarded the military decoration; or
            ``(B) the conviction of the member for a serious violent 
        felony.
    ``(2) In applying the exception described in paragraph (1)(B), the 
President and the Secretary of the Air Force shall take into account, 
as an extenuating factor, whether the member has been diagnosed with 
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) or Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `military decoration' means the Air Force 
        cross, distinguished-service medal, silver star, distinguished 
        flying cross, or Airman's Medal. The term does not include the 
        medal of honor.
            ``(2) The term `serious violent felony' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 3559(c)(2)(F) of title 18.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of such chapter is amended by adding at the end the 
        following new item:

``8757. Military decorations: limitations on revocation.''.

SEC. 564. AWARD OF VIETNAM SERVICE MEDAL TO VETERANS WHO PARTICIPATED 
              IN MAYAGUEZ RESCUE OPERATION.

    (a) Award Authorized.--The Secretary of the military department 
concerned shall, upon the application by or on behalf of an individual 
who is an eligible veteran, award that individual the Vietnam Service 
Medal, notwithstanding any otherwise applicable requirements for the 
award of that medal. Any such award shall be made in lieu of any Armed 
Forces Expeditionary Medal awarded the individual for the individual's 
participation in the Mayaguez rescue operation.
    (b) Treatment of Deceased Veterans.--In the case of a veteran who 
is deceased, the application described in subsection (a) may be 
submitted by the next of kin of the veteran.
    (c) Eligible Veteran.--For purposes of this section, the term 
``eligible veteran'' means a veteran of the Armed Forces--
            (1) who was awarded the Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal 
        for participation in military operations known as the Mayaguez 
        rescue operation of May 12-15, 1975; or
            (2) who participated in such operation.

SEC. 565. AWARD OF MEDALS OR OTHER COMMENDATIONS TO HANDLERS OF 
              MILITARY WORKING DOGS AND MILITARY WORKING DOGS.

    (a) Program of Award Required.--Each Secretary of a military 
department shall carry out a program to provide for the award of one or 
more medals or other commendations to handlers of military working 
dogs, and to military working dogs, under the jurisdiction of such 
Secretary to recognize valor or meritorious achievement by such 
handlers and dogs.
    (b) Medal and Commendations.--Any medal or commendation awarded 
pursuant to a program under subsection (a) shall be of such design, and 
include such elements, as the Secretary of the military department 
concerned shall specify.
    (c) Regulations.--Medals and commendations shall be awarded under 
programs under subsection (a) in accordance with regulations prescribed 
by the Secretary of Defense for purposes of this section.

SEC. 566. ELIGIBILITY OF VETERANS OF OPERATION END SWEEP FOR VIETNAM 
              SERVICE MEDAL.

    The Secretary of the military department concerned shall, upon the 
application of an individual who is a veteran who participated in 
Operation End Sweep, award that individual the Vietnam Service Medal, 
notwithstanding any otherwise applicable requirements for the award of 
that medal.

SEC. 567. EXPEDITED REPLACEMENT OF MILITARY DECORATIONS FOR VETERANS OF 
              WORLD WAR II AND THE KOREAN WAR.

    Section 1135 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by striking ``When'' and inserting 
        ``Subject to subsection (c), when'';
            (2) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
            (3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection (c):
    ``(c) Recipients of Military Decorations for Service in World War 
II or the Korean War.--If the recipient was awarded the military 
decoration for which a replacement is requested for service in World 
War II or the Korean War, the Secretary concerned shall perform all 
actions described--
            ``(1) in subsection (b)(1) in not more than 180 days; and
            ``(2) in subsection (b)(2) in not more than 60 days.''.

SEC. 568. ATOMIC VETERANS SERVICE MEDAL.

    (a) Service Medal Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall design 
and produce a military service medal, to be known as the ``Atomic 
Veterans Service Medal'', to honor retired and former members of the 
Armed Forces who are radiation-exposed veterans (as such term is 
defined in section 1112(c)(3) of title 38, United States Code).
    (b) Distribution of Medal.--
            (1) Issuance to retired and former members.--At the request 
        of a radiation-exposed veteran, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        issue the Atomic Veterans Service Medal to the veteran.
            (2) Issuance to next-of-kin.--In the case of a radiation-
        exposed veteran who is deceased, the Secretary may provide for 
        issuance of the Atomic Veterans Service Medal to the next-of-
        kin of the person.
            (3) Application.--The Secretary shall prepare and 
        disseminate as appropriate an application by which radiation-
        exposed veterans and their next-of-kin may apply to receive the 
        Atomic Veterans Service Medal.

          Subtitle G--Miscellaneous Reports and Other Matters

SEC. 571. EXPANSION OF UNITED STATES AIR FORCE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY 
              ENROLLMENT AUTHORITY TO INCLUDE CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES OF THE 
              HOMELAND SECURITY INDUSTRY.

    (a) Definition.--Subsection (b) of section 9314a of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
    ``(b) Covered Private Sector Employee Defined.--(1) In this 
section, the term `covered private sector employee' means--
            ``(A) an individual employed by a private firm that is 
        engaged in providing to the Department of Defense significant 
        and substantial defense-related systems, products, or services; 
        or
            ``(B) an individual employed by a private firm in one of 
        the critical infrastructure sectors identified in Presidential 
        Policy Directive 21 (Critical Infrastructure Security and 
        Resilience).
    ``(2) A covered private sector employee admitted for instruction at 
the United States Air Force Institute of Technology remains eligible 
for such instruction only so long as the person remains employed by the 
same firm.''.
    (b) Use of Defined Term.--Section 9314a of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) by striking ``defense industry 
                        employees described in subsection (b)'' and 
                        inserting ``a covered private sector 
                        employee''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``Any such defense 
                        industry employee'' and inserting ``A covered 
                        private sector employee''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``defense 
                industry employees'' and inserting ``covered private 
                sector employees''; and
                    (C) in paragraph (3), by striking ``defense 
                industry employee'' both places it appears and 
                inserting ``covered private sector employee'';
            (2) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) by striking ``Defense industry employees'' and 
                inserting ``A covered private sector employee''; and
                    (B) by striking ``defense industry employees'' and 
                inserting ``covered private sector employees'';
            (3) in subsection (d)(1), by striking ``defense industry 
        employees'' and inserting ``a covered private sector 
        employee''; and
            (4) in subsection (f), by striking ``defense industry 
        employees'' and inserting ``covered private sector employees''.
    (c) Other Conforming Amendments.--Section 9314a of title 10, United 
States Code, is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(1), by striking ``a defense focused'' 
        and inserting ``a defense-focused or homeland security-
        focused''; and
            (2) in subsection (d)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``or homeland 
                security'' after ``and defense''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (2), by inserting before the 
                period at the end the following: ``or the Department of 
                Homeland Security, as applicable''.
    (d) Clerical Amendments.--
            (1) Section heading.--The heading of section 9314a of title 
        10, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 9314a. United States Air Force Institute of Technology: 
              admission of certain private sector civilians''.
            (2) Table of sections.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 901 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended by striking the item relating to section 9314a and 
        inserting the following new item:

``9314a. United States Air Force Institute of Technology: admission of 
                            certain private sector civilians.''.

SEC. 572. SERVICEMEMBERS' GROUP LIFE INSURANCE.

    Section 1967(f)(4) of title 38, United States Code, is amended by 
striking the second sentence.

SEC. 573. VOTER REGISTRATION.

    Section 705 of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (50 U.S.C. 
4025(a)), is amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(c) Registration.--
            ``(1) In general.--For the purposes of voting in any 
        election for Federal office (as defined in section 301 of the 
        Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (52 U.S.C. 30101)) or 
        State or local office, a servicemember who registers to vote in 
        a State in which the servicemember is present in compliance 
        with military orders for a permanent change of station shall 
        not, solely by reason of that registration--
                    ``(A) be deemed to have acquired a residence or 
                domicile in that State;
                    ``(B) be deemed to have become a resident in or a 
                resident of that State; or
                    ``(C) be deemed to have lost a residence or 
                domicile in any other State, without regard to whether 
                or not the person intends to return to that State.
            ``(2) Notification by the servicemember.--A servicemember 
        who elects to register to vote in the State in which the 
        servicemember is present in compliance with military orders for 
        a permanent change of station shall notify the Service Voting 
        Action Officer of the military department concerned not later 
        than 10 days after such registration.
            ``(3) Notification by the service voting action officer.--A 
        Service Voting Action Officer who receives a notification under 
        paragraph (2) shall notify the chief State election official of 
        the State in which the servicemember resides or is domiciled of 
        such registration not later than 10 days after such 
        registration.''.

SEC. 574. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING SECTION 504 OF TITLE 10, UNITED 
              STATES CODE, ON EXISTING AUTHORITY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE TO ENLIST INDIVIDUALS, NOT OTHERWISE ELIGIBLE FOR 
              ENLISTMENT, WHOSE ENLISTMENT IS VITAL TO THE NATIONAL 
              INTEREST.

    It is the sense of Congress that a statute currently exists, 
specifically paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of section 504 of title 
10, United States Code, which states that ``the Secretary concerned may 
authorize the enlistment of a person not described in paragraph (1) [of 
that subsection] if the Secretary determines that such enlistment is 
vital to the national interest''.

SEC. 575. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING NONDISCRIMINATION AT UNITED 
              STATES MILITARY ACADEMY.

    Congress affirms the nondiscrimination policy of the United States 
Military Academy in West Point, New York, including as applied to 
female cadets, staff, and faculty.

SEC. 576. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY OF THE SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS 
              TO PROVIDE FOR THE CONDUCT OF MEDICAL DISABILITY 
              EXAMINATIONS BY CONTRACT PHYSICIANS.

    Section 704(c) of the Veterans Benefits Act of 2003 (Public Law 
108-183; 38 U.S.C. 5101 note) is amended by striking ``December 31, 
2017'' and inserting ``December 31, 2018''.

SEC. 577. ISSUANCE OF CONSOLIDATED PREGNANCY AND PARENTHOOD 
              INSTRUCTION.

    The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that each military department 
issues a single, consolidated instruction that addresses the decisions, 
actions, and requirements for members of the Armed Forces relating to 
pregnancy, the postpartum period, and parenthood.

SEC. 578. PROOF OF PERIOD OF MILITARY SERVICE FOR PURPOSES OF INTEREST 
              RATE LIMITATION UNDER THE SERVICEMEMBERS CIVIL RELIEF 
              ACT.

    Section 207(b)(1) of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (50 U.S.C. 
3937(b)(1)) is amended to read as follows:
            ``(1) Proof of military service.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Not later than 180 days after 
                the date of a servicemember's termination or release 
                from military service, in order for an obligation or 
                liability of the servicemember to be subject to the 
                interest rate limitation in subsection (a), the 
                servicemember shall provide to the creditor written 
                notice and a copy of--
                            ``(i) the military orders calling the 
                        servicemember to military service and any 
                        orders further extending military service; or
                            ``(ii) any other appropriate indicator of 
                        military service, including a certified letter 
                        from a commanding officer.
                    ``(B) Independent verification by creditor.--
                            ``(i) In general.--Regardless of whether a 
                        servicemember has provided to a creditor the 
                        written notice and documentation under 
                        subparagraph (A), the creditor may use, in lieu 
                        of such notice and documentation, information 
                        retrieved from the Defense Manpower Database 
                        Center through the creditor's normal business 
                        reviews of the Database Center for purposes of 
                        obtaining information indicating that the 
                        servicemember is on active duty.
                            ``(ii) Safe harbor.--A creditor that uses 
                        the information retrieved from the Defense 
                        Manpower Database Center under clause (i) with 
                        respect to a servicemember has not failed to 
                        treat the debt of the servicemember in 
                        accordance with subsection (a) if--
                                    ``(I) such information indicates 
                                that, on the date the creditor 
                                retrieves such information, the 
                                servicemember is not on active duty; 
                                and
                                    ``(II) the creditor has not, as of 
                                such date, received the written notice 
                                and documentation required under 
                                subparagraph (A) with respect to the 
                                servicemember.''.

SEC. 579. REPORT REGARDING POSSIBLE IMPROVEMENTS TO PROCESSING 
              RETIREMENTS AND MEDICAL DISCHARGES.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with 
the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, shall issue a report to the 
congressional defense committees and the Committees on Veterans' 
Affairs of the Senate and House of Representatives regarding possible 
improvements to the transition of members of the Armed Forces to 
veteran status.
    (b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall address the 
following:
            (1) Feasibility of requiring members of the Armed Forces to 
        apply for benefits administered by the Secretary of Veterans 
        Affairs before such members complete discharge from the Armed 
        Forces.
            (2) Feasibility of requiring members of the Armed Forces to 
        undergo compensation and pension examinations (to be 
        administered by the Secretary of Defense) for purposes of 
        obtaining benefits described in paragraph (1) before such 
        members complete discharge from active duty in the Armed 
        Forces.
            (3) Possible improvements to the timeliness of the process 
        for transitioning members who undergo medical discharge to care 
        provided by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.

SEC. 580. ESTABLISHMENT OF SEPARATION OATH FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMED 
              FORCES.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) The United States Armed Forces is the largest, all-
        volunteer military force in the world, yet less than one 
        percent of the American population serves in the Armed Forces.
            (2) Each branch of the Armed Forces (Army, Navy, Air Force, 
        Marine Corps, Coast Guard) instills in its members a sense of 
        duty and obligation to the United States, their branch of 
        service, and their comrades-in-arms.
            (3) The Department of Veterans Affairs estimates that 
        approximately 20 veterans of the Armed Forces commit suicide 
        each day and a veteran's risk of suicide is 21 percent higher 
        compared to an adult who has not served in the Armed Forces.
            (4) The Department of Veterans Affairs is aggressively 
        undertaking measures to prevent these tragic outcomes, yet 
        suicide rates among veterans remain unacceptably high.
            (5) Upon enlistment or appointment in the Armed Forces, a 
        new member is obligated to take an oath of office or oath of 
        enlistment.
            (6) Most members of the Armed Forces view this oath not as 
        an imposition, but as a promise that they are bound to fulfill.
    (b) Establishment of Separation Oath.--Section 502 of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (b) as subsection (c) and, 
        in such subsection, by striking ``The oath'' and inserting ``An 
        oath established by this section''; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new 
        subsection (b):
    ``(b) Separation Oath.--Prior to retirement or other separation 
from the armed forces, other than separation pursuant to the sentence 
of a court-martial, a member of an armed force may take the following 
oath:
            ```I, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, recognizing that my oath to 
        support and defend the Constitution of the United States 
        against all enemies, foreign and domestic, has involved me and 
        my fellow members in experiences that few persons, other than 
        our peers, can understand, do solemnly swear (or affirm) to 
        continue to be the keeper of my brothers- and sisters-in-arms 
        and protector of the United States and the Constitution; to 
        preserve the values I have learned; to maintain my body and my 
        mind; and to not bring harm to myself without speaking to my 
        fellow veterans first. I take this oath freely and without 
        purpose of evasion, so help me God.'''.
    (c) Clerical Amendments.--
            (1) Section heading.--The heading of section 502 of title 
        10, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 502. Enlistment oath and separation oath: who may administer''.
            (2) Table of sections.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 31 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended by striking the item relating to section 502 and 
        inserting the following new item:

``502. Enlistment oath and separation oath: who may administer.''.

SEC. 581. EXTENSION OF REPORTING REQUIREMENT REGARDING DIVERSITY IN 
              MILITARY LEADERSHIP.

    Section 115a(g) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``2017'' and inserting ``2022''.

          TITLE VI--COMPENSATION AND OTHER PERSONNEL BENEFITS

                     Subtitle A--Pay and Allowances

SEC. 601. ANNUAL ADJUSTMENT OF BASIC MONTHLY PAY.

    The adjustment in the rates of monthly basic pay required by 
subsection (a) of section 1009 of title 37, United States Code, to be 
made on January 1, 2018, shall take effect, notwithstanding any 
determination made by the President under subsection (e) of such 
section with respect to an alternative pay adjustment to be made on 
such date.

SEC. 602. LIMITATION ON BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING MODIFICATION 
              AUTHORITY FOR MEMBERS OF THE UNIFORMED SERVICES RESIDING 
              IN MILITARY HOUSING PRIVATIZATION INITIATIVE HOUSING.

    (a) In General.--Paragraph (3) of section 403(b) of title 37, 
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
subparagraph:
    ``(C) The Secretary of Defense may not reduce the rate of basic 
allowance for housing in effect on December 31, 2017, for a member of a 
uniformed service who resides in a housing unit acquired or constructed 
under the alternative authority of subchapter IV of chapter 169 of 
title 10 (known as the Military Housing Privatization Initiative) until 
January 1, 2019.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--Subparagraph (B) of such paragraph is 
amended in clause (iv) by striking ``Four'' and inserting ``Subject to 
subparagraph (C), four''.
    (c) GAO Review.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the Comptroller 
General of the United States shall submit to the Committees on Armed 
Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate a review of the 
following:
            (1) An analysis of the impact of reductions in the rate of 
        the basic allowance for housing under section 403 of title 37, 
        United States Code, on the long-term viability of the Military 
        Housing Privatization Initiative (MHPI).
            (2) An analysis of projected revenue for the MHPI, 
        considering projected reductions in such basic allowance for 
        housing, which compares projected revenue under the assumption 
        that members of the armed forces will make out-of-pocket 
        payments in addition to rent and under the assumption that 
        members will not make such out-of-pocket payments.
            (3) An analysis of the extent to which the Department of 
        Defense has relied and continues to rely on the assumption that 
        members of the armed forces who live in housing units acquired 
        or constructed under the MHPI will make out-of-pocket payments 
        in addition to basic rent in order to offset reductions in such 
        basic housing allowance.
            (4) An analysis of the future military construction costs 
        that will be necessary to offset reduced reinvestment account 
        distributions as a result of reductions in such basic housing 
        allowance, consistent with the requirement included in project 
        ground leases under the MHPI that all assets will be in like-
        new condition at the end of the lease.
            (5) The impact on maintenance of housing units acquired or 
        constructed under the MHPI because of the reductions in revenue 
        for the MHPI that will result from reductions in such basic 
        housing allowance.
            (6) The impacts of the costs described in paragraph (4) and 
        the reduction in revenue described in paragraph (5) on 
        occupancy and revenue generated by occupancy under the MHPI, 
        and the impact of changes in occupancy and associated revenue 
        on the costs described in paragraph (4) and the reduction in 
        revenue described in paragraph (5).
            (7) The process for establishing the criteria for and the 
        execution of market surveys used to establish the rates of such 
        basic housing allowance.

SEC. 603. HOUSING TREATMENT FOR CERTAIN MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES, 
              AND THEIR SPOUSES AND OTHER DEPENDENTS, UNDERGOING A 
              PERMANENT CHANGE OF STATION WITHIN THE UNITED STATES.

    (a) Housing Treatment.--
            (1) In general.--Chapter 7 of title 37, United States Code, 
        is amended by inserting after section 403 the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 403a. Housing treatment for certain members of the Armed Forces, 
              and their spouses and other dependents, undergoing a 
              permanent change of station within the United States
    ``(a) Housing Treatment for Certain Members Who Have a Spouse or 
Other Dependents.--
            ``(1) Housing treatment regulations.--The Secretary of 
        Defense shall prescribe regulations that permit a member of the 
        armed forces described in paragraph (2) who is undergoing a 
        permanent change of station within the United States to request 
        the housing treatment described in subsection (b) during the 
        covered relocation period of the member.
            ``(2) Eligible members.--A member described in this 
        paragraph is any member who--
                    ``(A) has a spouse who is gainfully employed or 
                enrolled in a degree, certificate or license granting 
                program at the beginning of the covered relocation 
                period;
                    ``(B) has one or more dependents attending an 
                elementary or secondary school at the beginning of the 
                covered relocation period;
                    ``(C) has one or more dependents enrolled in the 
                Exceptional Family Member Program; or
                    ``(D) is caring for an immediate family member with 
                a chronic or long-term illness at the beginning of the 
                covered relocation period.
    ``(b) Housing Treatment.--
            ``(1) Continuation of housing for the spouse and other 
        dependents.--If a spouse or other dependent of a member whose 
        request under subsection (a) is approved resides in Government-
        owned or Government-leased housing at the beginning of the 
        covered relocation period, the spouse or other dependent may 
        continue to reside in such housing during a period determined 
        in accordance with the regulations prescribed pursuant to this 
        section.
            ``(2) Early housing eligibility.--If a spouse or other 
        dependent of a member whose request under subsection (a) is 
        approved is eligible to reside in Government-owned or 
        Government-leased housing following the member's permanent 
        change of station within the United States, the spouse or other 
        dependent may commence residing in such housing at any time 
        during the covered relocation period.
            ``(3) Temporary use of government-owned or government-
        leased housing intended for members without a spouse or 
        dependent.--If a spouse or other dependent of a member 
        relocates at a time different from the member in accordance 
        with a request approved under subsection (a), the member may be 
        assigned to Government-owned or Government-leased housing 
        intended for the permanent housing of members without a spouse 
        or dependent until the member's detachment date or the spouse 
        or other dependent's arrival date, but only if such Government-
        owned or Government-leased housing is available without 
        displacing a member without a spouse or dependent at such 
        housing.
            ``(4) Equitable basic allowance for housing.--If a spouse 
        or other dependent of a member relocates at a time different 
        from the member in accordance with a request approved under 
        subsection (a), the amount of basic allowance for housing 
        payable may be based on whichever of the following areas the 
        Secretary concerned determines to be the most equitable:
                    ``(A) The area of the duty station to which the 
                member is reassigned.
                    ``(B) The area in which the spouse or other 
                dependent resides, but only if the spouse or other 
                dependent resides in that area when the member departs 
                for the duty station to which the member is reassigned, 
                and only for the period during which the spouse or 
                other dependent resides in that area.
                    ``(C) The area of the former duty station of the 
                member, but only if that area is different from the 
                area in which the spouse or other dependent resides.
    ``(c) Rule of Construction Related to Certain Basic Allowance for 
Housing Payments.--Nothing in this section shall be construed to limit 
the payment or the amount of basic allowance for housing payable under 
section 403(d)(3)(A) of this title to a member whose request under 
subsection (a) is approved.
    ``(d) Housing Treatment Education.--The regulations prescribed 
pursuant to this section shall ensure the relocation assistance 
programs under section 1056 of title 10 include, as part of the 
assistance normally provided under such section, education about the 
housing treatment available under this section.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) Covered relocation period.--(A) Subject to 
        subparagraph (B), the term `covered relocation period', when 
        used with respect to a permanent change of station of a member 
        of the armed forces, means the period that--
                    ``(i) begins 180 days before the date of the 
                permanent change of station; and
                    ``(ii) ends 180 days after the date of the 
                permanent change of station.
            ``(B) The regulations prescribed pursuant to this section 
        may provide for a lengthening of the covered relocation period 
        of a member for purposes of this section.
            ``(2) Dependent.--The term `dependent' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 401 of this title.
            ``(3) Permanent change of station.--The term `permanent 
        change of station' means a permanent change of station 
        described in section 452(b)(2) of this title.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 7 such title is amended by inserting after 
        the item relating to section 403 the following new item:

``403a. Housing treatment for certain members of the armed forces, and 
                            their spouses and other dependents, 
                            undergoing a permanent change of station 
                            within the United States.''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take 
effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and shall apply with 
respect to permanent changes of station of members of the Armed Forces 
that occur on or after October 1 of the fiscal year that begins after 
such date of enactment.

SEC. 604. PER DIEM ALLOWANCE POLICIES.

    (a) Policy and Regulations.--
            (1) Existing policy and regulations.--The Secretary of each 
        military department may not implement the policy in the 
        memorandum dated October 1, 2014, titled ``UTD/CTS for MAP 118-
        13/CAP 118-13 - Flat Rate Per Diem for Long Term TDY'', 
        regarding per diem allowances, or any regulations prescribed 
        pursuant to such memorandum, on or after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act.
            (2) Future policy and regulations.--(A) The Secretary of 
        each military department concerned may not implement a new 
        policy regarding per diem allowances under section 474 of title 
        37, United States Code, until after the Secretary of Defense 
        issues the report under subsection (b).
            (B) The Secretary of the military department concerned 
        shall notify the appropriate congressional committees not less 
        than 30 days before implementing a new policy regarding per 
        diem allowances under section 474 of title 37, United States 
        Code.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue a report to 
the appropriate congressional committees regarding options to reduce 
travel costs incurred by the Department of Defense, including the 
adoption of practices used by private entities.
    (c) Appropriate Congressional Committees.--In this section, the 
term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means the congressional 
defense committees, the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
Affairs of the Senate, and the Committee on Oversight and Government 
Reform of the House of Representatives.

SEC. 605. REEVALUATION OF BAH FOR THE MILITARY HOUSING AREA INCLUDING 
              STATEN ISLAND.

    Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, 
the Secretary of Defense, using the most recent data available to the 
Secretary, shall reevaluate the basic housing allowance prescribed 
under section 403(b) of title 37, United States Code, for the military 
housing area that includes Staten Island, New York.

SEC. 606. APPLICATION OF BASIC ALLOWANCE FOR HOUSING TO MEMBERS OF THE 
              UNIFORMED SERVICES IN THE VIRGIN ISLANDS.

    (a) In General.--Section 403(b) of title 37, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in the heading, by inserting ``and the Virgin Islands'' 
        after ``the United States'';
            (2) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``and the Virgin 
        Islands'' after ``the United States''; and
            (3) in paragraphs (2), (3)(A), and (6), by inserting ``or 
        the Virgin Islands'' after ``the United States'' each place it 
        appears.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 403(c) of title 37, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the heading, by inserting ``or the Virgin Islands'' 
        after ``the United States''; and
            (2) in paragraphs (1), (2), (3)(A)(i), and (3)(B), by 
        inserting ``or the Virgin Islands'' after ``the United States'' 
        each place it appears.
    (c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take 
effect on the date of the enactment of this Act and shall apply to 
payments under section 403 of title 37, United States Code, beginning 
on January 1, 2018.

           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, 2017'' and inserting ``December 31, 2018'':
            (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 478a(e), relating to reimbursement of travel 
        expenses for inactive-duty training outside of normal commuting 
        distance.
            (8) 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, 2017'' and 
inserting ``December 31, 2018'':
            (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, 2017'' and 
inserting ``December 31, 2018'':
            (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, 2017'' and inserting ``December 31, 2018'':
            (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, 2017'' and inserting ``December 31, 2018'':
            (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 336(g), relating to contracting bonus for 
        cadets and midshipmen enrolled in the Senior Reserve Officers' 
        Training Corps.
            (7) Section 351(h), relating to hazardous duty pay.
            (8) Section 352(g), relating to assignment pay or special 
        duty pay.
            (9) Section 353(i), relating to skill incentive pay or 
        proficiency bonus.
            (10) 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, 2017'' and inserting ``December 31, 2018'':
            (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 316a(g), relating to incentive pay for members 
        of precommissioning programs pursuing foreign language 
        proficiency.
            (6) Section 324(g), relating to accession bonus for new 
        officers in critical skills.
            (7) Section 326(g), relating to incentive bonus for 
        conversion to military occupational specialty to ease personnel 
        shortage.
            (8) Section 327(h), relating to incentive bonus for 
        transfer between Armed Forces.
            (9) Section 330(f), relating to accession bonus for officer 
        candidates.

SEC. 616. REIMBURSEMENT FOR STATE LICENSURE AND CERTIFICATION COSTS OF 
              A MEMBER OF THE ARMED FORCES ARISING FROM SEPARATION FROM 
              THE ARMED FORCES.

    (a) Reimbursement Authorized.--Section 1143 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
subsection:
    ``(f) Reimbursement for State Licensure and Certification Costs.--
(1) The Secretary concerned may reimburse a member of the armed forces 
who separates from the armed forces for qualified relicensing costs of 
the member.
    ``(2) Reimbursement provided to a member under this subsection may 
not exceed $500.
    ``(3) In this subsection, the term `qualified relicensing costs' 
means costs, including exam and registration fees, that--
            ``(A) are imposed by the State in which the member resides 
        after separation from the armed forces to secure a license or 
        certification to engage in a profession; and
            ``(B) are paid or incurred by the member to secure the 
        license or certification from the State in which the member 
        resides after separation from the armed forces.''.
    (b) Development of Recommendations to Expedite License Portability 
for Members of the Armed Forces.--
            (1) Consultation with states.--The Secretary of Defense, 
        and the Secretary of Homeland Security with respect to the 
        Coast Guard, shall consult with States--
                    (A) to identify barriers to the portability between 
                States of a license, certification, or other grant of 
                permission held by a member of the Armed Forces to 
                engage in an occupation when the member separates from 
                the Armed Forces; and
                    (B) to develop recommendations for the Federal 
                Government and the States, together or separately, to 
                expedite the portability of such licenses, 
                certifications, and other grants of permission for 
                separated members of the Armed Forces.
            (2) Specific considerations.--In conducting the 
        consultation and preparing the recommendations under paragraph 
        (1), the Secretaries shall consider the feasibility of--
                    (A) States accepting licenses, certifications, and 
                other grants of permission described in paragraph (1) 
                issued by another State and in good standing in that 
                State;
                    (B) the issuance of a temporary license pending 
                completion of State-specific requirements; and
                    (C) the establishment of an expedited review 
                process for separated members of the Armed Forces.
            (3) Report required.--Not later than March 15, 2018, the 
        Secretaries shall submit to the appropriate congressional 
        committees and the States a report containing the 
        recommendations developed under this subsection.
            (4) Appropriate congressional committees.--In this 
        subsection, the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means the congressional defense committees, the Committee on 
        Homeland Security and Government Affairs of the Senate, and the 
        Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 617. INCREASE IN MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF AVIATION BONUS FOR 12-MONTH 
              PERIOD OF OBLIGATED SERVICE.

    Section 334(c)(1)(B) of title 37, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``$35,000'' and inserting ``$50,000''.

SEC. 618. TECHNICAL AND CLERICAL AMENDMENTS RELATING TO 2008 
              CONSOLIDATION OF CERTAIN SPECIAL PAY AUTHORITIES.

    (a) Repayment Provisions.--
            (1) Title 10.--Section 510(i), subsections (a)(3) and (c) 
        of section 2005, paragraphs (1) and (2) of section 2007(e), 
        section 2105, section 2123(e)(1)(C), section 2128(c), section 
        2130a(d), section 2171(g), section 2173(g)(2), paragraphs (1) 
        and (2) of section 2200a(e), section 4348(f), section 6959(f), 
        section 9348(f), subsections (a)(2) and (b) of section 16135, 
        section 16203(a)(1)(B), section 16301(h), section 16303(d), and 
        the matter preceding subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) and the 
        matter preceding subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of section 
        16401(f) of title 10, United States Code, are each amended by 
        inserting ``or 373'' before ``of title 37''.
            (2) Title 14.--Section 182(g) of title 14, United States 
        Code, is amended by inserting ``or 373'' before ``of title 
        37''.
    (b) Officers Appointed Pursuant to an Agreement Under Section 329 
of Title 37.--Section 641 of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
by striking paragraph (6).
    (c) Reenlistment Leave.--The matter preceding paragraph (1) of 
section 703(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
``or paragraph (1) or (3) of section 351(a)'' after ``section 
310(a)(2)''.
    (d) Rest and Recuperation Absence: Qualified Members Extending Duty 
at a Designated Location Overseas.--The matter following paragraph (4) 
of section 705(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting ``or 352'' after ``section 314''.
    (e) Rest and Recuperation Absence: Certain Members Undergoing 
Extended Deployment to a Combat Zone.--Section 705a(b)(1)(B) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by inserting or ``352(a)'' after 
``section 305''.
    (f) Military Pay and Allowances Continuance While in a Missing 
Status.--Section 552(a)(2) of title 37, United States Code, is amended 
by inserting ``or paragraph (2) of section 351(a)'' after ``section 
301''.
    (g) Military Pay and Allowances.--Section 907(d) of title 37, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ``or 351'' 
                after ``section 301'';
                    (B) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``or 352'' 
                after ``section 301c'';
                    (C) in subparagraph (C), by inserting ``or 353(a)'' 
                after ``section 304'';
                    (D) in subparagraph (D), by inserting ``or 352'' 
                after ``section 305'';
                    (E) in subparagraph (E), by inserting ``or 352'' 
                after ``section 305a'';
                    (F) in subparagraph (F), by inserting ``or 352'' 
                after ``section 305b'';
                    (G) in subparagraph (G), by inserting ``or 352'' 
                after ``section 307a'';
                    (H) in subparagraph (I), by inserting ``or 352'' 
                after ``section 314'';
                    (I) in subparagraph (J), by striking ``316'' and 
                inserting ``353(b)''; and
                    (J) in subparagraph (K), by striking ``323'' and 
                inserting ``355''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ``or 352'' 
                after ``section 307'';
                    (B) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``308'' and 
                inserting ``331'';
                    (C) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``309'' and 
                inserting ``331''; and
                    (D) in subparagraph (D), by inserting ``or 353'' 
                after ``section 320''.
    (h) Pay and Allowances.--Section 208(a)(2) of the Public Health 
Service Act (42 U.S.C. 210(a)(2)) is amended by inserting ``or 373'' 
after ``303a(b)''.

SEC. 619. IMPROVED EMPLOYMENT ASSISTANCE FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMED 
              FORCES AND VETERANS.

    (a) Improved Employment Skills Verification.--Section 1143(a) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``The Secretary of 
        Defense''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(2) In order to improve the accuracy and completeness of a 
certification or verification of job skills and experience required by 
paragraph (1), the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Homeland 
Security with respect to the Coast Guard when it is not operating as a 
service in the Navy shall--
            ``(A) establish a database to record all training performed 
        by members of the armed forces that may have application to 
        employment in the civilian sector; and
            ``(B) make unclassified information regarding such 
        information available to States and other potential employers 
        referred to in subsection (c) so that State and other entities 
        may allow military training to satisfy licensing or 
        certification requirements to engage in a civilian 
        profession.''.
    (b) Improved Accuracy of Certificates of Training and Skills.--
Section 1143(a) of title 10, United States Code, is further amended by 
inserting after paragraph (2), as added by subsection (a), the 
following new paragraph:
    ``(3) The Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Homeland 
Security with respect to the Coast Guard when it is not operating as a 
service in the Navy shall ensure that a certification or verification 
of job skills and experience required by paragraph (1) is rendered in 
such a way that States and other potential employers can confirm the 
accuracy and authenticity of the certification or verification.''.
    (c) Improved Responsiveness to Certification Requests.--Section 
1143(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``For the purpose''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(2) A State may use a certification or verification of job skills 
and experience provided to a member of the armed forces under 
subsection (a) and request the Department of Defense or the Coast 
Guard, as the case may be, to confirm the accuracy and authenticity of 
the certification or verification. A response confirming or denying the 
information shall be provided within five business days.''.
    (d) Improved Notice to Members.--Section 1142(b)(4)(A) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended by inserting before the semicolon the 
following: ``, including State-submitted and approved lists of military 
training and skills that satisfy occupational certifications and 
licenses''.

     Subtitle C--Disability Pay, Retired Pay, and Survivor Benefits

SEC. 621. FINDINGS AND SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING THE SPECIAL SURVIVOR 
              INDEMNITY ALLOWANCE.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Dependency and indemnity compensation administered by 
        the Department of Veterans Affairs provides financial support 
        to the surviving spouses, children, and dependent parents of 
        deceased veterans.
            (2) The survivor benefit plan administered by the 
        Department of Defense provides an inflation-adjusted annuity to 
        the eligible survivors of certain deceased military personnel.
            (3) The amount of compensation a surviving spouse may 
        receive under the survivor benefit plan is offset on a dollar-
        for-dollar basis by any amount of dependency and indemnity 
        compensation the surviving spouse receives.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the special survivor indemnity allowance was created to 
        assist surviving spouses and begin to repay the offset 
        described in subsection (a)(3); and
            (2) such offset should be repealed as soon as possible.

                       Subtitle D--Other Matters

SEC. 631. LAND CONVEYANCE AUTHORITY, ARMY AND AIR FORCE EXCHANGE 
              SERVICE PROPERTY, DALLAS, TEXAS.

    (a) Conveyance Authorized.--The Army and Air Force Exchange Service 
may convey, by sale, exchange, or a combination thereof, all right, 
title, and interest of the United States in and to a parcel of real 
property, including improvements thereon, that is located at 8901 
Autobahn Drive in Dallas, Texas, and was purchased using 
nonappropriated funds of the Army and Air Force Exchange Service.
    (b) Consideration.--
            (1) In general.--Consideration for the real property 
        conveyed under subsection (a) shall be at least equal to the 
        fair market value of the property, as determined by the Army 
        and Air Force Exchange Service.
            (2) Treatment of cash consideration.--Any cash 
        consideration received from the conveyance of the property 
        under subsection (a) may be retained by the Army and Air Force 
        Exchange Service since the property was acquired using 
        nonappropriated funds.
    (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 Army and Air Force 
Exchange Service. The recipient of the property shall be required to 
cover the cost of the survey.
    (d) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Army and Air Force 
Exchange Service may require such additional terms and conditions in 
connection with the conveyance under subsection (a) as the Army and Air 
Force Exchange Service considers appropriate to protect the interests 
of the United States.

SEC. 632. REPORT REGARDING MANAGEMENT OF MILITARY COMMISSARIES AND 
              EXCHANGES.

    (a) 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 regarding management 
practices of military commissaries and exchanges.
    (b) Elements.--The report required under this section shall include 
a cost-benefit analysis with the goals of--
            (1) reducing the costs of operating military commissaries 
        and exchanges by $2,000,000,000 during fiscal years 2018 
        through 2022; and
            (2) not raising costs for patrons of military commissaries 
        and exchanges.

                   TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS

           Subtitle A--TRICARE and Other Health Care Benefits

SEC. 701. PHYSICAL EXAMINATIONS FOR MEMBERS OF A RESERVE COMPONENT WHO 
              ARE SEPARATING FROM THE ARMED FORCES.

    Section 1145 of title 10, United States Code, is 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) Physical Examinations for Certain Members of a Reserve 
Component.--(1) The Secretary concerned shall provide a physical 
examination pursuant to subsection (a)(5) to each member of a reserve 
component who--
            ``(A) during the two-year period before the date on which 
        the member is scheduled to be separated from the armed force 
        served on active duty in support of a contingency operation for 
        a period of more than 30 days;
            ``(B) will not otherwise receive such an examination under 
        such subsection; and
            ``(C) elects to receive such a physical examination.
    ``(2) The Secretary concerned shall--
            ``(A) provide the physical examination under paragraph (1) 
        to a member during the 90-day period before the date on which 
        the member is scheduled to be separated from the armed forces; 
        and
            ``(B) issue orders to such a member to receive such 
        physical examination.
    ``(3) A member may not be entitled to health care benefits pursuant 
to subsection (a), (b), or (c) solely by reason of being provided a 
physical examination under paragraph (1).
    ``(4) In providing to a member a physical examination under 
paragraph (1), the Secretary concerned shall provide to the member a 
record of the physical examination.''.

SEC. 702. MENTAL HEALTH EXAMINATIONS BEFORE MEMBERS SEPARATE FROM THE 
              ARMED FORCES.

    (a) In General.--Section 1145(a)(5)(A) of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by inserting ``and a mental health examination 
conducted pursuant to section 1074n of this title'' after ``a physical 
examination''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 1074n(a) of such title is 
amended by inserting ``(and before separation from active duty pursuant 
to section 1145(a)(5)(A) of this title)'' after ``each calendar year''.

SEC. 703. PROVISION OF HYPERBARIC OXYGEN THERAPY FOR CERTAIN MEMBERS OF 
              THE ARMED FORCES.

    (a) HBOT Treatment.--
            (1) In general.--Chapter 55 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by inserting after section 1074n the following 
        new section:
``Sec. 1074o. Provision of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for certain 
              members
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary may furnish hyperbaric oxygen 
therapy available at a military medical treatment facility to a covered 
member if such therapy is prescribed by a physician to treat post-
traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury.
    ``(b) Covered Member Defined.--In this section, the term `covered 
member' means a member of the armed forces who is--
            ``(1) serving on active duty; and
            ``(2) diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder or 
        traumatic brain injury.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of such chapter is amended by inserting after the 
        item relating to section 1074n the following new item:

``1074o. Provision of hyperbaric oxygen therapy for certain members.''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall 
take effect 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 704. MENTAL HEALTH ASSESSMENTS FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES 
              DEPLOYED IN SUPPORT OF A CONTINGENCY OPERATION.

    Section 1074m(a)(1)(B) of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
by striking ``Until January 1, 2019, once'' and inserting ``Once''.

SEC. 705. COUNSELING AND TREATMENT FOR SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS AND 
              CHRONIC PAIN MANAGEMENT SERVICES FOR MEMBERS WHO SEPARATE 
              FROM THE ARMED FORCES.

    Section 1145(a)(6)(B)(i) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in subclause (I)--
                    (A) by inserting ``, substance use disorder,'' 
                after ``post-traumatic stress disorder''; and
                    (B) by striking ``and'' at the end;
            (2) by redesignating subclause (II) as subclause (III); and
            (3) by inserting after subclause (I) the following:
                                    ``(II) chronic pain management 
                                services, including counseling and 
                                treatment of co-occurring mental health 
                                disorders and alternatives to opioid 
                                analgesics; and''.

SEC. 706. EXPANSION OF SEXUAL TRAUMA COUNSELING AND TREATMENT FOR 
              MEMBERS OF THE RESERVE COMPONENTS.

    Section 1720D(a)(2)(A) of title 38, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``on active duty''; and
            (2) by inserting before the period at the end the 
        following: ``that was suffered by the member while serving on 
        active duty, active duty for training, or inactive duty 
        training.''.

                 Subtitle B--Health Care Administration

SEC. 711. CLARIFICATION OF ROLES OF COMMANDERS OF MILITARY MEDICAL 
              TREATMENT FACILITIES AND SURGEONS GENERAL.

    (a) Role of Commanders.--Section 1073c(a)(2) of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as 
        subparagraphs (B) and (C), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting before subparagraph (B) the following new 
        subparagraph (A):
            ``(A) the operation of such facility;''.
    (b) Role of Surgeons General.--
            (1) Surgeon general of the army.--Section 3036(f) of title 
        10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
        following new paragraph:
    ``(4)(A) The Surgeon General is responsible--
            ``(i) for the medical readiness provided by the military 
        medical treatment facilities of the Army; and
            ``(ii) for maintaining a ready medical force of the Army.
    ``(B) In carrying out subparagraph (A), the Surgeon General shall 
provide operational oversight of readiness matters of the military 
medical treatment facilities of the Army.''.
            (2) Surgeon general of the navy.--Section 5137(b) of title 
        10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
        following new paragraph:
    ``(4)(A) The Surgeon General is responsible--
            ``(i) for the medical readiness provided by the military 
        medical treatment facilities of the Navy; and
            ``(ii) for maintaining a ready medical force of the Navy.
    ``(B) In carrying out subparagraph (A), the Surgeon General shall 
provide operational oversight of readiness matters of the military 
medical treatment facilities of the Navy.''.
            (3) Surgeon general of the air force.--Section 8036(b) of 
        title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end 
        the following new paragraph:
    ``(4)(A) The Surgeon General is responsible--
            ``(i) for the medical readiness provided by the military 
        medical treatment facilities of the Air Force; and
            ``(ii) for maintaining a ready medical force of the Air 
        Force.
    ``(B) In carrying out subparagraph (A), the Surgeon General shall 
provide operational oversight of readiness matters of the military 
medical treatment facilities of the Air Force.''.

SEC. 712. MAINTENANCE OF INPATIENT CAPABILITIES OF MILITARY MEDICAL 
              TREATMENT FACILITIES LOCATED OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES.

    In carrying out section 1073d of title 10, United States Code, the 
Secretary of Defense shall ensure that each military medical treatment 
facility located outside the United States maintains, at a minimum, the 
inpatient capabilities of such facility as of September 30, 2016.

SEC. 713. REGULAR UPDATE OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG PRICING STANDARD UNDER 
              TRICARE RETAIL PHARMACY PROGRAM.

    Section 1074g(d) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(3) With respect to the TRICARE retail pharmacy program described 
in subsection (a)(2)(E)(ii), the Secretary shall ensure that a contract 
entered into with a TRICARE pharmacy program contractor includes 
requirements described in section 1860D-12(b)(6) of the Social Security 
Act (42 U.S.C. 1395w-112(b)(6)) to ensure the provision of information 
regarding the pricing standard for prescription drugs.''.

SEC. 714. RESIDENCY REQUIREMENTS FOR PODIATRISTS.

    (a) Requirement.--In addition to any other qualification required 
by law or regulation, the Secretary of Defense shall ensure that to 
serve as a podiatrist in the Armed Forces, an individual must have 
successfully completed a three-year podiatric medicine and surgical 
residency.
    (b) Application.--Subsection (a) shall apply with respect to an 
individual who is commissioned as an officer in the Armed Forces on or 
after the date that is one year after the date of the enactment of this 
Act.

SEC. 715. TRAINING REQUIREMENT FOR HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS 
              PRESCRIBING OPIOIDS FOR TREATMENT OF PAIN IN THE ARMED 
              FORCES.

    (a) In General.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that to 
serve as a health care professional in the Department of Defense as an 
individual who is authorized to prescribe or otherwise dispense opioids 
for the treatment of pain, the professional (other than a pharmacist) 
must comply with the 12-hour training requirement of paragraph (2) at 
least once during each 3-year period or be licensed in a State that 
requires equivalent (or greater) training described in paragraph (2) 
with respect to the prescribing or dispensing of opioids for the 
treatment of pain.
    (2) The training requirement of this paragraph is that the 
professional has completed not less than 12 hours of training (through 
classroom situations, seminars at professional society meetings, 
electronic communications, or otherwise) with respect to--
            (A) pain management treatment guidelines and best 
        practices;
            (B) early detection of opioid addiction; and
            (C) the treatment and management of opioid-dependent 
        patients,
that is provided by the American Society of Addiction Medicine, the 
American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry, the American Medical 
Association, the American Osteopathic Association, the American 
Psychiatric Association, the American Academy of Pain Management, the 
American Pain Society, the American Academy of Pain Medicine, the 
American Board of Pain Medicine, the American Society of Interventional 
Pain Physicians, or any other organization that the Secretary of 
Defense determines is appropriate for purposes of this subsection.
    (b) Establishment of Training Modules.--(1) The Secretary of 
Defense shall establish or support the establishment of one or more 
training modules to be used to meet the training requirement under 
subsection (a).
    (2) To be eligible to receive support under paragraph (1), an 
entity shall be--
            (A) one of the organizations listed in paragraph (2) of 
        subsection (a); or
            (B) any other organization that the Secretary determines is 
        appropriate to provide training under such subsection.

                       Subtitle C--Other Matters

SEC. 721. ONE YEAR EXTENSION OF PILOT PROGRAM FOR PRESCRIPTION DRUG 
              ACQUISITION COST PARITY IN THE TRICARE PHARMACY BENEFITS 
              PROGRAM.

    Section 743(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``October 1, 2017'' and inserting ``October 
        1, 2018''; and
            (2) by striking ``September 30, 2018'' and inserting 
        ``September 30, 2019''.

SEC. 722. PILOT PROGRAM ON HEALTH CARE ASSISTANCE SYSTEM.

    (a) Pilot Program.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out a 
pilot program to provide a health care assistance service to certain 
covered beneficiaries enrolled in TRICARE Prime or TRICARE Select to 
improve the health outcomes and patient experience for covered 
beneficiaries with complex medical conditions.
    (b) Elements.--The pilot program under subsection (a) may include 
the following elements:
            (1) Assisting families with complex medical conditions to 
        understand and use the health benefits under the TRICARE 
        program.
            (2) Supporting such families in accessing and navigating 
        the health care delivery system.
            (3) Providing such families with information to allow the 
        families to make informed decisions with health care providers.
            (4) Improving the health outcomes for such families.
    (c) Duration.--The Secretary shall carry out the pilot program for 
an amount of time determined appropriate by the Secretary during the 
five-year period beginning January 1, 2018.
    (d) Report.--Not later than January 1, 2021, the Secretary shall 
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Senate a report containing an evaluation of the 
success of the pilot program under subsection (a), including an 
analysis of the implementation of the elements under subsection (b).
    (e) Definitions.--In this section, the terms ``covered 
beneficiary'', ``TRICARE Prime'', ``TRICARE program'', and ``TRICARE 
Select'' have the meaning given those terms in section 1072 of title 
10, United States Code.

SEC. 723. RESEARCH OF CHRONIC TRAUMATIC ENCEPHALOPATHY.

    Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise 
made available for fiscal year 2018 for advanced development for 
research, development, test, and evaluation for the Defense Health 
Program, not more than $25,000,000 may be used to award grants to 
medical researchers and universities to support research into early 
detection of chronic traumatic encephalopathy.

SEC. 724. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON ELIGIBILITY OF VICTIMS OF ACTS OF TERROR 
              FOR EVALUATION AND TREATMENT AT MILITARY TREATMENT 
              FACILITIES.

    Section 717 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) is amended by striking subsection (d) 
and inserting the following new subsections:
    ``(d) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
civilians covered by this section include United States victims of 
domestic and international terrorism.
    ``(e) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `act of terror' means an act of domestic 
        terrorism or international terrorism, as those terms are 
        defined in section 2331 of title 18, United States Code.
            ``(2) The term `covered beneficiary' has the meaning given 
        that term in section 1072 of title 10, United States Code.
            ``(3) The term `victim', with respect to an act of terror, 
        means an individual who suffered physical injury as a direct 
        result of the act of terror.''.

SEC. 725. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR TERMINATION OF 
              VETS4WARRIORS CRISIS HOTLINE PROGRAM.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the Department of 
Defense may be obligated or expended to terminate the Vets4Warriors 
crisis hotline program unless the Secretary of Defense has submitted to 
the congressional defense committees a report describing a sufficient 
replacement to such program.

SEC. 726. REPORT ON IMPLEMENTATION OF GAO RECOMMENDATIONS.

    Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit a report to the 
congressional defense committees on the implementation by the 
Department of Defense of the recommendations from the Government 
Accountability Office report entitled ``Actions Needed to Ensure Post-
Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury Are Considered in 
Misconduct Separations'' and published May 16, 2017.

SEC. 727. AUTHORIZATION OF INTERGOVERNMENTAL AGREEMENTS FOR THE 
              PROVISION OF HEALTH SCREENINGS.

    Section 2679(e)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new sentence: ``Such term includes 
health screenings for conditions relating to the exposure of 
perfluorooctanesuflonic acid and perfluorooctanoic acid in communities 
near formerly used defense sites that have been identified by the 
Secretary of Defense as sources of such acids.''

SEC. 728. STUDY ON SAFE OPIOID PRESCRIBING PRACTICES.

    (a) Study.--The Secretary of Defense shall conduct a study on the 
effectiveness of the training provided to military health care 
providers regarding opioid prescribing practices, initiatives in opioid 
safety, the use of the VA/DOD Clinical Practice Guideline for 
Management of Opioid Therapy for Chronic Pain, and other related 
training.
    (b) Elements.--The study under subsection (a) shall address the 
effectiveness of training with respect to the following:
            (1) Reducing the total number of prescription opioids 
        dispensed by the Department of Defense to beneficiaries of 
        health care furnished by the Department.
            (2) Reducing the average dosage prescribed by a military 
        health care provider to such beneficiaries.
            (3) Reducing the average number of doses per prescription 
        for treatment of acute pain.
            (4) Reducing the average duration of opioid therapy for 
        chronic pain.
            (5) Reducing the number of overdoses due to prescription 
        opioids for patients with acute pain and patients undergoing 
        opioid therapy for chronic pain.
            (6) Providing counseling and referrals to treatment 
        alternatives to opioid analgesics.
            (7) Providing education on the risks of opioid medications 
        to individuals for whom such medications are prescribed, and to 
        their families, with special consideration given to raising 
        awareness among adolescents on such risks.
            (8) Effectiveness in communicating to military health care 
        providers changes in Department policies regarding opioid 
        safety and prescribing practices.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall provide to the Committees on 
Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate a 
briefing on the results of the study under subsection (a).

SEC. 729. TICK-BORNE DISEASES.

    Using funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise 
made available for fiscal year 2018 for the Defense Health program, the 
Secretary of Defense may authorize grants to medical researchers and 
universities to support testing ticks for the purpose of improving the 
detection and diagnosis of tick-borne diseases.

SEC. 730. REPORT.

    For each of the fiscal years 2018 through 2021, the Secretary of 
Defense shall submit to Congress a report on the Department of 
Defense's--
            (1) activities and programs with respect to infectious 
        disease;
            (2) priority areas with respect to infectious disease; and
            (3) current policy and planning documents with respect to 
        infectious disease.

SEC. 731. PROVISION OF SUPPORT BY DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE TO DEPARTMENT 
              OF VETERANS AFFAIRS REGARDING ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORD 
              SYSTEM.

    (a) Support.--The Secretary of Defense may support the Secretary of 
Veterans Affairs, to the extent the Secretaries jointly consider 
feasible and advisable, in the development and implementation of an 
electronic health record system that--
            (1) is derivative of the Military Health System Genesis 
        record currently being developed and implemented by the 
        Secretary of Defense; and
            (2) achieves complete interoperability with the Military 
        Health System Genesis.
    (b) Annual Review.--The Secretary of Defense and the Secretary 
Veterans Affairs shall jointly conduct an annual review of the efforts 
undertaken by the Secretaries to achieve complete interoperability 
between the electronic health record of the Department of Veterans 
Affairs and the Military Health System Genesis.
    (c) Annual Report.--
            (1) Reports.--Not later than 60 days after completing each 
        annual review under subsection (b), the Secretary of Defense 
        and the Secretary of Veterans Affairs shall jointly submit to 
        the Committees on Armed Services and the Committees on 
        Veterans' Affairs of the Senate and the House of 
        Representatives a report on the review.
            (2) Elements.--Each report under paragraph (1) shall 
        include an assessment of the following:
                    (A) Milestones reached as part of the schedule of 
                development and acquisition as developed by the 
                Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans 
                Affairs.
                    (B) Costs associated with development and 
                implementation.
                    (C) Actions, if any, of the Secretary of Defense in 
                supporting the Secretary of Veterans Affairs pursuant 
                to subsection (a) with respect to the development and 
                implementation of an electronic health record system 
                and in achieving complete interoperability with the 
                Military Health System Genesis.
                    (D) Status of the adoption of the national 
                standards and architectural requirements identified by 
                the Interagency Program Office of the Departments and 
                in collaboration with the Office of the National 
                Coordinator for Health Information Technology of the 
                Department of Health and Human Services.
    (d) Termination.--The requirements under subsection (b) and (c) 
shall terminate on the date on which the Secretary of Defense and the 
Secretary of Veterans Affairs jointly certify to the Committees on 
Armed Services and the Committees on Veterans' Affairs of the Senate 
and the House of Representatives that the electronic health records of 
both the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs 
are completely interoperable.
    (e) Interoperability Defined.--In this section, the term 
``interoperability'' refers to the ability of different electronic 
health records systems or software to meaningfully exchange information 
in real time and provide useful results to one or more systems.

SEC. 732. INCREASED COLLABORATION WITH NIH TO COMBAT TRIPLE NEGATIVE 
              BREAST CANCER.

    The Office of Health of the Department of Defense shall work in 
collaboration with the National Institutes of Health to--
            (1) identify specific genetic and molecular targets and 
        biomarkers for triple negative breast cancer; and
            (2) provide information useful in biomarker selection, drug 
        discovery, and clinical trials design that will enable both--
                    (A) triple negative breast cancer patients to be 
                identified earlier in the progression of their disease; 
                and
                    (B) the development of multiple targeted therapies 
                for the disease.

SEC. 733. ENCOURAGING TRANSITION OF MILITARY MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS INTO 
              EMPLOYMENT WITH VETERANS HEALTH ADMINISTRATION.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish a program 
to encourage an individual who serves in the Armed Forces with a 
military occupational specialty relating to the provision of health 
care to seek employment with the Veterans Health Administration when 
the individual has been discharged or released from service in the 
Armed Forces or is contemplating separating from such service.
    (b) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to--
            (1) create any additional authority not otherwise provided 
        in law to convert a former member of the Armed Services to an 
        employee of the Veterans Health Administration; or
            (2) circumvent any existing requirement relating to a 
        detail, reassignment, or other transfer of such a former member 
        to the Veterans Health Administration.

  TITLE VIII--ACQUISITION POLICY, ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT, AND RELATED 
                                MATTERS

     Subtitle A--Defense Acquisition Streamlining and Transparency

                PART I--ACQUISITION SYSTEM STREAMLINING

SEC. 801. PROCUREMENT THROUGH ONLINE MARKETPLACES.

    (a) Establishment of Program.--The Administrator of General 
Services shall establish a program to procure commercial products 
through online marketplaces for purposes of expediting procurement and 
ensuring reasonable pricing of commercial products. The Administrator 
shall carry out the program in accordance with this section, through 
more than one contract with more than one online marketplace provider, 
and shall design the program to enable Government-wide use of such 
marketplaces.
    (b) Use of Program by Secretary of Defense.--The Secretary of 
Defense shall purchase, as appropriate, commercial products for the 
Department of Defense using the program established pursuant to 
subsection (a).
    (c) Criteria for Online Marketplaces.--The Administrator shall 
ensure that an online marketplace used under the program established 
pursuant to subsection (a)--
            (1) is used widely in the private sector, including in 
        business-to-business e-commerce;
            (2) provides dynamic selection, in which suppliers and 
        products may be frequently updated, and dynamic pricing, in 
        which product prices may be frequently updated;
            (3) enables offers from multiple suppliers on the same or 
        similar products to be sorted or filtered based on product and 
        shipping price, delivery date, and reviews of suppliers or 
        products;
            (4) does not feature or prioritize a product of a supplier 
        based on any compensation or fee paid to the online marketplace 
        by the supplier that is exclusively for such featuring or 
        prioritization on the online marketplace;
            (5) provides the capability for procurement oversight 
        controls, including spending limits, order approval, and order 
        tracking;
            (6) provides consolidated invoicing, payment, and customer 
        service functions for all transactions;
            (7) satisfies requirements for supplier and product 
        screening in subsection (d); and
            (8) collects information necessary to fulfill the 
        information requirements in subsection (h).
    (d) Supplier and Product Screening.--The Administrator shall--
            (1) provide or ensure electronic availability to an online 
        marketplace provider awarded a contract pursuant to subsection 
        (a), no less frequently than the first day of each month--
                    (A) the list of suspended and debarred contractors 
                contained in the System of Award Management maintained 
                by the General Services Administration, or any 
                successor system;
                    (B) a list of suppliers, by product, that certify 
                compliance with the requirements of section 2533a or 
                2533b of title 10, United States Code;
                    (C) a list of suppliers, by product, that comply 
                with the requirements of, or are subject to an 
                exception under, chapter 83 of title 41, United States 
                Code;
                    (D) a list of suppliers, by product, with respect 
                to which the President has issued a waiver under 
                section 301 of the Trade Agreements Act of 1979 (19 
                U.S.C. 2511);
                    (E) a list of products, by supplier, that are 
                suitable for the Federal Government to procure pursuant 
                to section 2410n of title 10, United States Code, or 
                section 8503 of title 41, United States Code; and
                    (F) a list of suppliers, by product, that are small 
                business concerns;
            (2) conduct reviews of suppliers to establish the lists 
        required under paragraph (1);
            (3) ensure that an online marketplace used under the 
        program established pursuant to subsection (a) provides the 
        ability to search suppliers and products and identify such 
        suppliers and products as authorized or not authorized for 
        purchase during the procurement and order approval process 
        based on the most recent lists provided pursuant to paragraph 
        (1).
    (e) Relationship to Other Provisions of Law.--(1) Notwithstanding 
any other provision of law, a procurement of a product made through an 
online marketplace under the program established pursuant to subsection 
(a)--
            (A) is deemed to satisfy requirements for full and open 
        competition pursuant to section 2304 of title 10, United States 
        Code, and section 3301 of title 41, United States Code, if 
        there are offers from two or more suppliers of such a product 
        or similar product with substantially the same physical, 
        functional, or performance characteristics on the online 
        marketplace; and
            (B) is deemed to be an award of a prime contract for 
        purposes of the goals established under section 15(g) of the 
        Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 644(g)), if the purchase is from 
        a supplier that is a small business concern.
    (2) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed as limiting the 
authority of a department or agency to restrict competition to small 
business concerns.
    (f) Requirement to Use Standard Terms and Conditions of Online 
Marketplaces.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a 
procurement of a product through a commercial online marketplace used 
under the program established pursuant to subsection (a) shall be made 
under the standard terms and conditions of the marketplace relating to 
purchasing on the marketplace, and the Administrator shall not require 
an online marketplace to modify its standard terms and conditions as a 
condition of receiving a contract pursuant to subsection (a).
    (g) Procedures for Award of Contract.--Notwithstanding section 2304 
of title 10, United States Code, or any other provision of law, the 
award of a contract to an online marketplace provider pursuant to 
subsection (a) may be made without the use of full and open 
competition.
    (h) Order Information.--
            (1) In general.--The Administrator shall require each 
        online marketplace provider awarded a contract pursuant to 
        subsection (a) to provide to the General Services 
        Administration, not less frequently than the first day of each 
        month, the ability to electronically access the following 
        information with respect to each product ordered during the 
        preceding month:
                    (A) The product name and description.
                    (B) The date and time of the order.
                    (C) The product price.
                    (D) The person or entity within the department or 
                agency that purchased the product and, if appropriate, 
                the official who authorized the purchase.
                    (E) The delivery address specified in the order for 
                the product.
                    (F) The number of suppliers that offered the same 
                product or a similar product with substantially the 
                same physical, functional, or performance 
                characteristics on the same date and time that the 
                product was ordered.
            (2) Data system.--The Administrator shall ensure that order 
        information listed in paragraph (1) is entered into the Federal 
        Procurement Data System described in section 1122 of title 41, 
        United States Code.
    (i) Limitation on Information Disclosure.--In any contract awarded 
to an online marketplace provider pursuant to subsection (a), the 
Administrator shall require that the provider agree not to sell or 
otherwise make available to any third party any of the information 
listed in subsection (h)(1) in a manner that identifies the Federal 
Government, or any of its departments or agencies, as the purchaser, 
except with written consent of the Administrator.
    (j) Comptroller General Review of Small Business Participation.--
            (1) Report requirement.--Not later than three years after a 
        contract with an online marketplace provider is awarded 
        pursuant to subsection (a), the Comptroller General of the 
        United States shall submit to the committees listed in 
        paragraph (2) a report on small business participation in the 
        program established pursuant to subsection (a). The report 
        shall include--
                    (A) the number of small business concerns that have 
                registered or that have sold goods with at least one 
                online marketplace provider;
                    (B) trends in small business participation;
                    (C) the effect, if any, of the program on the 
                ability of agencies to meet goals established under 
                section 15(g) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
                644(g)); and
                    (D) a discussion of the limitations, if any, to 
                small business participation in the program.
            (2) Committees.--The committees listed in this paragraph 
        are the following:
                    (A) The Committees on Armed Services of the Senate 
                and House of Representatives.
                    (B) The Committee on Homeland Security and 
                Governmental Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on 
                Oversight and Government Reform of the House of 
                Representatives.
                    (C) The Committee on Small Business and 
                Entrepreneurship of the Senate and the Committee on 
                Small Business of the House of Representatives.
    (k) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) Online marketplace provider.--The term ``online 
        marketplace provider'' means a commercial, non-Government 
        entity providing an online portal for the purchase of 
        commercial products aggregated, distributed, sold, or 
        manufactured by such entity. The term does not include an 
        online portal managed by the Government for, or predominantly 
        for use by, Government agencies.
            (2) Commercial product.--The term ``commercial product'' 
        means a commercially available off-the-shelf item, as defined 
        in section 104 of title 41, United States Code, except the term 
        does not include services.
            (3) Small business concern.--The term ``small business 
        concern'' has the meaning given such term under section 3 of 
        the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632).

SEC. 802. PERFORMANCE OF INCURRED COST AUDITS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 137 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 2313a the following new section:
``Sec. 2313b. Performance of incurred cost audits
    ``(a) Compliance With Standards of Risk and Materiality.--Not later 
than October 1, 2020, the Secretary of Defense shall comply with 
commercially accepted standards of risk and materiality in the 
performance of each incurred cost audit of costs associated with a 
contract of the Department of Defense.
    ``(b) Conditions for the Use of Qualified Private Auditors to 
Perform Incurred Cost Audits.--(1) The Secretary shall use a qualified 
private auditor to perform a sufficient number of incurred cost audits 
of contracts of the Department of Defense in order to ensure that--
            ``(A) any backlog of incurred cost audits of the Defense 
        Contract Audit Agency is eliminated by October 1, 2020;
            ``(B) incurred cost audits are completed not later than one 
        year after the date of receipt of a qualified incurred cost 
        submission;
            ``(C) sufficient private sector capacity exists to meet the 
        current and future needs of the Department of Defense for the 
        performance of incurred cost audits;
            ``(D) qualified private auditors are used to perform a 
        substantial number of incurred cost audits on an ongoing basis 
        to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the performance 
        of incurred cost audits;
            ``(E) the Defense Contract Audit Agency is able to devote 
        ample resources to high priority audits; and
            ``(F) multi-year auditing is conducted only to address 
        outstanding incurred cost audits for which a qualified incurred 
        cost submission was submitted to the Defense Contract Audit 
        Agency more than 12 months before the date of the enactment of 
        this section.
            ``(2)(A) Not later than October 1, 2018, the Secretary of 
        Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        copy of the acquisition plan required by the Federal 
        Acquisition Regulation for the task order contract to be 
        awarded under subparagraph (B). Such plan shall also include--
                    ``(i) a description of the incurred cost audits 
                that the Secretary determines are appropriate to be 
                conducted by qualified private auditors, including the 
                approximate number and dollar value of such incurred 
                cost audits; and
                    ``(ii) an estimate of the number and dollar value 
                of incurred cost audits to be conducted by qualified 
                private auditors for each of the fiscal years 2019 
                through 2025 necessary to meet the requirements of 
                paragraph (1).
            ``(B) Not later than October 1, 2019, the Secretary of 
        Defense or a Federal department or agency authorized by the 
        Secretary shall award an indefinite delivery-indefinite 
        quantity task order contract to two or more qualified private 
        auditors to perform incurred cost audits of costs associated 
        with contracts of the Department of Defense.
            ``(C) The Defense Contract Management Agency, a contract 
        administration office of a military department, or an 
        authorized entity outside of the Department of Defense shall 
        issue a task order to perform an incurred cost audit to a 
        qualified private auditor under a task order contract awarded 
        under subparagraph (B), if issuing such task order will assist 
        the Secretary in meeting the requirements of paragraph (1). 
        Such task order may be issued only to a qualified private 
        auditor that certifies that the qualified private auditor 
        possesses the necessary independence to perform such an audit.
            ``(D) A qualified private auditor performing an incurred 
        cost audit of a contract of the Department of Defense shall 
        develop and maintain complete and accurate working papers on 
        each incurred cost audit. All working papers and reports on the 
        incurred cost audit prepared by such qualified private auditor 
        shall be the property of the Department of Defense, except that 
        the qualified private auditor may retain a complete copy of all 
        working papers to support such reports made pursuant to this 
        section.
            ``(E) The Defense Contract Audit Agency may not conduct 
        further audit or review of an incurred cost audit performed by 
        a qualified private auditor pursuant to this section unless 
        requested to do so as part of conducting contract quality 
        assurance functions in accordance with the Federal Acquisition 
        Regulation.
            ``(3)(A) Effective October 1, 2022, the Defense Contract 
        Audit Agency may issue unqualified audit findings for an 
        incurred cost audit only if the Defense Contract Audit Agency 
        is peer reviewed by a commercial auditor and passes such peer 
        review. This peer review shall be conducted in accordance with 
        the peer review requirements of generally accepted government 
        auditing standards of the Comptroller General of the United 
        States and shall be deemed to meet the requirements of the 
        Defense Contract Audit Agency for a peer review under such 
        standards.
                    ``(B) The peer review referred to in subparagraph 
                (A) shall occur not less frequently than once every 
                three years.
                    ``(C) Not later than October 1, 2019, the Secretary 
                of Defense shall provide to the Committee on Armed 
                Services of the House of Representatives an update on 
                the process of securing a commercial auditor to perform 
                the peer review referred to in subparagraph (A).
            ``(4) The Secretary of Defense shall consider the results 
        of an incurred cost audit performed under this section without 
        regard to whether the Defense Contract Audit Agency or a 
        qualified private auditor performed the audit.
            ``(5) The contracting officer for a contract that is the 
        subject of an incurred cost audit shall have the sole 
        discretion to accept or reject an audit finding on direct costs 
        of the contract.
    ``(c) Materiality Standards for Incurred Cost Audits.--(1) Not 
later than October 1, 2020, and except as provided in paragraph (2), 
the minimum materiality standard used by an auditor shall--
                    ``(A) for an incurred cost audit of costs in an 
                amount less than or equal to $100,000, be 4 percent of 
                such costs;
                    ``(B) for an incurred cost audit of costs in an 
                amount greater than $100,000 but less than $500,000, be 
                $2,000 plus 2 percent of such costs;
                    ``(C) for an incurred cost audit of costs in an 
                amount greater than $500,000 but less than $1,000,000, 
                be $5,000 plus 1 percent of such costs;
                    ``(D) for an incurred cost audit of costs in an 
                amount greater than $1,000,000 but less than 
                $5,000,000, be $8,000 plus 0.9 percent of such costs;
                    ``(E) for an incurred cost audit of costs in an 
                amount greater than $5,000,000 but less than 
                $10,000,000, be $13,000 plus 0.8 percent of such costs;
                    ``(F) for an incurred cost audit of costs in an 
                amount greater than $10,000,000 but less than 
                $50,000,000, be $23,000 plus 0.7 percent of such costs;
                    ``(G) for an incurred cost audit of costs in an 
                amount greater than $50,000,000 but less than 
                $100,000,000, be $73,000 plus 0.6 percent of such 
                costs;
                    ``(H) for an incurred cost audit of costs in an 
                amount greater than $100,000,000 but less than 
                $500,000,000, be $153,000 plus 0.52 percent of such 
                costs; and
                    ``(I) for an incurred cost audit of costs in an 
                amount greater than $500,000,000, be $503,000 plus 0.45 
                percent of such costs.
            ``(2) An auditor that performs an incurred cost audit under 
        this section may use a materiality standard of a lesser amount 
        than the materiality standard described under paragraph (1) 
        with respect to a particular qualified incurred cost submission 
        from a contractor based on an assessment of risk presented by 
        such qualified incurred cost submission. The risk shall be 
        assessed by the auditor in accordance with generally accepted 
        government auditing standards and guidance issued by the 
        Secretary of Defense.
            ``(3) Not later than March 1, 2019, the Comptroller General 
        of the United States shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a report on practices for assessing risk and 
        materiality in auditing, which shall include--
                    ``(A) a summary of commercially accepted standards 
                of risk and materiality and Government standards for 
                risk and materiality as related to incurred cost 
                audits;
                    ``(B) examples of how commercial auditing firms 
                apply such standards in developing methodologies for 
                conducting incurred cost audits; and
                    ``(C) recommendations, if appropriate, to modify 
                the minimum materiality standards under paragraph (1) 
                to be consistent with commercially accepted standards 
                of risk and materiality.
            ``(4) Not later than October 1, 2019, and every 5 years 
        thereafter, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a report on commercially 
        accepted standards of risk and materiality as related to 
        incurred cost audits. The report may contain recommendations to 
        modify the materiality standards under paragraph (1) to be 
        consistent with such commercially accepted standards of risk 
        and materiality.
    ``(d) Timeliness of Incurred Cost Audits.--(1) The Secretary of 
Defense shall ensure that all incurred cost audits performed pursuant 
to subsection (b) are performed in a timely manner.
            ``(2) The Secretary of Defense shall notify a contractor 
        within 60 days after receipt of an incurred cost submission 
        from the contractor whether the submission is a qualified 
        incurred cost submission.
            ``(3) With respect to qualified incurred cost submissions 
        received on or after the date of the enactment of this section, 
        audit findings shall be issued for an incurred cost audit not 
        later than one year after the date of receipt of such qualified 
        incurred cost submission.
            ``(4) If audit findings are not issued within one year 
        after the date of receipt of a qualified incurred cost 
        submission, such qualified incurred cost submission shall be 
        considered accepted in its entirety unless the Secretary of 
        Defense can demonstrate that the contractor unreasonably 
        withheld information necessary to perform the incurred cost 
        audit.
    ``(f) Review of Audit Performance.--Not later than April 1, 2025, 
the Comptroller General of the United States shall provide a report to 
the congressional defense committees that evaluates for the period 
beginning on October 1, 2019, and ending on August 31, 2023--
            ``(1) the timeliness, individual cost, and quality of 
        incurred cost audits, set forth separately by incurred cost 
        audits performed by the Defense Contract Audit Agency and by 
        qualified private auditors;
            ``(2) the cost to contractors of the Department of Defense 
        for incurred cost audits, set forth separately by incurred cost 
        audits performed by the Defense Contract Audit Agency and by 
        qualified private auditors;
            ``(3) the effect, if any, on other types of audits 
        conducted by the Defense Contract Audit Agency that results 
        from incurred cost audits conducted by qualified private 
        auditors; and
            ``(4) the capability and capacity of commercial auditors to 
        conduct incurred cost audits for the Department of Defense.
    ``(g) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `commercial auditor' means a private entity 
        engaged in the business of performing audits.
            ``(2) The term `flexibly priced contract' means--
                    ``(A) a cost-type contract, fixed-price incentive 
                fee contract, or price-redeterminable contract, or a 
                task order issued under an indefinite delivery-
                indefinite quantity task order con- 10 tract, for which 
                final payment is based on actual costs incurred; or
                    ``(B) the materials portion of a time-and-materials 
                contract or labor-hour contract of the Department of 
                Defense.
            ``(3) The term `incurred cost audit' means an audit of 
        charges to the Government by a contractor under a flexibly 
        priced contract.
            ``(4) The term `materiality standard' means a dollar amount 
        of misstatements, including omissions, contained in an incurred 
        cost audit that would be material if the misstatements, 
        individually or in the aggregate, could reasonably be expected 
        to influence the economic decisions of the Government made on 
        the basis of the incurred cost audit.
            ``(5) The term `qualified incurred cost submission' means a 
        submission by a contractor of costs incurred under a flexibly 
        priced contract that has been qualified by the Department of 
        Defense as sufficient to conduct an incurred cost audit.
            ``(6) The term `qualified private auditor' means a 
        commercial auditor--
                    ``(A) that performs audits in accordance with 
                generally accepted government auditing standards of the 
                Comptroller General of the United States; and
                    ``(B) that has received a passing peer review 
                rating, as defined by generally accepted Government 
                auditing standards.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
such chapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to section 
2313a the following new item:

``2313b. Performance of incurred cost audits.''.

SEC. 803. MODIFICATIONS TO COST OR PRICING DATA AND REPORTING 
              REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) Modifications to Submissions of Cost or Pricing Data.--
            (1) Title 10.--Subsection (a) of section 2306a of title 10, 
        United States Code, is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``December 5, 1990'' each place it 
                appears and inserting ``June 30, 2018'';
                    (B) by striking ``December 5, 1991'' each place it 
                appears and inserting ``July 1, 2018'';
                    (C) by striking ``$100,000'' each place it appears 
                and inserting ``$750,000'';
                    (D) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) in subparagraphs (A)(i), (B)(i), 
                        (C)(i), (C)(ii), and (D)(i), by striking 
                        ``$500,000'' and inserting ``$2,500,000''; and
                            (ii) in subparagraph (B)(ii), by striking 
                        ``$500,000'' and inserting ``$750,000'';
                    (E) in paragraph (6), by striking ``December 5, 
                1990'' and inserting ``June 30, 2018''; and
                    (F) in paragraph (7), by striking ``to the amount'' 
                and all that follows through ``higher multiple of 
                $50,000.'' and inserting ``in accordance with section 
                1908 of title 41.''.
            (2) Title 41.--Section 3502 of title 41, United States 
        Code, is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a)--
                            (i) by striking ``October 13, 1994'' each 
                        place it appears and inserting ``June 30, 
                        2018'';
                            (ii) by striking ``$100,000'' each place it 
                        appears and inserting ``$750,000'';
                            (iii) in paragraphs (1)(A), (2)(A), (3)(A), 
                        (3)(B), and (4)(A), by striking ``$500,000'' 
                        and inserting ``$2,500,000''; and
                            (iv) in paragraph (2)(B), by striking 
                        ``$500,000'' and inserting ``$750,000'';
                    (B) in subsection (f), by striking ``October 13, 
                1994'' and inserting ``June 30, 2018''; and
                    (C) in subsection (g), by striking ``to the 
                amount'' and all that follows through ``higher multiple 
                of $50,000.'' and inserting ``in accordance with 
                section 1908.''.
    (b) Modification to Authority to Require Submission.--Paragraph (1) 
of section 2306a(d) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``the contracting officer shall require submission of'' and 
all the follows through ``to the extent necessary'' and inserting ``the 
offeror shall be required to submit to the contracting officer data 
other than certified cost or pricing data (if requested by the 
contracting officer), to the extent necessary''.
    (c) Comptroller General Review of Modifications to Cost or Pricing 
Data Submission Requirements.--Not later than March 1, 2022, the 
Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the implementation and 
effect of the amendments made by subsections (a) and (b).
    (d) Requirements for Defense Contract Audit Agency Report.--
            (1) In general.--Section 2313a of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a)(2)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (A)--
                                    (I) by inserting ``and dollar 
                                value'' after ``number''; and
                                    (II) by inserting ``, set forth 
                                separately by type of audit'' after 
                                ``pending'';
                            (ii) in subparagraph (C), by inserting ``, 
                        both from the date of receipt of a qualified 
                        incurred cost submission and from the date the 
                        audit begins'' after ``audit'';
                            (iii) by amending subparagraph (D) to read 
                        as follows:
                    ``(D) the sustained questioned costs, set forth 
                separately by type of audit, both as a total value and 
                as a percentage of the total questioned costs for the 
                audit;'';
                            (iv) by striking subparagraph (E); and
                            (v) by inserting after subparagraph (D) the 
                        following new subparagraphs:
                    ``(E) the total number and dollar value of incurred 
                cost audits completed, and the method by which such 
                incurred cost audits were completed;
                    ``(F) the aggregate cost of performing audits, set 
                forth separately by type of audit;
                    ``(G) the ratio of sustained questioned costs to 
                the aggregate costs of performing audits, set forth 
                separately by type of audit; and
                    ``(H) the total number and dollar value of audits 
                that are pending for a period longer than one year as 
                of the end of the fiscal year covered by the report, 
                and the fiscal year in which the qualified submission 
                was received, set forth separately by type of audit;''; 
                and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                subsection:
    ``(d) Definitions.--
            ``(1) The terms `incurred cost audit' and `qualified 
        incurred cost submission' have the meaning given those terms in 
        section 2313b of this title.
            ``(2) The term `sustained questioned costs' means 
        questioned costs that were recovered by the Federal Government 
        as a result of contract negotiations related to such questioned 
        costs.''.
            (2) Exemption to report termination requirements.--Section 
        1080 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
        2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1000; 10 U.S.C. 111 note), 
        as amended by section 1061(j) of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328), 
        does not apply to the report required to be submitted to 
        Congress under section 2313a of title 10, United States Code.
    (e) Adjustment to Value of Covered Contracts for Requirements 
Relating to Allowable Costs.--Subparagraph (B) of section 2324(l)(1) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``to the 
equivalent'' and all that follows through ``higher multiple of 
$50,000.'' and inserting ``in accordance with section 1908 of title 
41.''.

           PART II--EARLY INVESTMENTS IN ACQUISITION PROGRAMS

SEC. 811. REQUIREMENT TO EMPHASIZE RELIABILITY AND MAINTAINABILITY IN 
              WEAPON SYSTEM DESIGN.

    (a) Sustainment Factors in Weapon System Design.--
            (1) In general.--Chapter 144 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 2442. Sustainment factors in weapon system design
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the 
defense acquisition system gives ample emphasis to sustainment factors, 
particularly those factors that are affected principally by the design 
of a weapon system, in the development of a weapon system.
    ``(b) Requirements Process.--The Secretary shall ensure that 
reliability and maintainability are included in the performance 
attributes of the key performance parameter on sustainment during the 
development of capabilities requirements.
    ``(c) Solicitation and Award of Contracts.--
            ``(1) Requirement.--The program manager of a weapon system 
        shall include in the solicitation for and terms of a covered 
        contract for the weapon system clearly defined and measurable 
        requirements for engineering activities and design 
        specifications for reliability and maintainability.
            ``(2) Exception.--If the program manager determines that 
        engineering activities and design specifications for 
        reliability or maintainability should not be a requirement in a 
        covered contract, the program manager shall document in writing 
        the justification for the decision.
            ``(3) Source selection criteria.--The Secretary shall 
        ensure that sustainment factors, including reliability and 
        maintainability, are given ample emphasis in the process for 
        source selection. The Secretary shall encourage the use of 
        objective reliability and maintainability criteria in the 
        evaluation of competitive proposals.
    ``(d) Contract Performance.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Secretary shall ensure that the 
        Department of Defense uses best practices for responding to the 
        positive or negative performance of a contractor in meeting the 
        sustainment requirements of a covered contract for a weapon 
        system. The Secretary shall encourage the use of incentive fees 
        authorized in paragraph (2) in all covered contracts for 
        weapons systems. The Secretary shall take the necessary actions 
        to enable program offices to execute the recovery options 
        required for each covered contract under paragraph (3).
            ``(2) Authority for incentive fees.--The Secretary of 
        Defense is authorized to pay an incentive fee to a contractor 
        that exceeds the design specification requirements for 
        reliability or maintainability for a covered contract. In 
        exercising the authority provided in this paragraph, the 
        Secretary may provide in the terms of the contract for the 
        payment of an incentive fee to a contractor not later than the 
        date of acceptance of the last item under the contract.
            ``(3) Recovery options.--(A) Any covered contract for a 
        weapon system shall include terms for amounts to be paid by the 
        contractor to the Government for failure to meet the design 
        specification requirements for reliability and maintainability 
        of the contract by the date of acceptance of the last item 
        under the contract. Terms for such amounts shall be included in 
        the solicitation for the contract. Such terms shall include 
        provisions providing that--
                    ``(i) the contractor, at no or minimal cost to the 
                Government as determined by the Secretary and included 
                in the contract, identifies the cause of the failure in 
                the system design, develops an engineering change, and, 
                in the case of a production contract, modifies all end 
                items to be delivered or already delivered under the 
                contract; or
                    ``(ii) the contractor provides the Government--
                            ``(I) a refund in the amount required to 
                        identify the cause of the failure in the system 
                        design, develop an engineering change, and 
                        modify all end items delivered under the 
                        contract; and
                            ``(II) associated technical data required 
                        to make the necessary modifications.
            ``(B) The Secretary may waive the requirement in 
        subparagraph (A) with respect to a covered contract if the 
        Secretary determines that such requirement is not in the 
        national security interests of the United States.
            ``(4) Measurement of reliability and maintainability.--In 
        carrying out paragraphs (2) and (3), the program manager shall 
        base determinations of a contractor's performance on 
        reliability and maintainability data collected during 
        developmental testing and operational testing.
    ``(e) Covered Contract Defined.--In this section, the term `covered 
contract', with respect to a weapon system, means a contract--
            ``(1) for the engineering and manufacturing development of 
        a weapon system; or
            ``(2) for the production of a weapon system.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of subchapter I of such chapter is amended by adding 
        at the end the following new item:

``2442. Sustainment factors in weapon system design.''.
    (b) Effective Date for Certain Provisions.--Subsections (c) and (d) 
of section 2442 of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection 
(a), shall apply with respect to any covered contract (as defined in 
that section) for which the contract solicitation is issued on or after 
the date occurring one year after the date of the enactment of this 
Act.
    (c) Investment Program Authorized.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish 
        an investment program for funding engineering changes to the 
        design of a weapon system in the engineering and manufacturing 
        development phase or in the production phase of an acquisition 
        program to improve reliability or maintainability of the weapon 
        system and reduce projected operating and support costs. The 
        program may be funded from the Defense Modernization Account 
        authorized in section 2216 of title 10, United States Code. A 
        program manager may apply for available funds by presenting a 
        business case analysis of the anticipated return on investment 
        of such funds.
            (2) Briefing required.--Not later than 180 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in 
        consultation with the Secretaries of the military departments, 
        shall provide a briefing to the Committees on Armed Services in 
        the Senate and the House of Representatives on an 
        implementation plan for the program authorized under paragraph 
        (1). The implementation plan shall set forth the process by 
        which program managers apply for available funds, including 
        information on the validation of business case analyses and the 
        evaluation of applications. The briefing shall also include the 
        results of a review of past or existing programs to improve 
        reliability and maintainability and reduce operating and 
        support costs of weapon systems, an assessment of best 
        practices and lessons learned from these programs, and an 
        assessment of the opportunities for consolidation of existing 
        similar programs.

SEC. 812. LICENSING OF APPROPRIATE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY TO SUPPORT 
              MAJOR WEAPON SYSTEMS.

    (a) Negotiation of Price for Technical Data Before Development or 
Production of Major Weapon System.--
            (1) Requirement.--Chapter 144 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by inserting after section 2438 the following 
        new section:
``Sec. 2439. Negotiation of price for technical data before development 
              or production of major weapon systems
    ``The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the Department of 
Defense, before selecting a contractor for the engineering and 
manufacturing development of a major weapon system, or for the 
production of a major weapon system, negotiates a price for technical 
data to be delivered under a contract for such development or 
production.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of such chapter is amended by inserting after the 
        item relating to section 2438 the following new item:

``2439. Negotiation of price for technical data before development or 
                            production of major weapon systems.''.
            (3) Effective date.--Section 2439 of title 10, United 
        States Code, as added by paragraph (1), shall apply with 
        respect to any contract for engineering and manufacturing 
        development of a major weapon system, or for the production of 
        a major weapon system, for which the contract solicitation is 
        issued on or after the date occurring one year after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act.
    (b) Written Determination for Milestone B Approval.--
            (1) In general.--Subsection (a)(3) of section 2366b of 
        title 10, United States Code, is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph 
                (M); and
                    (B) by inserting after subparagraph (N) the 
                following new subparagraph:
                    ``(O) appropriate actions have been taken to 
                negotiate and enter into a contract or contract options 
                for the technical data required to support the program; 
                and''.
            (2) Effective date.--Section 2366b(a)(3)(O) of title 10, 
        United States Code, as added by paragraph (1), shall apply with 
        respect to any major defense acquisition program receiving 
        Milestone B approval on or after the date occurring one year 
        after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (c) Preference for Negotiation of Customized License Agreements.--
Section 2320 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections 
        (g) and (h), respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new 
        subsection (f):
    ``(f) Preference for Specially Negotiated Licenses.--The Secretary 
of Defense shall, to the maximum extent practicable, negotiate and 
enter into a contract with a contractor for a specially negotiated 
license for technical data to support the product support strategy of a 
major weapon system or subsystem of a major weapon system. In 
performing the assessment and developing the corresponding strategy 
required under subsection (e) for such a system or subsystem, a program 
manager shall consider the use of specially negotiated licenses to 
acquire customized technical data appropriate for the particular 
elements of the product support strategy.''.

SEC. 813. MANAGEMENT OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY MATTERS WITHIN THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Management of Intellectual Property.--
            (1) In general.--Chapter 137 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by inserting after section 2321 the following 
        new section:
``Sec. 2322. Management of intellectual property matters within the 
              Department of Defense
    ``(a) Office and Director of Intellectual Property.--(1) There is 
an Office of Intellectual Property within the Office of the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment.
    ``(2) The Office shall be headed by a Director of Intellectual 
Property, who shall have the qualifications described in paragraph (3). 
The Director is responsible in the Department of Defense to the Under 
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment for policy and 
oversight of the acquisition and licensing of intellectual property 
within the Department of Defense. The Director shall report directly to 
the Under Secretary.
    ``(3) In order to qualify to be assigned to the position of 
Director, an individual shall--
            ``(A) have management expertise in, and professional 
        experience with, intellectual property matters, including an 
        understanding of intellectual property law, regulations, and 
        policies, especially with respect to regulations and policies 
        of the Federal Government and the Department of Defense for 
        acquiring or licensing intellectual property, and best 
        practices for negotiating and executing business arrangements 
        with industry for the acquisition or licensing of intellectual 
        property;
            ``(B) have an understanding of Department of Defense weapon 
        system acquisition; and
            ``(C) have an understanding of the commercial marketplace; 
        commercial industry operations, including supply chain 
        operations; business strategies; and private investment in 
        research and development.
    ``(4) The Secretary of Defense shall designate the position of 
Director as a critical acquisition position under section 1733(b)(1)(C) 
of this title.
    ``(b) Duties.--(1) The Director of Intellectual Property (in this 
section referred to as the `Director') shall oversee and coordinate 
efforts throughout the Department of Defense to acquire or license 
intellectual property within the Department of Defense. The duties 
under this paragraph shall include the duties specified in paragraphs 
(2) through (8).
    ``(2) The Director shall develop and recommend any policy guidance 
on the acquisition or licensing of intellectual property to be issued 
by the Secretary of Defense.
    ``(3) The Director shall provide oversight and coordination of the 
efforts within the Department of Defense to acquire or license 
intellectual property--
            ``(A) to ensure that program managers are aware of the 
        rights afforded the Federal Government and contractors in 
        intellectual property and that program managers fully consider 
        and use all available techniques and best practices for 
        acquiring or licensing intellectual property early in the 
        acquisition process;
            ``(B) to enable consistency across the military departments 
        and the Department of Defense in strategies for obtaining 
        intellectual property and communicating with industry; and
            ``(C) to raise awareness within the acquisition, science 
        and technology, and logistics communities within the Department 
        of intellectual property issues.
    ``(4) The Director shall assist program managers in developing 
customized intellectual property strategies for each weapon system 
based on, at a minimum, the unique characteristics of the weapon system 
and its components, the product support strategy for the weapon system, 
the organic industrial base strategy of the military department 
concerned, and the commercial market.
    ``(5) The Director shall develop guidelines and resources on 
intellectual property matters and make them available to the 
acquisition workforce. Such guidelines and resources shall include 
templates for specially negotiated licenses (as appropriate) and a 
collection of definitions, key terms, examples, and case studies that 
demonstrate and resolve ambiguities in the differences between--
            ``(A) detailed manufacturing and process data;
            ``(B) form, fit, and function data; and
            ``(C) data required for operations, maintenance, 
        installation, and training.
    ``(6) The Director shall establish, maintain, supervise, and assign 
to program offices the cadre of intellectual property experts 
established under subsection (c).
    ``(7) The Director, in coordination with the Defense Acquisition 
University and in consultation with industry, shall--
            ``(A) develop a career path, including development 
        opportunities, talent management programs, and training, for 
        the cadre of intellectual property experts established under 
        subsection (c); and
            ``(B) develop, update, and coordinate intellectual property 
        training provided to the acquisition workforce.
    ``(8) The Director shall foster communications with industry and 
serve as a central point of contact within the Department of Defense 
for communications with contractors on intellectual property matters. 
The Director may interact directly with industry, trade associations, 
other Government agencies, academic research and educational 
institutions, and scientific organizations engaged in intellectual 
property matters. As part of such communications, the Director shall 
regularly engage with appropriately representative entities, including 
large and small businesses, traditional and non-traditional Government 
contractors, prime contractors and subcontractors, and maintenance 
repair organizations.
    ``(c) Cadre of Intellectual Property Experts.--(1) The Director 
shall establish within the Office of Intellectual Property a cadre of 
personnel who are experts in intellectual property matters. The purpose 
of the cadre is to ensure a consistent, strategic, and highly 
knowledgeable approach to acquiring or licensing intellectual property 
by providing expert advice, assistance, and resources to the 
acquisition workforce on intellectual property matters, including 
acquiring or licensing intellectual property.
    ``(2) The cadre of experts shall be assigned to a weapons system 
program office or an acquisition command within a military department 
to advise, assist, and provide resources to a program manager or 
program executive officer on intellectual property matters at various 
stages of the life cycle of a weapon system. In performing such duties, 
the experts shall--
            ``(A) interpret and provide counsel on laws, regulations, 
        and policies relating to intellectual property;
            ``(B) advise and assist in the development of an 
        acquisition strategy, product support strategy, and 
        intellectual property strategy for a weapon system;
            ``(C) conduct or assist with financial analysis and 
        valuation of intellectual property;
            ``(D) assist in the drafting of a contract solicitation or 
        contract;
            ``(E) interact with or assist in interactions with 
        contractors, including communications and negotiations with 
        contractors on contract solicitations and contract awards; and
            ``(F) conduct or assist with mediation if technical data 
        delivered pursuant to a contract is incomplete or does not 
        comply with the terms of the contract.
    ``(3)(A) In order to achieve the purpose set forth in paragraph 
(1), the Director shall ensure the cadre has the appropriate number of 
staff and such staff possesses the necessary skills, knowledge, and 
experience to carry out the duties under paragraph (2), including in 
relevant areas of law, contracting, acquisition, logistics, 
engineering, financial analysis, and valuation. The Director may use 
existing authorities to staff the cadre, including those in 
subparagraphs (B), (C), (D), and (F).
    ``(B) Civilian personnel from within the Office of the Secretary of 
Defense, Joint Staff, military departments, Defense Agencies, and 
combatant commands may be assigned to serve as members of the cadre, 
upon request of the Director.
    ``(C) The Director may use the authorities for highly qualified 
experts under section 9903 of title 5, to hire experts as members of 
the cadre who are skilled professionals in intellectual property and 
related matters.
    ``(D) The Director may enter into a contract with a private-sector 
entity for specialized expertise to support the cadre. Such entity may 
be considered a covered Government support contractor, as defined in 
section 2320 of this title.
    ``(E) In establishing the cadre, the Director shall give preference 
to civilian employees of the Department of Defense, rather than members 
of the armed forces, to maintain continuity in the cadre.
    ``(F) The Director is authorized to use funding from the Defense 
Acquisition Workforce Development Fund for the purpose of recruitment, 
training, and retention of the cadre, including paying salaries of 
newly hired members of the cadre for up to three years.
    ``(G) Members of the cadre shall report to the Director.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of such chapter is amended by adding at the end the 
        following new item:

``2322. Management of intellectual property matters within the 
                            Department of Defense.''.
    (b) Placement in the Office of the Secretary of Defense.--
Subsection 131(b)(8) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(J) The Director of the Office of Intellectual 
                Property assigned pursuant to section 2322(a) of this 
                title.''.
    (c) Additional Acquisition Position.--Subsection 1721(b) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following 
new paragraph:
            ``(12) Intellectual property.''.
    (d) Review of Acquisition Workforce Training.--Not later than one 
year after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of 
Defense shall revise the education and training programs provided to 
the acquisition workforce under chapter 87 of title 10, United States 
Code--
            (1) to ensure the acquisition workforce maintains a basic 
        familiarity with the fundamental aspects of the acquisition and 
        licensing of intellectual property; and
            (2) to establish and maintain advanced expertise in the 
        acquisition and licensing of intellectual property to staff the 
        cadre of intellectual property experts required under section 
        2322 of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection 
        (a).

SEC. 814. IMPROVEMENT OF PLANNING FOR ACQUISITION OF SERVICES.

    (a) In General.--
            (1) Improvement of planning for acquisition of services.--
        Chapter 137 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
        inserting after section 2328 the following new section:
``Sec. 2329. Procurement of services: data analysis and requirements 
              validation
    ``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that--
            ``(1) appropriate and sufficiently detailed data are 
        collected and analyzed to support the validation of 
        requirements for services contracts and inform the planning, 
        programming, budgeting, and execution process of the Department 
        of Defense;
            ``(2) requirements for services contracts are evaluated 
        appropriately and in a timely manner to inform decisions 
        regarding the procurement of services; and
            ``(3) decisions regarding the procurement of services 
        consider available resources and total force management 
        policies and procedures.
    ``(b) Specification of Amounts Requested in Budget.--Effective 
October 1, 2022, the Secretary of Defense shall annually submit to 
Congress information on services contracts that clearly and separately 
identifies the amount requested for each category of services to be 
procured for each Defense Agency, Department of Defense Field Activity, 
command, or military installation. Such information shall--
            ``(1) be submitted at or about the time of the budget 
        submission by the President under section 1105(a) of title 31;
            ``(2) cover the fiscal year covered by such budget 
        submission by the President;
            ``(3) be consistent with total amounts of estimated 
        expenditures and proposed appropriations necessary to support 
        the programs, projects, and activities of the Department of 
        Defense included in such budget submission by the President for 
        that fiscal year; and
            ``(4) be organized using a common enterprise data structure 
        developed under section 2222 of this title.
    ``(c) Data Analysis.--(1) Each Secretary of a military department 
shall regularly analyze past spending patterns and anticipated future 
requirements with respect to the procurement of services within such 
military department.
    ``(2)(A) The Secretary of Defense shall regularly analyze past 
spending patterns and anticipated future requirements with respect to 
the procurement of services--
            ``(i) within each Defense Agency and Department of Defense 
        Field Activity; and
            ``(ii) across military departments, Defense Agencies, and 
        Department of Defense Field Activities.
    ``(B) The Secretaries of the military departments shall make data 
on services contracts available to the Secretary of Defense for 
purposes of conducting the analysis required under subparagraph (A).
    ``(3) The analyses conducted under this subsection shall--
            ``(A) identify contracts for similar services that are 
        procured for three or more consecutive years at each Defense 
        Agency, Department of Defense Field Activity, command, or 
        military installation;
            ``(B) evaluate patterns in the procurement of services, to 
        the extent practicable, at each Defense Agency, Department of 
        Defense Field Activity, command, or military installation and 
        by category of services procured;
            ``(C) be used to validate requirements for services 
        contracts entered into after the date of the enactment of this 
        subsection; and
            ``(D) be used to inform decisions on the award of and 
        funding for such services contracts.
    ``(d) Requirements Evaluation.--Each Services Requirements Review 
Board shall evaluate each requirement for a services contract, taking 
into consideration total force management policies and procedures, 
available resources, the analyses conducted under subsection (c), and 
contracting efficacy and efficiency. An evaluation of a services 
contract for compliance with contracting policies and procedures may 
not be considered to be an evaluation of a requirement for such 
services contract.
    ``(e) Timely Planning to Avoid Bridge Contracts.--(1) Effective 
October 1, 2018, the Secretary of Defense shall ensure that a 
requirements owner shall, to the extent practicable, plan appropriately 
before the date of need of a service at a Defense Agency, Department of 
Defense Field Activity, command, or military installation to avoid the 
use of a bridge contract to provide for continuation of a service to be 
performed through a services contract. Such planning shall include 
allowing time for a requirement to be validated, a services contract to 
be entered into, and funding for the services contract to be secured.
    ``(2)(A) Upon the first use, due to inadequate planning (as 
determined by the Secretary of Defense), of a bridge contract to 
provide for continuation of a service to be performed through a 
services contract, the requirements owner, along with the contracting 
officer or a designee of the contracting officer for the contract, 
shall--
            ``(i) for a services contract in an amount less than 
        $10,000,000, provide an update on the status of the bridge 
        contract (including the rationale for using the bridge 
        contract) to the commander or the senior civilian official of 
        the Defense Agency concerned, Department of Defense Field 
        Activity concerned, command concerned, or military installation 
        concerned, as applicable; or
            ``(ii) for a services contract in an amount equal to or 
        greater than $10,000,000, provide an update on the status of 
        the bridge contract (including the rationale for using the 
        bridge contract) to the service acquisition executive for the 
        military department concerned, the head of the Defense Agency 
        concerned, the combatant commander concerned, or the Under 
        Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, as 
        applicable.
    ``(B) Upon the second use, due to inadequate planning (as 
determined by the Secretary of Defense), of a bridge contract to 
provide for continuation of a service to be performed through a 
services contract in an amount less than $10,000,000, the commander or 
senior civilian official referred to in subparagraph (A)(i) shall 
provide notification of such second use to the Vice Chief of Staff of 
the armed force concerned and the service acquisition executive of the 
military department concerned, the head of the Defense Agency 
concerned, the combatant commander concerned, or the Under Secretary of 
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, as applicable.
    ``(f) Exception.--Except with respect to the analyses required 
under subsection (c), this section shall not apply to--
            ``(1) services contracts in support of contingency 
        operations, humanitarian assistance, disaster relief, or 
        national security emergencies; or
            ``(2) services contracts entered into pursuant to an 
        international agreement.
    ``(g) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `bridge contact' means--
                    ``(A) an extension to an existing contract beyond 
                the period of performance to avoid a lapse in service 
                caused by a delay in awarding a subsequent contract; or
                    ``(B) a new short-term contract awarded on a sole-
                source basis to avoid a lapse in service caused by a 
                delay in awarding a subsequent contract.
            ``(2) The term `requirements owner' means a member of the 
        armed forces (other than the Coast Guard) or a civilian 
        employee of the Department of Defense responsible for a 
        requirement for a service to be performed through a services 
        contract.
            ``(3) The term `Services Requirements Review Board' has the 
        meaning given in Department of Defense Instruction 5000.74, 
        titled `Defense Acquisition of Services' and dated January 5, 
        2016, or a successor instruction.''
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of such chapter is amended by inserting after the 
        item relating to section 2328 the following new item:

``2329. Procurement of services: data analysis and requirements 
                            validation.''.

SEC. 815. IMPROVEMENTS TO TEST AND EVALUATION PROCESSES AND TOOLS.

    (a) Developmental Test Plan Sufficiency Assessments.--
            (1) Addition to milestone b brief summary report.--Section 
        2366b(c)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
                    (A) by redesignating subparagraph (G) as 
                subparagraph (H); and
                    (B) by inserting after subparagraph (F) the 
                following new subparagraph (G):
                    ``(G) An assessment of the sufficiency of 
                developmental test and evaluation plans, including the 
                use of automated data analytics or modeling and 
                simulation tools.''.
            (2) Addition to milestone c brief summary report.--Section 
        2366c(a) of such title is amended by inserting after paragraph 
        (3) the following new paragraph:
            ``(4) An assessment of the sufficiency of the developmental 
        test and evaluation completed, including the use of automated 
        data analytics or modeling and simulation tools.''.
            (3) Responsibility for conducting assessments.--For 
        purposes of the sufficiency assessments required by section 
        2366b(c)(1) and section 2366c(a)(4) of such title, as added by 
        paragraphs (1) and (2), with respect to a major defense 
        acquisition program--
                    (A) if the milestone decision authority for the 
                program is the service acquisition executive of the 
                military department that is managing the program, the 
                sufficiency assessment shall be conducted by the senior 
                official within the military department with 
                responsibility for developmental testing; and
                    (B) if the milestone decision authority for the 
                program is the Under Secretary of Defense for 
                Acquisition and Sustainment, the sufficiency assessment 
                shall be conducted by the senior Department of Defense 
                official with responsibility for developmental testing.
            (4) Guidance required.--Within one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the senior Department of Defense 
        official with responsibility for developmental testing shall 
        develop guidance for the sufficiency assessments required by 
        section 2366b(c)(1) and section 2366c(a)(4) of title 10, United 
        States Code, as added by paragraphs (1) and (2). At a minimum, 
        the guidance shall require--
                    (A) for the sufficiency assessment required by 
                section 2366b(c)(1) of such title, that the assessment 
                address the sufficiency of--
                            (i) the developmental test and evaluation 
                        plan;
                            (ii) the developmental test and evaluation 
                        schedule, including a comparison to historic 
                        analogous systems;
                            (iii) the developmental test and evaluation 
                        resources (facilities, personnel, test assets, 
                        data analytics tools, and modeling and 
                        simulation capabilities);
                            (iv) the risks of developmental test and 
                        production concurrency; and
                            (v) the developmental test criteria for 
                        entering the production phase; and
                    (B) for the sufficiency assessment required by 
                section 2366c(a)(4) of such title, that the assessment 
                address--
                            (i) the sufficiency of the developmental 
                        test and evaluation completed;
                            (ii) the sufficiency of the plans and 
                        resources available for remaining developmental 
                        test and evaluation;
                            (iii) the risks identified during 
                        developmental testing to the production and 
                        deployment phase;
                            (iv) the sufficiency of the plans and 
                        resources for remaining developmental test and 
                        evaluation; and
                            (v) the readiness of the system to perform 
                        scheduled initial operational test and 
                        evaluation.
    (b) Evaluation of Department of Defense Need for Centralized Tools 
for Developmental Test and Evaluation.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall evaluate 
        the strategy of the Department of Defense for developing and 
        expanding the use of tools designed to facilitate the cost 
        effectiveness and efficiency of developmental testing, 
        including automated test methods and tools, modeling and 
        simulation tools, and big data analytics technologies. The 
        evaluation shall include a determination of the appropriate 
        role of the senior Department of Defense official with 
        responsibility for developmental testing in developing 
        enterprise level strategies related to such types of testing 
        tools.
            (2) Briefing required.--Not later than one year after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall provide 
        a briefing to the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives on the results of the evaluation required by 
        paragraph (1).

              PART III--ACQUISITION WORKFORCE IMPROVEMENTS

SEC. 821. ENHANCEMENTS TO THE CIVILIAN PROGRAM MANAGEMENT WORKFORCE.

    (a) Establishment of Program Manager Development Program.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation 
        with the Secretaries of the military departments, shall 
        implement a program manager development program to provide for 
        the professional development of high-potential, experienced 
        civilian personnel. Personnel shall be competitively selected 
        for the program based on their potential to become a program 
        manager of a major defense acquisition program, as defined in 
        section 2430 of title 10, United States Code. The program shall 
        be administered and overseen by the Secretary of each military 
        department, acting through the service acquisition executive 
        for the department concerned.
            (2) Plan required.--Not later than one year after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        provide to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and 
        the House of Representatives a comprehensive plan to implement 
        the program established under paragraph (1). In developing the 
        plan, the Secretary of Defense shall seek the input of relevant 
        external parties, including professional associations, other 
        government entities, and industry. The plan shall include the 
        following elements:
                    (A) An assessment of the minimum level of subject 
                matter experience, education, years of experience, 
                certifications, and other qualifications required to be 
                selected into the program, set forth separately for 
                current Department of Defense employees and for 
                personnel hired into the program from outside the 
                Department of Defense.
                    (B) A description of hiring flexibilities to be 
                used to recruit qualified personnel from outside the 
                Department of Defense.
                    (C) A description of the extent to which mobility 
                agreements will be required to be signed by personnel 
                selected for the program during their participation in 
                the program and after their completion of the program. 
                The use of mobility agreements shall be applied to help 
                maximize the flexibility of the Department of Defense 
                in assigning personnel, while not inhibiting the 
                participation of the most capable candidates.
                    (D) A description of the tenure obligation required 
                of personnel selected for the program.
                    (E) A plan for training during the course of the 
                program, including training in leadership, program 
                management, engineering, finance and budgeting, market 
                research, business acumen, contracting, supplier 
                management, requirement setting and tradeoffs, 
                intellectual property matters, and software.
                    (F) A description of career paths to be followed by 
                personnel in the program in order to ensure that 
                personnel in the program gain expertise in the program 
                management functional career field competencies 
                identified by the Department in existing guidance and 
                the topics listed in subparagraph (E), including--
                            (i) a determination of the types of 
                        advanced educational degrees that enhance 
                        program management skills and the mechanisms 
                        available to the Department of Defense to 
                        facilitate the attainment of those degrees by 
                        personnel in the program;
                            (ii) a determination of required 
                        assignments to positions within acquisition 
                        programs, including position type and 
                        acquisition category of the program office;
                            (iii) a determination of required or 
                        encouraged rotations to career broadening 
                        positions outside of acquisition programs; and
                            (iv) a determination of how the program 
                        will ensure the opportunity for a required 
                        rotation to industry of at least six months to 
                        develop an understanding of industry motivation 
                        and business acumen, such as by developing an 
                        industry exchange program for civilian program 
                        managers, similar to the Corporate Fellows 
                        Program of the Secretary of Defense.
                    (G) A general description of the number of 
                personnel anticipated to be selected into the program, 
                how frequently selections will occur, how long 
                personnel selected into the program will participate in 
                the program, and how personnel will be placed into an 
                assignment at the completion of the program.
                    (H) A description of benefits that will be offered 
                under the program using existing human capital 
                flexibilities to retain qualified employees, such as 
                student loan repayments.
                    (I) An assessment of personnel flexibilities needed 
                to allow the military departments and the Defense 
                Agencies to reassign or remove program managers that do 
                not perform effectively.
                    (J) A description of how the program will be 
                administered and overseen by the Secretaries of each 
                military department, acting through the service 
                acquisition executive for the department concerned.
                    (K) A description of how the program will be 
                integrated with existing program manager development 
                efforts at each military department.
            (3) Use of defense acquisition workforce development 
        fund.--Amounts in the Department of Defense Acquisition 
        Workforce Development Fund (established under section 1705 of 
        title 10, United States Code) may be used to pay the base 
        salary of personnel in the program established under paragraph 
        (1) during the period of time such personnel are temporarily 
        assigned to a developmental rotation or training program 
        anticipated to last at least six months.
            (4) Implementation.--The program established under 
        paragraph (1) shall be implemented not later than September 30, 
        2019.
    (b) Independent Study of Incentives for Program Managers.--
            (1) Requirement for study.--Not later than 30 days after 
        the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense 
        shall enter into a contract with an independent research entity 
        described in paragraph (2) to carry out a comprehensive study 
        of incentives for Department of Defense civilian and military 
        program managers for major defense acquisition programs, 
        including--
                    (A) additional pay options for program managers to 
                provide incentives to senior civilian employees and 
                military officers to accept and remain in program 
                manager roles;
                    (B) a financial incentive structure to reward 
                program managers for delivering capabilities on budget 
                and on time; and
                    (C) a comparison between financial and non-
                financial incentive structures for program managers in 
                the Department of Defense and an appropriate comparison 
                group of private industry companies.
            (2) Independent research entity.--The entity described in 
        this subsection is an independent research entity that is a 
        not-for-profit entity or a federally funded research and 
        development center with appropriate expertise and analytical 
        capability.
            (3) Reports.--
                    (A) To secretary.--Not later than nine months after 
                the date of the enactment of this Act, the independent 
                research entity shall provide to the Secretary a report 
                containing--
                            (i) the results of the study required by 
                        paragraph (1); and
                            (ii) such recommendations to improve the 
                        financial incentive structure of program 
                        managers for major defense acquisition programs 
                        as the independent research entity considers to 
                        be appropriate.
                    (B) To congress.--Not later than 30 days after 
                receipt of the report under subparagraph (A), the 
                Secretary of Defense shall submit such report, together 
                with any additional views or recommendations of the 
                Secretary, to the congressional defense committees.

SEC. 822. IMPROVEMENTS TO THE HIRING AND TRAINING OF THE ACQUISITION 
              WORKFORCE.

    (a) Use of Funds From the Defense Acquisition Workforce Development 
Fund to Pay Salaries of Personnel to Manage the Fund.--
            (1) In general.--Subsection 1705(e) of title 10, United 
        States Code, is amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) by inserting ``(A)'' before ``Subject 
                        to the provisions of this subsection''; and
                            (ii) by adding at the end the following new 
                        subparagraph:
            ``(B) Amounts in the Fund also may be used to pay salaries 
        of personnel at the Office of the Secretary of Defense, 
        military departments, and Defense Agencies to manage the 
        Fund.''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (3)--
                            (i) by striking ``and'' at the end of 
                        subparagraph (C);
                            (ii) by striking the period and inserting 
                        ``; and'' at the end of subparagraph (D); and
                            (iii) by adding at the end the following 
                        new subparagraph:
                    ``(E) describing the amount from the Fund that may 
                be used to pay salaries of personnel at the Office of 
                the Secretary of Defense, military departments, and 
                Defense Agencies to manage the Fund and the 
                circumstances under which such amounts may be used for 
                such purpose.''.
            (2) Guidance.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        issue, and submit to the congressional defense committees, the 
        policy guidance required by subparagraph (E) of section 
        1705(e)(3) of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
        paragraph (1).
    (b) Comptroller General Review of Effectiveness of Hiring and 
Retention Flexibilities for Acquisition Workforce Personnel.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than June 30, 2019, the 
        Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a report on the effectiveness 
        of hiring and retention flexibilities for the acquisition 
        workforce.
            (2) Elements.--The report under this subsection shall 
        include the following:
                    (A) A determination of the extent to which the 
                Department of Defense experiences challenges with 
                recruitment and retention of the acquisition workforce, 
                such as post-employment restrictions.
                    (B) A description of the hiring and retention 
                flexibilities available to the Department to fill 
                civilian acquisition positions and the extent to which 
                the Department has used the flexibilities available to 
                it to target critical or understaffed career fields.
                    (C) A determination of the extent to which the 
                Department has the necessary data on its use of hiring 
                and retention flexibilities for the civilian 
                acquisition workforce to strategically manage the use 
                of such flexibilities.
                    (D) An identification of the factors that affect 
                the use of hiring and retention flexibilities for the 
                civilian acquisition workforce.
                    (E) Recommendations for any necessary changes to 
                the hiring and retention flexibilities available to the 
                Department to fill civilian acquisition positions.
                    (F) A description of the flexibilities available to 
                the Department to remove underperforming members of the 
                acquisition workforce and the extent to which any such 
                flexibilities are used.
    (c) Assessment and Report Required on Business-related Training for 
the Acquisition Workforce.--
            (1) Assessment.--The Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment shall conduct an assessment of the 
        following:
                    (A) The effectiveness of industry certifications 
                and other industry training programs, including 
                fellowships, available to defense acquisition workforce 
                personnel.
                    (B) Gaps in knowledge of industry operations, 
                industry motivation, and business acumen in the 
                acquisition workforce.
            (2) Report.--Not later than December 31, 2018, the Under 
        Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of 
        the Senate and the House of Representatives a report containing 
        the results of the assessment conducted under this subsection.
            (3) Elements.--The assessment and report under paragraphs 
        (1) and (2) shall address the following:
                    (A) Current sources of training and career 
                development opportunities, industry rotations, and 
                other career development opportunities related to 
                knowledge of industry operations, industry motivation, 
                and business acumen for each acquisition position, as 
                designated under section 1721 of title 10, United 
                States Code.
                    (B) Gaps in training, industry rotations, and other 
                career development opportunities related to knowledge 
                of industry operations, industry motivation, and 
                business acumen for each such acquisition position.
                    (C) Plans to address those gaps for each such 
                acquisition position.
                    (D) Consideration of the role industry-taught 
                classes and classes taught at educational institutions 
                outside of the Defense Acquisition University could 
                play in addressing gaps.
    (d) Comptroller General Review of Acquisition Training for Non-
acquisition Workforce Personnel.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than June 30, 2019, the 
        Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a report on acquisition-
        related training for personnel working on acquisitions but not 
        considered to be part of the acquisition workforce (as defined 
        in section 101(18) of title 10, United States Code) (hereafter 
        in this subsection referred to as ``non-acquisition workforce 
        personnel'').
            (2) Elements.--The report shall address the following:
                    (A) The extent to which non-acquisition workforce 
                personnel play a significant role in defining 
                requirements, conducting market research, participating 
                in source selection and contract negotiation efforts, 
                and overseeing contract performance.
                    (B) The extent to which the Department is able to 
                identify and track non-acquisition workforce personnel 
                performing the roles identified in subparagraph (A).
                    (C) The extent to which non-acquisition workforce 
                personnel are taking acquisition training.
                    (D) The extent to which the Defense Acquisition 
                Workforce Development Fund has been used to provide 
                acquisition training to non-acquisition workforce 
                personnel.
                    (E) A description of sources of funding other than 
                the Fund that are available to and used by the 
                Department to provide non-acquisition workforce 
                personnel with acquisition training.
                    (F) The extent to which additional acquisition 
                training is needed for non-acquisition workforce 
                personnel, including the types of training needed, the 
                positions that need the training, and any challenges to 
                delivering necessary additional training.
    (e) Briefing on Improvements to the Defense Contract Audit Agency 
Workforce.--
            (1) Briefing required.--Not later than 180 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Director of the Defense 
        Contract Audit Agency, in consultation with the Under Secretary 
        of Defense (Comptroller), shall provide a briefing to the 
        Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of 
        Representatives.
            (2) Elements.--The briefing required by paragraph (1) shall 
        address the following:
                    (A) The current education, certifications, and 
                qualifications of the Defense Contract Audit Agency 
                workforce, by supervisory and non-supervisory levels 
                and type of position.
                    (B) Shortfalls (if any) in education, 
                qualification, or training in the Defense Contract 
                Audit Agency workforce, by supervisory and non-
                supervisory levels and type of position, and the 
                reasons for those shortfalls.
                    (C) The link (if any) between Defense Contract 
                Audit Agency workforce skill and experience gaps and 
                the Agency's backlog of audits.
                    (D) The link (if any) between the effectiveness of 
                Defense Contract Audit Agency regional directors and 
                their education, certifications, and qualifications.
                    (E) The number of Defense Contract Audit Agency 
                auditors who have relevant private sector experience, 
                including from industry exchanges while at the Defense 
                Contract Audit Agency and from prior employment 
                experiences, and the perspective of the Defense 
                Contract Audit Agency on the benefits of those 
                experiences.
                    (F) Ongoing efforts and future plans by the Defense 
                Contract Audit Agency to improve the 
                professionalization of its audit workforce, including 
                changes in hiring, training, required certifications or 
                qualifications, compensation structure, and increased 
                opportunities for industry exchanges or rotations.

SEC. 823. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATIONS TO ACQUISITION DEMONSTRATION 
              PROJECT.

    (a) Extension.--Section 1762(g) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by striking ``December 31, 2020'' and inserting ``December 31, 
2023''.
    (b) Implementation Strategy for Improvements in Acquisition 
Demonstration Project.--
            (1) Strategy required.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
        develop an implementation strategy to address areas for 
        improvement in the demonstration project required by section 
        1762 of title 10, United States Code, as identified in the 
        second assessment of such demonstration project required by 
        section 1762(e) of such title.
            (2) Elements.--The strategy shall include the following 
        elements:
                    (A) Actions that have been or will be taken to 
                assess whether the flexibility to set starting salaries 
                at different levels is being used appropriately by 
                supervisors and managers to compete effectively for 
                highly skilled and motivated employees.
                    (B) Actions that have been or will be taken to 
                assess reasons for any disparities in career outcomes 
                across race and gender for employees in the 
                demonstration project.
                    (C) Actions that have been or will be taken to 
                strengthen the link between employee contribution and 
                compensation for employees in the demonstration 
                project.
                    (D) Actions that have been or will be taken to 
                enhance the transparency of the pay system for 
                employees in the demonstration project.
                    (E) A time frame and individual responsible for 
                each action identified under subparagraphs (A) through 
                (D).
            (3) Briefing required.--Not later than one year after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense 
        shall provide a briefing to the Committees on Armed Services of 
        the Senate and House of Representatives and the Committee on 
        Oversight and Government Reform of the House of Representatives 
        on the implementation strategy required by paragraph (1).

SEC. 824. ACQUISITION POSITIONS IN THE OFFICES OF THE SECRETARIES OF 
              THE MILITARY DEPARTMENTS.

    (a) Office of the Secretary of the Army Maximum Number of 
Personnel.--Section 3014(f) of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(6) The limitation in paragraph (1) may be exceeded if a civilian 
employee is assigned on permanent duty in the Office of the Secretary 
of the Army or on the Army Staff and--
            ``(A) the employee was employed immediately preceding that 
        assignment either--
                    ``(i) in a position within the Office of the Under 
                Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and 
                Logistics that had responsibility for oversight of 
                acquisition programs or processes prior to February 1, 
                2018, and that was determined to be no longer needed as 
                a result of section 901 of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-
                328; 130 Stat. 2339) and the amendments made by that 
                section; or
                    ``(ii) in a Joint Staff position that supported the 
                Joint Requirements Oversight Council prior to December 
                23, 2016, and that was determined to be no longer 
                needed as a result of section 925 of the National 
                Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public 
                Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2359) and the amendments made by 
                that section; and
            ``(B) the position described in subparagraph (A) is not 
        filled by the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment or the Joint Staff after the 
        employee's permanent duty assignment.''.
    (b) Office of the Secretary of the Navy Maximum Number of 
Personnel.--Section 5014(f) of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(6) The limitation in paragraph (1) may be exceeded if a civilian 
employee is assigned on permanent duty in the Department of the Navy or 
assigned or detailed to permanent duty in the Office of the Secretary 
of the Navy, the Office of Chief of Naval Operations, or the 
Headquarters, Marine Corps, and--
            ``(A) the employee was employed immediately preceding that 
        assignment either--
                    ``(i) in a position within the Office of the Under 
                Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and 
                Logistics that had responsibility for oversight of 
                acquisition programs or processes prior to February 1, 
                2018, and that was determined to be no longer needed as 
                a result of section 901 of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-
                328; 130 Stat. 2339) and the amendments made by that 
                section; or
                    ``(ii) in a Joint Staff position that supported the 
                Joint Requirements Oversight Council prior to December 
                23, 2016, and that was determined to be no longer 
                needed as a result of section 925 of the National 
                Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public 
                Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2359) and the amendments made by 
                that section; and
            ``(B) the position described in subparagraph (A) is not 
        filled by the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment or the Joint Staff after the 
        employee's permanent duty assignment.''.
    (c) Office of the Secretary of the Air Force Maximum Number of 
Personnel.--Section 8014(f) of title 10, United States Code, is amended 
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(6) The limitation in paragraph (1) may be exceeded if a civilian 
employee is assigned on permanent duty in the Office of the Secretary 
of the Air Force or on the Air Staff and--
            ``(A) the employee was employed immediately preceding that 
        assignment either--
                    ``(i) in a position within the Office of the Under 
                Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and 
                Logistics that had responsibility for oversight of 
                acquisition programs or processes prior to February 1, 
                2018, and that was determined to be no longer needed as 
                a result of section 901 of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-
                328; 130 Stat. 2339) and the amendments made by that 
                section; or
                    ``(ii) in a Joint Staff position that supported the 
                Joint Requirements Oversight Council prior to December 
                23, 2016, and that was determined to be no longer 
                needed as a result of section 925 of the National 
                Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public 
                Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2359) and the amendments made by 
                that section; and
            ``(B) the position described in subparagraph (A) is not 
        filled by the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment or the Joint Staff after the 
        employee's permanent duty assignment.''.

                   PART IV--TRANSPARENCY IMPROVEMENTS

SEC. 831. TRANSPARENCY OF DEFENSE BUSINESS SYSTEM DATA.

    (a) Establishment of Common Enterprise Data Structures.--Section 
2222 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (d), by adding at the end the following 
        new paragraph:
            ``(7) Policy requiring that any data contained in a defense 
        business system is an asset of the Department of Defense, and 
        that such data should be made readily available to members of 
        the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, and 
        the military departments (except as otherwise provided by law 
        or regulation).'';
            (2) in subsection (e), by adding at the end the following 
        new paragraph:
            ``(5) Common enterprise data structures.--(A) The defense 
        business enterprise architecture shall include one or more 
        common enterprise data structures which can be used to code 
        data that are automatically extracted from the relevant defense 
        business systems to facilitate Department of Defense-wide 
        analysis and management of such data.
            ``(B) The Deputy Chief Management Officer shall--
                    ``(i) in consultation with the Defense Business 
                Council established under subsection (f), develop one 
                or more common enterprise data structures and an 
                associated data governance process; and
                    ``(ii) have primary decision-making authority with 
                respect to the development of any such common 
                enterprise data structure.
            ``(C) The Director of Cost Assessment and Program 
        Evaluation shall--
                    ``(i) in consultation with the Defense Business 
                Council established under subsection (f), document and 
                maintain any common enterprise data structure developed 
                under subparagraph (B);
                    ``(ii) extract data from defense business systems 
                using the appropriate common data enterprise structure 
                on a specified schedule;
                    ``(iii) provide access to such data to the Office 
                of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, and the 
                military departments (except as otherwise provided by 
                law or regulation) on a specified schedule developed in 
                consultation with the Defense Business Council 
                established under subsection (f); and
                    ``(iv) have primary decision-making authority with 
                respect to the maintenance of any such common 
                enterprise data structure.
            ``(D) Common enterprise data structures shall be 
        established and maintained for the following types of data of 
        the Department of Defense:
                    ``(i) An accounting of expenditures of the 
                Department of Defense, set forth separately for each 
                type of expenditure.
                    ``(ii) Data from the future-years defense program 
                established under section 221 and budget data.
                    ``(iii) Acquisition cost data and earned value 
                management data.
                    ``(iv) Operating and support costs for weapon 
                systems, including data on maintenance procedures 
                conducted on each major weapon system (as defined in 
                section 2379 of this title).
                    ``(v) Data on contracts and task orders of the 
                Department of Defense, including goods and services 
                acquired under such contracts or task orders and 
                associated obligations and expenditures.
            ``(E) The Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint 
        Chiefs of Staff, the Secretaries of the military departments, 
        the Commanders of the combatant commands, the heads of the 
        Defense Agencies, the heads of the Department of Defense Field 
        Activities, and the heads of all other organizations of the 
        Department of Defense shall provide access to the relevant 
        defense business system of such department, combatant command, 
        Defense Agency, Field Activity, or organization, as applicable, 
        and data extracted from such system, for purposes of 
        automatically populating data sets coded with common enterprise 
        data structures.'';
            (3) in subsection (f)(2), by adding at the end the 
        following new clause:
                            ``(iv) The Director of Cost Assessment and 
                        Program Evaluation with respect to common 
                        enterprise data structures.''; and
            (4) in subsection (i), by adding at the end the following 
        new paragraphs:
            ``(10) Common enterprise data structure.--The term `common 
        enterprise data structure' means a mapping and organization of 
        data from defense business systems into a common data set.
            ``(11) Data governance process.--The term `data governance 
        process' means a system to manage the timely Department of 
        Defense-wide sharing of data described under paragraph 
        (5)(A).''.
    (b) Additional Duties of the Director of Cost Assessment and 
Program Evaluation.--Section 139a(d) of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(9) Maintenance of common enterprise data structures 
        established pursuant to section 2222 of this title, including 
        establishing and maintaining access to any data contained in a 
        defense business system (as defined in such section) and used 
        in a common enterprise data structure, as determined 
        appropriate by the Secretary of Defense or the Director of Cost 
        Assessment and Program Evaluation.''.
    (c) Implementation Plan for Common Enterprise Data Structures.--
            (1) Plan required.--Not later than six months after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Deputy Chief Management 
        Officer and the Director of Cost Assessment and Program 
        Evaluation shall jointly develop a plan to implement the 
        requirements of subsection (a).
            (2) Elements.--At a minimum, the implementation plan 
        required by paragraph (1) shall include the following elements:
                    (A) The major tasks required to implement the 
                requirements of subsection (a) and the recommended time 
                frames for each task.
                    (B) The estimated resources required to complete 
                each major task identified pursuant to subparagraph 
                (A).
                    (C) Any challenges associated with each major task 
                identified pursuant to subparagraph (A) and related 
                steps to mitigate such challenge.
                    (D) A description of how data security issues will 
                be appropriately addressed in the implementation of the 
                requirements of subsection (a).
            (3) Submission to congress.--Upon completion of the plan 
        required under paragraph (1), the Deputy Chief Management 
        Officer and the Director of Cost Assessment and Program 
        Evaluation shall submit such plan to the congressional defense 
        committees.

SEC. 832. MAJOR DEFENSE ACQUISITION PROGRAMS: DISPLAY OF BUDGET 
              INFORMATION.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 144 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 2433a the following new section:
``Sec. 2434. Major defense acquisition programs: display of budget 
              information
    ``(a) In General.--In the defense budget materials for fiscal year 
2020 and each subsequent fiscal year, the Secretary of Defense shall 
ensure that the funding requirements listed in subsection (b) are 
displayed separately for major defense acquisition programs, as defined 
in section 2340 of title 10, United States Code.
    ``(b) Requirements for Budget Display.--The budget justification 
display for a fiscal year shall include the funding requirement for 
each major defense acquisition program, including all sources of 
appropriations--
            ``(1) for developmental test and evaluation;
            ``(2) for operational test and evaluation;
            ``(3) for the purchase of cost data from contractors; and
            ``(4) for the purchase or license of technical data.
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section, the terms `budget' and 
`defense budget materials' have the meaning given those terms in 
section 234 of this title.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
such chapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to section 
2433a following new item:

``2434. Major defense acquisition programs: display of budget 
                            information.''.

SEC. 833. ENHANCEMENTS TO TRANSPARENCY IN TEST AND EVALUATION PROCESSES 
              AND DATA.

    (a) Additional Requirements Relating to Designation of a Major 
Defense Acquisition Program.--Section 139 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(2)(B), by inserting before the period 
        at the end the following: ``and in accordance with subsection 
        (l).'';
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(l) For purposes of subsection (a)(2)(B), before designating a 
program that is not a major defense acquisition program for the 
purposes of section 2430 of this title as a major defense acquisition 
program for the purposes of this section, the Director shall provide in 
writing to the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment, and the test and evaluation executive of the military 
department or departments executing the program, the specific 
circumstances of the program that led to the designation decision.''; 
and
            (3) by adding at the end of subsection (h)(4) the 
        following: ``The report shall also include a brief statement of 
        the rationale for placing on the oversight list of the Director 
        each program that is not a major defense acquisition program 
        for the purposes of section 2430 of this title but has been 
        designated as a major defense acquisition program for the 
        purposes of this section.''.
    (b) Consideration of Legacy Items or Components in Operational Test 
and Evaluation Reports.--Section 2399(b)(2) of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph (A)(ii);
            (2) by redesignating subparagraph (B) as subparagraph (C); 
        and
            (3) by inserting after subparagraph (A) the following new 
        subparagraph:
            ``(B) a description of the performance of the items or 
        components tested in relation to comparable legacy items or 
        components, if such items or components exist and relevant data 
        are available without requiring additional testing; and''.
    (c) Opportunity for Military Department Comments on Annual Report 
on Operational Test and Evaluation.--Section 139(h) of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraph (5) as paragraph (6), and in 
        that paragraph by striking ``and the Secretaries of the 
        military departments''; and
            (2) by inserting after paragraph (4) the following new 
        paragraph (5):
            ``(5) Within 45 days after the submission of an annual 
        report by the Director to Congress, the Secretaries of the 
        military departments may each submit a report to the 
        congressional defense committees addressing any concerns 
        related to information included in the annual report, or 
        providing updated or additional information as appropriate.''.
    (d) Guidelines for Collection of Cost Data on Test and 
Evaluation.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Director of Operational Test and 
        Evaluation and the senior Department of Defense official with 
        responsibility for developmental testing shall jointly develop 
        policies, procedures, guidance, and a collection method to 
        ensure that consistent, high quality data are collected on the 
        full range of estimated and actual developmental, live fire, 
        and operational testing costs for major defense acquisition 
        programs. Data on estimated and actual developmental, live 
        fire, and operational testing costs shall be maintained in an 
        electronic database maintained by the Director for Cost 
        Assessment and Program Evaluation.
            (2) Concurrence and coordination.--In carrying out 
        paragraph (1), the Director of Operational Test and Evaluation 
        and the senior Department of Defense official with 
        responsibility for developmental testing shall obtain the 
        concurrence of the Director for Cost Assessment and Program 
        Evaluation and shall coordinate with the Director of the Test 
        Resource Management Center and the Secretaries of the military 
        departments.
            (3) Major defense acquisition program defined.--In this 
        section, the term ``major defense acquisition program'' has the 
        meaning provided in section 2430 of title 10, United States 
        Code.
    (e) Report on Enterprise Approach to Test and Evaluation Knowledge 
Management.--
            (1) Report required.--Within one year after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Director of the Test Resource 
        Management Center and the senior Department of Defense official 
        with responsibility for developmental testing shall provide to 
        the congressional defense committees a report on the 
        development of an approach for managing test and evaluation 
        knowledge across the entire Department of Defense.
            (2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall 
        include the following elements:
                    (A) The detailed concepts, requirements, 
                technologies, methodologies, and architecture necessary 
                for an enterprise approach to knowledge management for 
                test and evaluation, including data, data analysis 
                tools, and modeling and simulation capabilities.
                    (B) Resources needed to develop and adopt an 
                enterprise approach to knowledge management for test 
                and evaluation.
                    (C) Roles and responsibilities of various 
                Department of Defense entities to develop and adopt an 
                enterprise approach to knowledge management for test 
                and evaluation.
                    (D) Time frames required to develop and adopt an 
                enterprise approach to knowledge management for test 
                and evaluation.
                    (E) A description of pilot studies ongoing at the 
                time of the date of the enactment of this Act or 
                previously conducted related to developing an 
                enterprise approach to test and evaluation knowledge 
                management, including results of the pilot studies (if 
                available) and lessons learned.

     Subtitle B--Streamlining of Defense Acquisition Statutes and 
                              Regulations

SEC. 841. MODIFICATIONS TO THE ADVISORY PANEL ON STREAMLINING AND 
              CODIFYING ACQUISITION REGULATIONS.

    (a) Extension of Date for Final Report.--
            (1) Transmittal of panel final report.--Subsection (e)(1) 
        of section 809 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 889), as amended 
        by section 863(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2303), is 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking ``Not later than two years after 
                the date on which the Secretary of Defense establishes 
                the advisory panel'' and inserting ``Not later than 
                January 15, 2019''; and
                    (B) by striking ``the Secretary'' and inserting 
                ``the Secretary of Defense and the congressional 
                defense committees''.
            (2) Secretary of defense action on final report.--
        Subsection (e)(4) of such section is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``Not later than 30 days'' and 
                inserting ``Not later than 60 days''; and
                    (B) by striking ``the final report, together with 
                such comments as the Secretary determines 
                appropriate,'' and inserting ``such comments as the 
                Secretary determines appropriate''.
    (b) Termination of Panel.--Such section is further amended by 
adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(g) Termination of Panel.--The advisory panel shall terminate 180 
days after the date on which the final report of the panel is 
transmitted pursuant to subsection (e)(1) or on such later date as may 
be specified by the Secretary of Defense.''.

SEC. 842. EXTENSION OF MAXIMUM DURATION OF FUEL STORAGE CONTRACTS.

    (a) Extension.--Section 2922(b) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by striking ``20 years'' and inserting ``30 years''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall 
apply with respect to contracts entered into on or after the date of 
the enactment of this Act and may be applied to a contract entered into 
before that date if the total contract period under the contract 
(including options) has not expired as of the date of any extension of 
such contract period by reason of such amendment.

SEC. 843. EXCEPTION FOR BUSINESS OPERATIONS FROM REQUIREMENT TO ACCEPT 
              $1 COINS.

    Paragraph (1) of section 5112(p) of title 31, United States Code, 
is amended by adding at the end the following new flush sentence:
        ``This paragraph does not apply with respect to business 
        operations conducted by any entity under a contract with an 
        agency or instrumentality of the United States, including any 
        nonappropriated fund instrumentality established under title 
        10, United States Code.''.

SEC. 844. REPEAL OF EXPIRED PILOT PROGRAM.

    Section 807(c) of Public Law 104-106 (10 U.S.C. 2401a note) is 
repealed.

Subtitle C--Amendments to General Contracting Authorities, Procedures, 
                            and Limitations

SEC. 851. LIMITATION ON UNILATERAL DEFINITIZATION.

    (a) Limitation.--Section 2326 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsections (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), 
        (h), and (i) as subsections (d), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i), and 
        (j) respectively; and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection (c):
    ``(c) Limitation on Unilateral Definitization by Contracting 
Officer.--With respect to any undefinitized contractual action with a 
value greater than $1,000,000,000, if agreement is not reached on 
contractual terms, specifications, and price within the period or by 
the date provided in subsection (b)(1), the contracting officer may not 
unilaterally definitize those terms, specifications, or price over the 
objection of the contractor until--
            ``(1) the head of the agency approves the definitization in 
        writing;
            ``(2) the contracting officer provides a copy of the 
        written approval to the contractor; and
            ``(3) a period of 30 calendar days has elapsed after the 
        written approval is provided to the contractor.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--Section 2326(b)(3) of such title is 
amended by striking ``subsection (g)'' and inserting ``subsection 
(h)''.
    (c) Conforming Regulations.--Not later than 120 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 implement section 2326 of title 10, United States Code, as amended 
by this section.

SEC. 852. CODIFICATION OF REQUIREMENTS PERTAINING TO ASSESSMENT, 
              MANAGEMENT, AND CONTROL OF OPERATING AND SUPPORT COSTS 
              FOR MAJOR WEAPON SYSTEMS.

    (a) Codification and Amendment.--
            (1) In general.--Chapter 137 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by inserting after section 2337 the following 
        new section:
``Sec. 2337a. Assessment, management, and control of operating and 
              support costs for major weapon systems
    ``(a) Guidance Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall issue and 
maintain guidance on actions to be taken to assess, manage, and control 
Department of Defense costs for the operation and support of major 
weapon systems.
    ``(b) Elements.--The guidance required by subsection (a) shall, at 
a minimum--
            ``(1) be issued in conjunction with the comprehensive 
        guidance on life-cycle management and the development and 
        implementation of product support strategies for major weapon 
        systems required by section 2337 of this title;
            ``(2) require the military departments to retain each 
        estimate of operating and support costs that is developed at 
        any time during the life cycle of a major weapon system, 
        together with supporting documentation used to develop the 
        estimate;
            ``(3) require the military departments to update estimates 
        of operating and support costs periodically throughout the life 
        cycle of a major weapon system, to determine whether 
        preliminary information and assumptions remain relevant and 
        accurate, and identify and record reasons for variances;
            ``(4) establish policies and procedures for the collection, 
        organization, maintenance, and availability of standardized 
        data on operating and support costs for major weapon systems in 
        accordance with section 2222 of this title;
            ``(5) establish standard requirements for the collection 
        and reporting of data on operating and support costs for major 
        weapon systems by contractors performing weapon system 
        sustainment functions in an appropriate format, and develop 
        contract clauses to ensure that contractors comply with such 
        requirements;
            ``(6) require the military departments--
                    ``(A) to collect and retain data from operational 
                and developmental testing and evaluation on the 
                reliability and maintainability of major weapon 
                systems; and
                    ``(B) to use such data to inform system design 
                decisions, provide insight into sustainment costs, and 
                inform estimates of operating and support costs for 
                such systems;
            ``(7) require the military departments to ensure that 
        sustainment factors are fully considered at key life cycle 
        management decision points and that appropriate measures are 
        taken to reduce operating and support costs by influencing 
        system design early in development, developing sound 
        sustainment strategies, and addressing key drivers of costs;
            ``(8) require the military departments to conduct an 
        independent logistics assessment of each major weapon system 
        prior to key acquisition decision points (including milestone 
        decisions) to identify features that are likely to drive future 
        operating and support costs, changes to system design that 
        could reduce such costs, and effective strategies for managing 
        such costs;
            ``(9) include--
                    ``(A) reliability metrics for major weapon systems; 
                and
                    ``(B) requirements on the use of metrics under 
                subparagraph (A) as triggers--
                            ``(i) to conduct further investigation and 
                        analysis into drivers of those metrics; and
                            ``(ii) to develop strategies for improving 
                        reliability, availability, and maintainability 
                        of such systems at an affordable cost; and
            ``(10) require the military departments to conduct periodic 
        reviews of operating and support costs of major weapon systems 
        after such systems achieve initial operational capability to 
        identify and address factors resulting in growth in operating 
        and support costs and adapt support strategies to reduce such 
        costs.
    ``(c) Retention of Data on Operating and Support Costs.--
            ``(1) In general.--The Director of Cost Assessment and 
        Program Evaluation shall be responsible for developing and 
        maintaining a database on operating and support estimates, 
        supporting documentation, and actual operating and support 
        costs for major weapon systems.
            ``(2) Support.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that 
        the Director, in carrying out such responsibility--
                    ``(A) promptly receives the results of all cost 
                estimates and cost analyses conducted by the military 
                departments with regard to operating and support costs 
                of major weapon systems;
                    ``(B) has timely access to any records and data of 
                the military departments (including classified and 
                proprietary information) that the Director considers 
                necessary to carry out such responsibility; and
                    ``(C) with the concurrence of the Under Secretary 
                of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, may direct 
                the military departments to collect and retain 
                information necessary to support the database.
    ``(d) Major Weapon System Defined.--In this section, the term 
`major weapon system' has the meaning given that term in section 
2379(f) of title 10, United States Code.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 137 of such title is amended by adding 
        after the item relating to section 2337 the following new item:

``2337a. Assessment, management, and control of operating and support 
                            costs for major weapon systems.''.
    (b) Repeal of Superseded Section.--
            (1) Repeal.--Section 832 of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 10 
        U.S.C. 2430 note) is repealed.
            (2) Conforming amendment.--Section 2441(c) of title 10, 
        United States Code, is amended by striking ``section 2337 of 
        this title'' and all that follows through the period and 
        inserting ``sections 2337 and 2337a of this title.''.

SEC. 853. USE OF PROGRAM INCOME BY ELIGIBLE ENTITIES THAT CARRY OUT 
              PROCUREMENT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS.

    Section 2414 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by striking ``limitation'' and 
        inserting ``funding''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Use of Program Income.--
            ``(1) An eligible entity that earned income in a specified 
        fiscal year from activities carried out pursuant to a 
        procurement technical assistance program funded under this 
        chapter may expend an amount of such income not to exceed 25 
        percent of the cost of furnishing procurement technical 
        assistance in such specified fiscal year, during the fiscal 
        year following the specified fiscal year, to carry out a 
        procurement technical assistance program funded under this 
        chapter.
            ``(2) An eligible entity that does not enter into a 
        cooperative agreement with the Secretary for a fiscal year--
                    ``(A) shall notify the Secretary of the amount of 
                any income the eligible entity carried over from the 
                previous fiscal year; and
                    ``(B) may retain an amount of such income equal to 
                10 percent of the value of assistance furnished by the 
                Secretary under this section during the previous fiscal 
                year.
            ``(3) In determining the value of assistance furnished by 
        the Secretary under this section for any fiscal year, the 
        Secretary shall account for the amount of any income the 
        eligible entity carried over from the previous fiscal year.''.

SEC. 854. AMENDMENT TO SUSTAINMENT REVIEWS.

    Section 2441(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following: ``The Secretary concerned shall make 
the memorandum and supporting documentation for each sustainment review 
available to the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
Sustainment within 30 days after the review is completed.''.

SEC. 855. CLARIFICATION TO OTHER TRANSACTION AUTHORITY.

    (a) Clarification to Requirement for Written Determinations for 
Prototype Projects.--Section 2371b(a)(2) of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by striking ``for a prototype project'' each place 
such term appears and inserting ``for a transaction (for a prototype 
project)''.
    (b) Clarification of Inclusion of Small Businesses Participating in 
SBIR or STTR.--Section 2371b(d)(1)(B) of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended by inserting ``(including small businesses participating in 
a program described under section 9 of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 638))'' after ``small businesses''.

SEC. 856. CLARIFYING THE USE OF LOWEST PRICE TECHNICALLY ACCEPTABLE 
              SOURCE SELECTION PROCESS.

    Section 813 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2270; 10 U.S.C. 2305 note) is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)--
                    (A) in paragraph (5), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end;
                    (B) in paragraph (6), by striking the period at the 
                end and inserting a semicolon; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraphs:
            ``(7) the Department of Defense would realize minimal or no 
        additional innovation or future technological advantage; and
            ``(8) with respect to a contract for procurement of goods, 
        the goods procured are predominately expendable in nature, 
        nontechnical, or have a short life expectancy or short shelf 
        life.''; and
            (2) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) in paragraph (2), by striking ``or'' at the 
                end;
                    (B) in paragraph (3), by striking the period at the 
                end and inserting ``; or''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
            ``(4) electronic test and measurement equipment for which 
        calibration or repair costs are expected to substantially 
        affect full life-cycle costs.''.

SEC. 857. AMENDMENT TO NONTRADITIONAL AND SMALL CONTRACTOR INNOVATION 
              PROTOTYPING PROGRAM.

    Section 884(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2318; 10 U.S.C.2301 note) is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraph (9) as paragraph (10); and
            (2) by inserting after paragraph (8) the following new 
        paragraph (9):
    ``(9) Unmanned ground logistics and unmanned air logistics 
capabilities enhancement.''.

SEC. 858. MODIFICATION TO ANNUAL MEETING REQUIREMENT OF CONFIGURATION 
              STEERING BOARDS.

    Section 814(c)(4) of the Duncan Hunter National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 
4529; 10 U.S.C. 2430 note) is amended by striking ``year.'' and 
inserting ``year, unless the senior acquisition executive of the 
military department concerned determines in writing that there have 
been no changes to the program requirements of a major defense 
acquisition program during the preceding year.''.

SEC. 859. CHANGE TO DEFINITION OF SUBCONTRACT IN CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES.

    Section 1906(c)(1) of title 41, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following: ``The term does not include agreements 
entered into by a contractor for the supply of commodities that are 
intended for use in the performance of multiple contracts with the 
Government and other parties and are not identifiable to any particular 
contract.''.

SEC. 860. AMENDMENT RELATING TO APPLICABILITY OF INFLATION ADJUSTMENTS.

    Subsection 1908(d) of title 41, United States Code, is amended by 
inserting before the period at the end the following: ``, and shall 
apply, in the case of the procurement of property or services by 
contract, to a contract, and any subcontract at any tier under the 
contract, in effect on that date without regard to the date of award of 
the contract or subcontract.''.

SEC. 860A. EXEMPTION OF CERTAIN CONTRACTS FROM INFLATION ADJUSTMENTS.

    Subparagraph (B) of section 1908(b)(2) of title 41, United States 
Code, is amended by inserting ``3131 to 3134,'' after ``sections''.

SEC. 860B. INCLUSION OF SBIR AND STTR PROGRAMS IN TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE.

    Subsection (c) of section 2418 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``issued under'' and inserting the 
        following: ``issued--
            ``(1) under'';
            (2) by striking ``and on'' and inserting ``, and on'';
            (3) by striking ``requirements.'' and inserting 
        ``requirements; and''; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(2) under section 9 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
        638), and on compliance with those requirements.''.

                       Subtitle D--Other Matters

SEC. 861. EXEMPTION FROM DESIGN-BUILD SELECTION PROCEDURES.

    Subsection (d) of section 2305a of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by striking the second and third sentences and inserting the 
following: ``If the contract value exceeds $4,000,000, the maximum 
number specified in the solicitation shall not exceed 5 unless--
            ``(1) the solicitation is issued pursuant to a indefinite 
        delivery-indefinite quantity contract for design-build 
        construction; or
            ``(2)(A) the head of the contracting activity, delegable to 
        a level no lower than the senior contracting official within 
        the contracting activity, approves the contracting officer's 
        justification with respect to an individual solicitation that a 
        number greater than 5 is in the Federal Government's interest; 
        and
            ``(B) the contracting officer shall provide written 
        documentation of how a maximum number exceeding 5 is consistent 
        with the purposes and objectives of the two-phase selection 
        procedures.''.

SEC. 862. REQUIREMENT THAT CERTAIN SHIP COMPONENTS BE MANUFACTURED IN 
              THE NATIONAL TECHNOLOGY AND INDUSTRIAL BASE.

    (a) Additional Procurement Limitation.--Section 2534(a) of title 
10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following 
new paragraph:
            ``(6) Components for auxiliary ships.--Subject to 
        subsection (k), the following components:
                    ``(A) Auxiliary equipment, including pumps, for all 
                shipboard services.
                    ``(B) Propulsion system components, including 
                engines, reduction gears, and propellers.
                    ``(C) Shipboard cranes.
                    ``(D) Spreaders for shipboard cranes.''.
    (b) Implementation.--Such section is further amended by adding at 
the end the following new subsection:
    ``(k) Implementation of Auxiliary Ship Component Limitation.--
Subsection (a)(6) applies only with respect to contracts awarded by the 
Secretary of a military department for new construction of an auxiliary 
ship after the date of the enactment of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 using funds available for 
National Defense Sealift Fund programs or Shipbuilding and Conversion, 
Navy.''.

SEC. 863. PROCUREMENT OF AVIATION CRITICAL SAFETY ITEMS.

    Section 814(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2271; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note) is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by inserting ``or an aviation critical safety 
                item (as defined in section 2319(g) of this title)'' 
                after ``personal protective equipment''; and
                    (B) by inserting ``equipment or'' after ``failure 
                of the''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2), by inserting ``or item'' after 
        ``equipment''.

SEC. 864. MILESTONES AND TIMELINES FOR CONTRACTS FOR FOREIGN MILITARY 
              SALES.

    (a) Establishment of Standard Timelines for Foreign Military 
Sales.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish specific milestones 
and standard timelines to achieve such milestones for a foreign 
military sale (as authorized under chapter 2 of the Arms Export Control 
Act (22 U.S.C. 2761 et seq.)), including milestones and timelines for 
actions that occur after a letter of offer and acceptance (as described 
in chapter 5 of the Security Assistance Management Manual of the 
Defense Security Cooperation Agency) for such foreign military sale is 
completed. Such milestones and timelines--
            (1) may vary depending on the complexity of the foreign 
        military sale; and
            (2) shall cover the period beginning on the date of receipt 
        of a complete letter of request (as described in such chapter 
        5) from a foreign country and ending on the date of the final 
        delivery of a defense article or defense service sold through 
        the foreign military sale.
    (b) Submissions to Congress.--
            (1) Quarterly notification.--During the period beginning on 
        the date of the enactment of this Act and ending on December 
        31, 2021, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
        defense committees, the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the 
        House of Representatives, and the Committee on Foreign 
        Relations of the Senate, on a quarterly basis, a report that 
        includes a list of each foreign military sale with a value 
        greater than or equal to the dollar threshold for congressional 
        notification under section 36 of the Arms Export Control Act 
        (22 U.S.C. 2776)--
                    (A) for which the final delivery of a defense 
                article or defense service has not been completed; and
                    (B) that failed to meet a standard timeline to 
                achieve a milestone as established under subsection 
                (a).
            (2) Annual report.--Not later than November 1, 2019, and 
        annually thereafter until December 31, 2021, the Secretary 
        shall submit to the committees described in paragraph (1) a 
        report that summarizes--
                    (A) the number, set forth separately by dollar 
                value and milestone, of foreign military sales that met 
                the standard timeline to achieve a milestone 
                established under subsection (a) during the preceding 
                fiscal year; and
                    (B) the number, set forth separately by dollar 
                value, milestone, and case development extenuating 
                factor, of foreign military sales that failed to meet 
                the standard timeline to achieve a milestone 
                established under subsection (a).
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) Defense article; defense service.--The terms ``defense 
        article'' and ``defense service'' have the meanings given those 
        terms, respectively, in section 47 of the Arms Export Control 
        Act (22 U.S.C. 2794).
            (2) Case development extenuating factor.--The term ``case 
        development extenuating factor'' means a reason from a list of 
        reasons developed by the Secretary (such as a change in 
        requirements, delay in performance, or failure to receive 
        funding) for the failure of a foreign military sale to meet a 
        standard timeline to achieve a milestone established under 
        subsection (a).

SEC. 865. NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENT FOR CERTAIN CONTRACTS FOR AUDIT 
              SERVICES.

    (a) Notification to Congress.--If the Under Secretary of Defense 
(Comptroller) makes a written finding that a delay in performance of a 
covered contract while a protest is pending would hinder the annual 
preparation of audited financial statements for the Department of 
Defense, and the head of the procuring activity responsible for the 
award of the covered contract does not authorize the award of the 
contract (pursuant to section 3553(c)(2) of title 31, United States 
Code) or the performance of the contract (pursuant to section 
3553(d)(3)(C) of such title), the Secretary of Defense shall--
            (1) notify the congressional defense committees within 10 
        days after such finding is made; and
            (2) describe any steps the Department of Defense plans to 
        take to mitigate any hindrance identified in such finding to 
        the annual preparation of audited financial statements for the 
        Department.
    (b) Covered Contract Defined.--In this section, the term ``covered 
contract'' means a contract for services to perform an audit to comply 
with the requirements of section 3515 of title 31, United States Code.

SEC. 866. TRAINING IN ACQUISITION OF COMMERCIAL ITEMS.

    (a) Training.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the President of the Defense Acquisition 
University shall establish a comprehensive training program on the 
acquisition of commercial items, including part 12 of the Federal 
Acquisition Regulation. The curriculum shall include, at a minimum, the 
following:
            (1) The reasons for and appropriate uses of part 12 of the 
        Federal Acquisition Regulation, including the preference for 
        the acquisition of commercial items under section 2377 of title 
        10, United States Code.
            (2) The definition of a commercial item, including the 
        interpretation of the phrase ``of a type''.
            (3) Price analysis and negotiations.
            (4) Market research and analysis.
            (5) Independent cost estimates.
            (6) Parametric estimating methods.
            (7) Value analysis.
            (8) Other topics on the acquisition of commercial items 
        necessary to ensure a well-educated acquisition workforce.
    (b) Student Enrollment.--The President of the Defense Acquisition 
University shall set goals for student enrollment for the training 
program established under subsection (a).

SEC. 867. NOTICE OF COST-FREE FEDERAL PROCUREMENT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE 
              IN CONNECTION WITH REGISTRATION OF SMALL BUSINESS 
              CONCERNS ON PROCUREMENT WEBSITES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish 
procedures to ensure that any notice or direct communication regarding 
the registration of a small business concern on a website maintained by 
the Department of Defense relating to contracting opportunities 
contains information about cost-free Federal procurement technical 
assistance services that are available through a procurement technical 
assistance program established under chapter 142 of title 10, United 
States Code.
    (b) Small Business Concern Defined.--The term ``small business 
concern'' has the meaning given such term under section 3 of the Small 
Business Act (15 U.S.C. 632).

SEC. 868. COMPTROLLER GENERAL REPORT ON CONTRACTOR BUSINESS SYSTEM 
              REQUIREMENTS.

    Not later than 1 year after the date of enactment of this Act, the 
Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the feasibility and 
effects of an increase to the percentage of total gross revenue 
included in the definition of the term ``covered contractor'' in 
section 893(g)(2) of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note). Such 
report shall include--
            (1) an assessment of the effects of the amendment to such 
        definition made by subsection (c) of section 893 of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public 
        Law 114-328); and
            (2) the feasibility and effects of a subsequent increase to 
        the percentage of total gross revenue included in such 
        definition.

SEC. 869. STANDARD GUIDELINES FOR EVALUATION OF REQUIREMENTS FOR 
              SERVICES CONTRACTS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall encourage the use 
of standard guidelines within the Department of Defense for the 
evaluation of requirements for services contracts. Such guidelines 
shall be available to the Services Requirements Review Boards 
(established under Department of Defense Instruction 5000.74, titled 
``Defense Acquisition of Services'' and dated January 5, 2016, or a 
successor instruction) within each Defense Agency, each Department of 
Defense Field Activity, and each military department for the purpose of 
standardizing the requirements evaluation required under section 2329 
of title 10, United States Code, as added by this Act. Such guidelines 
may provide policy guidance or tools, including a comprehensive 
checklist of total force management policies and procedures that is 
modeled after the checklist used by the Army, to aid uniform decision-
making during the requirements evaluation process.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section--
            (1) the terms ``Defense Agency'', ``Department of Defense 
        Field Activity'', and ``military department'' have the meanings 
        given those terms in section 101 of title 10, United States 
        Code; and
            (2) the term ``total force management policies and 
        procedures'' means the policies and procedures established 
        under section 129a of such title.

SEC. 870. TEMPORARY LIMITATION ON AGGREGATE ANNUAL AMOUNT AVAILABLE FOR 
              CONTRACT SERVICES.

    (a) Limitation.--Except as provided in subsection (b)(1), the total 
amount obligated by the Department of Defense for contract services in 
fiscal year 2018 may not exceed the total amount requested for the 
Department for contract services in the budget of the President for 
fiscal year 2010 (as submitted to Congress pursuant to section 1105(a) 
of title 31, United States Code) adjusted for net transfers from 
funding for overseas contingency operations.
    (b) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) Contract services.--The term ``contract services'' has 
        the meaning given that term in section 235 of title 10, United 
        States Code, except that the term does not include services 
        that are funded out of amounts available for overseas 
        contingency operations.
            (2) Transfers from funding for overseas contingency 
        operations.--The term ``transfers from funding for overseas 
        contingency operations'' means amounts funded out of amounts 
        available for overseas contingency operations in fiscal year 
        2010 that are funded out of amounts other than amounts so 
        available in fiscal year 2018.

SEC. 871. DEVELOPMENT OF PROCUREMENT ADMINISTRATIVE LEAD TIME.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall develop, make 
available for public comment, and finalize--
            (1) a definition of the term ``Procurement Administrative 
        Lead Time'' or ``PALT'', to be applied Department of Defense-
        wide, that describes the amount of time from the date on which 
        a solicitation is issued to the date of an initial award of a 
        contract or task order of the Department of Defense; and
            (2) a plan for measuring and publicly reporting data on 
        PALT for Department of Defense contracts and task orders above 
        the micro-purchase threshold.
    (b) Requirement for Definition.--Unless the Secretary determines 
otherwise, the amount of time in the definition of PALT developed under 
subsection (a) shall--
            (1) begin on the date on which a solicitation is issued for 
        a contract or task order of the Department of Defense by the 
        Secretary of a military department or head of a Defense Agency; 
        and
            (2) end on the date of an initial award of the contract or 
        task order.
    (c) Deviation From PALT Milestones.--The Secretary may deviate from 
current PALT milestones as the Secretary determines necessary, to 
develop the definition of PALT under subsection (a).
    (d) Coordination.--In developing the definition of PALT, the 
Secretary shall coordinate with the senior contracting official of each 
military department and Defense Agency to determine the variations of 
the definition in use across the Department of Defense and each 
military department and Defense Agency.
    (e) Use of Existing Procurement Data Systems.--In developing the 
plan for measuring and publicly reporting data on PALT required by 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall consider, to the maximum extent 
practicable, relying on the information captured by the Federal 
procurement data system established pursuant to section 1122(a)(4) of 
title 41, United States Code (or any similar or successor system).

SEC. 872. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING STEEL PRODUCED IN THE UNITED 
              STATES.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Frequent surges in unfairly trade steel imports have 
        materially injured the iron ore and steel industries in the 
        United States, putting our national, economic, and energy 
        security at risk.
            (2) High-quality American steel products are vital to the 
        success of the United States military and are used in a variety 
        of applications from aircraft carriers to armor plate for 
        tanks.
            (3) Domestic producers of defense-related steel products 
        are dependent on the overall financial health of the iron ore 
        and steel industries in the United States.
            (4) The loss of a strong domestic iron ore and steel 
        industry would make the United States dangerously dependent 
        upon foreign sources of steel, such as China.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that a strong 
domestic iron ore and steel industry is vital to the national security 
of the United States.

SEC. 873. AMENDMENTS RELATING TO INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.

    (a) Elimination of Sunset Relating to Transparency and Risk 
Management of Major Information Technology Investments.--Subsection (c) 
of section 11302 of title 40, United States Code, is amended by 
striking the first paragraph (5).
    (b) Elimination of Sunset Relating to Information Technology 
Portfolio, Program, and Resource Reviews.--Section 11319 of title 40, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating the second subsection (c) as 
        subsection (d); and
            (2) in subsection (d), as so redesignated, by striking 
        paragraph (6).
    (c) Extension of Sunset Relating to Federal Data Center 
Consolidation Initiative.--Subsection (e) of section 834 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 
113-291; 44 U.S.C. 3601 note) is amended by striking ``2018'' and 
inserting ``2020''.

SEC. 874. REPEAL OF CERTAIN AUDITING REQUIREMENTS.

    Section 190 of title 10, United States Code, as proposed to be 
added by section 820(b)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2274), is amended 
by striking subsection (f).

SEC. 875. PROHIBITION ON CONTRACTING WITH CERTAIN TELECOMMUNICATIONS 
              PROVIDERS.

    (a) List of Covered Contractors.--Not later than 30 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Director of National 
Intelligence shall develop a list of covered contractors, to be updated 
as frequently as the Director determines appropriate, and shall make 
such list available to the Secretary of Defense.
    (b) Prohibition on Contracts.--The Secretary of Defense may not 
enter into a contract with a covered contractor on the list described 
under subsection (a).
    (c) Removal From List.--To be removed from the list described in 
subsection (a), a covered contractor may submit a request to the 
Director in such manner as the Director determines appropriate. Upon 
certification of the request, the Director shall remove the covered 
contractor from the list.
    (d) Waiver.--The President may waive the requirements of subsection 
(b) if the President determines that the waiver is justified for 
national security reasons.
    (e) Covered Contractor Defined.--The term ``covered contractor'' 
means a provider of telecommunications or telecommunications equipment 
that has been found by the Director to have knowingly assisted or 
facilitated a cyber attack carried out by or on behalf of the 
government of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea or persons 
associated with such government.
    (f) Effective Date.--This section shall apply with respect to 
contracts of a covered contractor entered into on or after the date of 
the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 876. ASSESSMENT AND AUTHORITY TO TERMINATE OR PROHIBIT CONTRACTS 
              FOR PROCUREMENT FROM CHINESE COMPANIES PROVIDING SUPPORT 
              TO THE DEMOCRATIC PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF KOREA.

    (a) Assessment Required.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation 
        with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of the Treasury, and 
        the Director of National Intelligence, shall conduct an 
        assessment of trade between the People's Republic of China and 
        the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, including elements 
        deemed to be important to United States national security and 
        defense.
            (2) Elements.--The assessment required by paragraph (1) 
        shall--
                    (A) assess the composition of all trade between 
                China and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, 
                including trade in goods and services;
                    (B) identify whether any Chinese commercial 
                entities that are engaged in such trade materially 
                support illicit activities on the part of North Korea;
                    (C) evaluate the extent to which the United States 
                Government procures goods or services from any 
                commercial entity identified under subparagraph (B);
                    (D) provide a list of commercial entities 
                identified under subparagraph (B) that provide defense 
                goods or services for the Department of Defense; and
                    (E) evaluate the ramifications to United States 
                national security, including any impacts to the defense 
                industrial base, Department of Defense acquisition 
                programs, and Department of Defense logistics or supply 
                chains, of prohibiting procurements from commercial 
                entities listed under subparagraph (D).
            (3) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to 
        Congress a report on the assessment required by paragraph (1). 
        The report shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may 
        contain a classified annex.
    (b) Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may terminate existing 
contracts or prohibit the award of contracts for the procurement of 
goods or services for the Department of Defense from a Chinese 
commercial entity listed under subsection (a)(2)(D) based on a 
determination informed by the assessment required under subsection (a).
    (c) Notification.--The Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
appropriate committees of Congress a notification of, and detailed 
justification for, any exercise of the authority in subsection (b) not 
less than 30 days before the date on which the authority is exercised.
    (d) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
            (2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.

SEC. 877. REPORT ON SOURCING OF TUNGSTEN AND TUNGSTEN POWDERS FROM 
              DOMESTIC PRODUCERS.

    (a) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report on the procurement of 
tungsten and tungsten powders for military applications.
    (b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) An overview of the quantities and countries of origin 
        of tungsten and tungsten powders that are procured by the 
        Department of Defense or prime contractors of the Department 
        for military applications.
            (2) An evaluation of the effects on the Department if 
        domestic-produced tungsten and tungsten powders are given 
        priority.
            (3) An evaluation of the effects on the Department if 
        tungsten and tungsten powders are required to be procured from 
        only domestic producers.
            (4) An estimate of any costs associated with domestic 
        sourcing requirements related to tungsten and tungsten powders.

      TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT

 Subtitle A--Organization and Management of the Department of Defense 
                               Generally

SEC. 901. RESPONSIBILITY OF THE CHIEF INFORMATION OFFICER OF THE 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FOR RISK MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES 
              REGARDING SUPPLY CHAIN FOR INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY 
              SYSTEMS.

    Section 142(b)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (H), by striking ``and'' at the end;
            (2) in subparagraph (I), by striking the period at the end 
        and inserting a semicolon; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
            ``(J) has the responsibilities for policy, oversight, 
        guidance, and coordination for risk management activities for 
        the Department regarding the supply chain for information 
        technology systems.''.

SEC. 902. REPEAL OF OFFICE OF CORROSION POLICY AND OVERSIGHT.

    (a) Repeal.--Section 2228 of title 10, United States Code, is 
repealed.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
chapter 131 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking the 
item relating to section 2228.

SEC. 903. DESIGNATION OF CORROSION CONTROL AND PREVENTION EXECUTIVES 
              FOR THE MILITARY DEPARTMENTS.

    (a) Department of the Army.--
            (1) Designation.--Chapter 303 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 3025. Corrosion control and prevention executive
    ``(a) Designation.--(1) There is a corrosion control and prevention 
executive in the Department of the Army. The Assistant Secretary of the 
Army for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics shall designate the 
corrosion control and prevention executive.
    ``(2) In addition to the duties assigned under subsection (c), the 
principal responsibility of the civilian employee designated as the 
corrosion control and prevention executive shall be coordinating 
Department of the Army corrosion control and prevention program 
activities (including budget programming) with the Department and the 
Office of the Secretary of Defense, the program executive officers of 
the Department, and relevant major subordinate commands of the 
Department.
    ``(3) The corrosion control and prevention executive shall be a 
civilian employee of the Department in the grade GS-15 or higher of the 
General Schedule.
    ``(b) Qualifications.--In order to qualify for designation as the 
corrosion control and prevention executive in the Department of the 
Army, an individual shall, at a minimum--
            ``(1) have a working knowledge of corrosion prevention and 
        control;
            ``(2) have strong program management and communication 
        skills; and
            ``(3) understand the acquisition, research and development, 
        test and evaluation, and sustainment policies and procedures 
        across the Department, including sustainment of infrastructure.
    ``(c) Duties.--(1) The corrosion control and prevention executive 
in the Department of the Army shall ensure that corrosion control and 
prevention is maintained in the Department's policy and guidance for 
management of each of the following:
            ``(A) System acquisition and production, including design 
        and maintenance.
            ``(B) Research, development, test, and evaluation programs 
        and activities.
            ``(C) Equipment standardization programs, including 
        international standardization agreements.
            ``(D) Logistics research and development initiatives.
            ``(E) Logistics support analysis as it relates to 
        integrated logistic support in the materiel acquisition 
        process.
            ``(F) Military infrastructure design, construction, and 
        maintenance.
    ``(2) The corrosion control and prevention executive in the 
Department shall be responsible for identifying the funding levels 
necessary to accomplish the items specified in paragraph (1).
    ``(3) In cooperation with the appropriate staff of the Department, 
the corrosion control and prevention executive in the Department shall, 
develop, support, and provide the rationale for resources--
            ``(A) to initiate and sustain an effective corrosion 
        control and prevention program in the Department;
            ``(B) to evaluate the program's effectiveness; and
            ``(C) to ensure that corrosion control and prevention 
        requirements for materiel are reflected in budgeting and 
        policies of the Department for the formulation, management, and 
        evaluation of personnel and programs for the entire Department, 
        including the Army Reserve and the Army National Guard.
    ``(4) The corrosion control and prevention executive in the 
Department shall submit an annual report, not later than December 31 of 
each year, to the Secretary of the Army and the Secretary of Defense 
containing recommendations pertaining to the corrosion control and 
prevention program of the Department, including corrosion-related 
funding levels to carry out all of the duties of the executive under 
this section.
    ``(5) The corrosion control and prevention executive in the 
Department may not be assigned other duties that may interfere with the 
duties specified in this subsection and the principal responsibility 
assigned under subsection (a)(2).''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 303 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended by adding at the end the following new item:

``3025. Corrosion control and prevention executive.''.
    (b) Department of the Navy.--
            (1) Designation.--Chapter 503 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 5029. Corrosion control and prevention executive
    ``(a) Designation.--(1) There is a corrosion control and prevention 
executive in the Department of the Navy. The Assistant Secretary of the 
Navy for Research, Development, and Acquisition shall designate the 
corrosion control and prevention executive.
    ``(2) In addition to the duties assigned under subsection (c), the 
principal responsibility of the civilian employee designated as the 
corrosion control and prevention executive shall be coordinating 
Department of the Navy corrosion control and prevention program 
activities (including budget programming) with the Department and the 
Office of the Secretary of Defense, the program executive officers of 
the Department, and relevant major subordinate commands of the 
Department.
    ``(3) The corrosion control and prevention executive shall be a 
civilian employee of the Department in the grade GS-15 or higher of the 
General Schedule.
    ``(b) Qualifications.--In order to qualify for designation as the 
corrosion control and prevention executive in the Department of the 
Navy, an individual shall, at a minimum--
            ``(1) have a working knowledge of corrosion prevention and 
        control;
            ``(2) have strong program management and communication 
        skills; and
            ``(3) understand the acquisition, research and development, 
        test and evaluation, and sustainment policies and procedures 
        across the Department, including sustainment of infrastructure.
    ``(c) Duties.--(1) The corrosion control and prevention executive 
in the Department of the Navy shall ensure that corrosion control and 
prevention is maintained in the Department's policy and guidance for 
management of each of the following:
            ``(A) System acquisition and production, including design 
        and maintenance.
            ``(B) Research, development, test, and evaluation programs 
        and activities.
            ``(C) Equipment standardization programs, including 
        international standardization agreements.
            ``(D) Logistics research and development initiatives.
            ``(E) Logistics support analysis as it relates to 
        integrated logistic support in the materiel acquisition 
        process.
            ``(F) Military infrastructure design, construction, and 
        maintenance.
    ``(2) The corrosion control and prevention executive in the 
Department shall be responsible for identifying the funding levels 
necessary to accomplish the items specified in paragraph (1).
    ``(3) In cooperation with the appropriate staff of the Department, 
the corrosion control and prevention executive in the Department shall, 
develop, support, and provide the rationale for resources--
            ``(A) to initiate and sustain an effective corrosion 
        control and prevention program in the Department;
            ``(B) to evaluate the program's effectiveness; and
            ``(C) to ensure that corrosion control and prevention 
        requirements for materiel are reflected in budgeting and 
        policies of the Department for the formulation, management, and 
        evaluation of personnel and programs for the entire Department, 
        including the Navy Reserve and the Marine Corps Reserve.
    ``(4) The corrosion control and prevention executive in the 
Department shall submit an annual report, not later than December 31 of 
each year, to the Secretary of the Navy and the Secretary of Defense 
containing recommendations pertaining to the corrosion control and 
prevention program of the Department, including corrosion-related 
funding levels to carry out all of the duties of the executive under 
this section.
    ``(5) The corrosion control and prevention executive in the 
Department may not be assigned other duties that may interfere with the 
duties specified in this subsection and the principal responsibility 
assigned under subsection (a)(2).''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 503 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended by adding at the end the following new item:

``5029. Corrosion control and prevention executive.''.
    (c) Department of the Air Force.--
            (1) Designation.--Chapter 803 of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        section:
``Sec. 8025. Corrosion control and prevention executive
    ``(a) Designation.--(1) There is a corrosion control and prevention 
executive in the Department of the Air Force. The Assistant Secretary 
of the Air Force for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics shall 
designate the corrosion control and prevention executive.
    ``(2) In addition to the duties assigned under subsection (c), the 
principal responsibility of the civilian employee designated as the 
corrosion control and prevention executive shall be coordinating 
Department of the Air Force corrosion control and prevention program 
activities (including budget programming) with the Department and the 
Office of the Secretary of Defense, the program executive officers of 
the Department, and relevant major subordinate commands of the 
Department.
    ``(3) The corrosion control and prevention executive shall be a 
civilian employee of the Department in the grade GS-15 or higher of the 
General Schedule.
    ``(b) Qualifications.--In order to qualify for designation as the 
corrosion control and prevention executive in the Department of the Air 
Force, an individual shall, at a minimum--
            ``(1) have a working knowledge of corrosion prevention and 
        control;
            ``(2) have strong program management and communication 
        skills; and
            ``(3) understand the acquisition, research and development, 
        test and evaluation, and sustainment policies and procedures 
        across the Department, including sustainment of infrastructure.
    ``(c) Duties.--(1) The corrosion control and prevention executive 
in the Department of the Air Force shall ensure that corrosion control 
and prevention is maintained in the Department's policy and guidance 
for management of each of the following:
            ``(A) System acquisition and production, including design 
        and maintenance.
            ``(B) Research, development, test, and evaluation programs 
        and activities.
            ``(C) Equipment standardization programs, including 
        international standardization agreements.
            ``(D) Logistics research and development initiatives.
            ``(E) Logistics support analysis as it relates to 
        integrated logistic support in the materiel acquisition 
        process.
            ``(F) Military infrastructure design, construction, and 
        maintenance.
    ``(2) The corrosion control and prevention executive in the 
Department shall be responsible for identifying the funding levels 
necessary to accomplish the items specified in paragraph (1).
    ``(3) In cooperation with the appropriate staff of the Department, 
the corrosion control and prevention executive in the Department shall, 
develop, support, and provide the rationale for resources--
            ``(A) to initiate and sustain an effective corrosion 
        control and prevention program in the Department;
            ``(B) to evaluate the program's effectiveness; and
            ``(C) to ensure that corrosion control and prevention 
        requirements for materiel are reflected in budgeting and 
        policies of the Department for the formulation, management, and 
        evaluation of personnel and programs for the entire Department, 
        including the Air Force Reserve and the Air National Guard.
    ``(4) The corrosion control and prevention executive in the 
Department shall submit an annual report, not later than December 31 of 
each year, to the Secretary of the Air Force and the Secretary of 
Defense containing recommendations pertaining to the corrosion control 
and prevention program of the Department, including corrosion-related 
funding levels to carry out all of the duties of the executive under 
this section.
    ``(5) The corrosion control and prevention executive in the 
Department may not be assigned other duties that may interfere with the 
duties specified in this subsection and the principal responsibility 
assigned under subsection (a)(2).''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 803 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended by adding at the end the following new item:

``8025. Corrosion control and prevention executive.''.
    (d) Repeal of Replaced Provision.--Effective 90 days after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, section 903 of the Duncan Hunter National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public Law 110-117; 10 
U.S.C. 2228 note) is repealed.
    (e) Deadline for Designation.--Corrosion control and prevention 
executives who satisfy the qualifications specified in subsection (b) 
of sections 3025, 5029, and 8025 of title 10, United States Code, as 
added by this section, shall be designated not later than 90 days after 
the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 904. MAINTAINING CIVILIAN WORKFORCE CAPABILITIES TO SUSTAIN 
              READINESS, THE ALL VOLUNTEER FORCE, AND OPERATIONAL 
              EFFECTIVENESS.

    Section 912(a)(2) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) is amended by adding at the end 
the following new subparagraphs:
                    ``(D) The minimum civilian end strength specified 
                in section 691 of title 10, United States Code, needed 
                to support the national military strategy.
                    ``(E) A civilian operating force structure sized 
                for operational effectiveness, that is manned, equipped 
                and trained to support deployment time and rotation 
                ratios sized to sustain the readiness and needed 
                retention levels for the regular and reserve components 
                according to the judgment of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 
                in fulfillment of their responsibilities under sections 
                151, 3033, 5033, 8033 and 5044 of title 10, United 
                States Code.
                    ``(F) The development of civilian workforce levels 
                to ensure that every proposal to change military force 
                structure is accompanied with the associated civilian 
                force structure changes needed to support that military 
                force structure.
                    ``(G) The hiring authorities and other actions that 
                the Secretary of Defense or the Secretary of the 
                military department will take to eliminate any gaps 
                between desired programmed civilian workforce levels 
                and the existing size of the civilian workforce by 
                mission and functional area.
                    ``(H) A civilian workforce plan that is consistent 
                with the total force management requirements of 
                sections 129 and 129a of title 10, United States 
                Code.''.

          Subtitle B--Designation of the Navy and Marine Corps

SEC. 911. REDESIGNATION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY AS THE DEPARTMENT 
              OF THE NAVY AND MARINE CORPS.

    (a) Redesignation of Military Department.--The military department 
designated as the Department of the Navy is redesignated as the 
Department of the Navy and Marine Corps.
    (b) Redesignation of Secretary and Other Statutory Offices.--
            (1) Secretary.--The position of the Secretary of the Navy 
        is redesignated as the Secretary of the Navy and Marine Corps.
            (2) Other statutory offices.--The positions of the Under 
        Secretary of the Navy, the four Assistant Secretaries of the 
        Navy, and the General Counsel of the Department of the Navy are 
        redesignated as the Under Secretary of the Navy and Marine 
        Corps, the Assistant Secretaries of the Navy and Marine Corps, 
        and the General Counsel of the Department of the Navy and 
        Marine Corps, respectively.

SEC. 912. CONFORMING AMENDMENTS TO TITLE 10, UNITED STATES CODE.

    (a) Definition of ``Military Department''.--Paragraph (8) of 
section 101(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended to read as 
follows:
            ``(8) The term `military department' means the Department 
        of the Army, the Department of the Navy and Marine Corps, and 
        the Department of the Air Force.''.
    (b) Organization of Department.--The text of section 5011 of such 
title is amended to read as follows: ``The Department of the Navy and 
Marine Corps is separately organized under the Secretary of the Navy 
and Marine Corps.''.
    (c) Position of Secretary.--Section 5013(a)(1) of such title is 
amended by striking ``There is a Secretary of the Navy'' and inserting 
``There is a Secretary of the Navy and Marine Corps''.
    (d) Chapter Headings.--
            (1) The heading of chapter 503 of such title is amended to 
        read as follows:

       ``CHAPTER 503--DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY AND MARINE CORPS''.

            (2) The heading of chapter 507 of such title is amended to 
        read as follows:

  ``CHAPTER 507--COMPOSITION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY AND MARINE 
                                CORPS''.

    (e) Other Amendments.--
            (1) Title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking 
        ``Department of the Navy'' and ``Secretary of the Navy'' each 
        place they appear other than as specified in subsections (a), 
        (b), (c), and (d) (including in section headings, subsection 
        captions, tables of chapters, and tables of sections) and 
        inserting ``Department of the Navy and Marine Corps'' and 
        ``Secretary of the Navy and Marine Corps'', respectively, in 
        each case with the matter inserted to be in the same typeface 
        and typestyle as the matter stricken.
            (2)(A) Sections 5013(f), 5014(b)(2), 5016(a), 5017(2), 
        5032(a), and 5042(a) of such title are amended by striking 
        ``Assistant Secretaries of the Navy'' and inserting ``Assistant 
        Secretaries of the Navy and Marine Corps''.
            (B) The heading of section 5016 of such title, and the item 
        relating to such section in the table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 503 of such title, are each amended by 
        inserting ``and Marine Corps'' after ``of the Navy'', with the 
        matter inserted in each case to be in the same typeface and 
        typestyle as the matter amended.

SEC. 913. OTHER PROVISIONS OF LAW AND OTHER REFERENCES.

    (a) Title 37, United States Code.--Title 37, United States Code, is 
amended by striking ``Department of the Navy'' and ``Secretary of the 
Navy'' each place they appear and inserting ``Department of the Navy 
and Marine Corps'' and ``Secretary of the Navy and Marine Corps'', 
respectively.
    (b) Other References.--Any reference in any law other than in title 
10 or title 37, United States Code, or in any regulation, document, 
record, or other paper of the United States, to the Department of the 
Navy shall be considered to be a reference to the Department of the 
Navy and Marine Corps. Any such reference to an office specified in 
section 911(b) shall be considered to be a reference to that office as 
redesignated by that section.

SEC. 914. EFFECTIVE DATE.

    This subtitle and the amendments made by this subtitle shall take 
effect on the first day of the first month beginning more than 60 days 
after the date of the enactment of this Act.

                       Subtitle C--Other Matters

SEC. 921. TRANSITION OF THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE TO 
              REFLECT ESTABLISHMENT OF POSITIONS OF UNDER SECRETARY OF 
              DEFENSE FOR RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING, UNDER SECRETARY OF 
              DEFENSE FOR ACQUISITION AND SUSTAINMENT, AND CHIEF 
              MANAGEMENT OFFICER.

    (a) References to Positions Pending Execution of Amendments.--Until 
February 1, 2018, any reference in this Act, or an amendment made by 
this Act--
            (1) to the position of Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Research and Engineering, to be established by the amendment 
        made by section 901(a) of the National Defense Authorization 
        Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2339), 
        shall be deemed to be a reference to the Under Secretary of 
        Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics under 
        section 133 of title 10, United States Code;
            (2) to the position of Under Secretary of Defense for 
        Acquisition and Sustainment, to be established by the amendment 
        made by section 901(b) of the National Defense Authorization 
        Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2340), 
        shall be deemed to be a reference to the Under Secretary of 
        Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics under 
        section 133 of title 10, United States Code; and
            (3) to the position of Chief Management Officer of the 
        Department of Defense, to be established by section 901(c) of 
        the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
        (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2341; 10 U.S.C. 131 note), shall 
        be deemed to be a reference to the Deputy Secretary of Defense 
        under section 132 of title 10, United States Code.
    (b) Service of Incumbents.--
            (1) Principal deputy under secretary of defense for 
        acquisition, technology, and logistics.--The individual serving 
        as Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
        Technology, and Logistics under section 137a(c)(1) of title 10, 
        United States Code, as of February 1, 2018, may continue to 
        serve as Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and 
        Sustainment commencing as of that date, without further 
        appointment under section 133b of such title, as added by 
        section 901(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2340).
            (2) Deputy chief management officer.--The individual 
        serving as Deputy Chief Management Officer of the Department of 
        Defense under section 132a of title 10, United States Code, as 
        of February 1, 2018, may continue to serve as Chief Management 
        Officer commencing as of that date, without further appointment 
        under section 901(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act 
        for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2341; 10 
        U.S.C. 131 note).

SEC. 922. EXTENSION OF DEADLINES FOR REPORTING AND BRIEFING 
              REQUIREMENTS FOR COMMISSION ON THE NATIONAL DEFENSE 
              STRATEGY FOR THE UNITED STATES.

    Section 942(e) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2368) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``December 1, 2017'' and 
        inserting ``January 31, 2018''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``June 1, 2017'' and 
        inserting ``September 1, 2017''.

SEC. 923. BRIEFING ON FORCE MANAGEMENT LEVEL POLICY.

    (a) Findings; Sense of Congress.--
            (1) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
                    (A) The force management level policy that 
                previously restricted the total number of members of 
                the Armed Forces of the United States deployed to 
                Afghanistan increased the cost of operations in 
                Afghanistan.
                    (B) The restriction meant that the Department of 
                Defense had to substitute available military personnel 
                for costlier contract support.
            (2) Sense of congress.--It is the sense of Congress that 
        the Department of Defense should discourage the practice of 
        substituting contractor personnel for available members of the 
        Armed Forces when a unit deploys overseas and should revise 
        this practice as it pertains to unit deployment to Afghanistan.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than March 31, 2018, the Secretary of 
Defense shall provide to the congressional defense committees a 
briefing detailing--
            (1) the steps that the Secretary is taking to revise 
        deployment guidelines to ensure that readiness, unit cohesion, 
        and maintenance are prioritized; and
            (2) the plan of the Secretary to establish a policy that 
        will avoid to the extent practicable these costly practices in 
        the future.

SEC. 924. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON COOPERATIVE PROGRAM FOR INFORMATION 
              SECURITY EDUCATION.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the Secretary of Defense should provide adequate 
        resources to the Office of the Chief Information Officer of the 
        Department of Defense and the Defense Procurement Acquisition 
        Policy to enable such entities to establish a cooperative 
        program with the National Institute of Standards and 
        Technology-Manufacturing Extension Partnership; and
            (2) the cooperative program described in paragraph (1) 
        should--
                    (A) educate and assist small- and medium-sized 
                manufacturing firms in the Department of Defense supply 
                chain in achieving compliance with NIST Special 
                Publication 800-171 titled ``Protecting Controlled 
                Unclassified Information in Nonfederal Information 
                Systems and Organizations'' as such publication is 
                incorporated into the Defense Federal Acquisition 
                Regulation Supplement;
                    (B) highlight the resources available to businesses 
                that have contracts with the Department or that are 
                applying for such contracts; and
                    (C) educate such businesses on--
                            (i) the System Security Plan of the 
                        National Institute of Standards and Technology;
                            (ii) the procurement toolbox of the Defense 
                        Procurement Acquisition Policy;
                            (iii) the Cyber Security Evaluation Tool of 
                        the Department of Homeland Security; and
                            (iv) the risks of using third party 
                        companies in assessing compliance with NIST 
                        Special Publication 800-171.

SEC. 925. COMPLETION OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE DIRECTIVE 2310.07E 
              REGARDING MISSING PERSONS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall make the completion 
of Department of Defense Directive 2310.07E a top priority in order to 
improve the efficiency of locating missing persons.
    (b) Definition.--In this section, the term ``missing person'' has 
the meaning given such term in section 1513 of title 10, United States 
Code.

SEC. 926. RESPONSIBILITY FOR DEVELOPMENTAL TEST AND EVALUATION WITHIN 
              THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE.

    (a) Briefing on Plans to Address Developmental Test and Evaluation 
Responsibilities Within the Office of the Secretary of Defense.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 60 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall 
        provide a briefing to the Committee on Armed Services of the 
        House of Representatives on a strategy to ensure that there is 
        sufficient expertise, oversight, and policy direction on 
        developmental test and evaluation within the Office of the 
        Secretary of Defense after the completion of the reorganization 
        of such Office required under section 901 of the National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-
        328; 130 Stat. 2339).
            (2) Elements.--The briefing required by paragraph (1) shall 
        address the following:
                    (A) The structure of the roles and responsibilities 
                of the senior Department of Defense official 
                responsible for developmental test and evaluation.
                    (B) The location of the senior Department of 
                Defense official responsible for developmental test and 
                evaluation within the organizational structure of the 
                Office of the Secretary of Defense.
                    (C) An estimate of personnel and other resources 
                that should be made available to the senior Department 
                of Defense official responsible for developmental test 
                and evaluation to ensure that such official can provide 
                independent expertise, oversight, and policy direction 
                and guidance Department of Defense-wide.
                    (D) Methods to ensure that the senior Department of 
                Defense official responsible for developmental test and 
                evaluation will be empowered to facilitate Department 
                of Defense-wide efficiencies by helping programs to 
                optimize test designs.
                    (E) Methods to ensure that an advocate for test and 
                evaluation workforce will continue to exist within the 
                acquisition workforce.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) developmental testing is critical to reducing 
        acquisition program risk by providing valuable information to 
        support sound decision making;
            (2) major defense acquisition programs often do not conduct 
        enough developmental testing, so too many problems are first 
        identified during operational testing, when they are expensive 
        and time-consuming to fix; and
            (3) in order to ensure that effective developmental testing 
        is conducted on major defense acquisition programs, the 
        Secretary should--
                    (A) carefully consider where the senior Department 
                of Defense official responsible for developmental test 
                and evaluation is located within the organizational 
                structure of the Office of the Secretary of Defense; 
                and
                    (B) ensure that such official has sufficient 
                authority and resources to provide oversight and policy 
                direction on developmental test and evaluation 
                Department of Defense-wide.

                      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 2018 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 subsection (a) 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. PREPARATION OF CONSOLIDATED CORRECTIVE ACTION PLAN AND 
              IMPLEMENTATION OF CENTRALIZED REPORTING SYSTEM.

    (a) Establishment.--In accordance with the recommendations included 
in the Government Accountability Office report numbered GAO-17-85 and 
entitled ``DOD Financial Management: Significant Efforts Still Needed 
for Remediating Audit Readiness Deficiencies'', the Under Secretary of 
Defense (Comptroller) of the Department of Defense shall--
            (1) on a bimonthly basis, prepare a consolidated corrective 
        action plan management summary on the status of all corrective 
        actions plans related to critical capabilities for the military 
        services and for the service providers and other defense 
        organizations; and
            (2) develop and implement a centralized monitoring and 
        reporting process that captures and maintains up-to-date 
        information, including the standard data elements recommended 
        in the implementation guide for Office of Management and Budget 
        Circular A-123, for all corrective action plans and findings 
        and recommendations Department-wide that pertain to critical 
        capabilities.
    (b) Effective Date.--Subsection (a) shall take effect on October 1, 
2017.

SEC. 1003. ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              AUDITS.

    (a)  Financial Improvement Audit Readiness Plan.--Section 
1003(a)(2)(A)(ii) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 10 U.S.C. 2222 note) is amended by 
striking ``are validated as ready for audit by not later than September 
30, 2017'' and inserting ``go under full financial statement audit 
beginning September 30, 2017, and that the department leadership make 
every effort to reach an unmodified opinion as soon as possible''.
    (b) Audit of Fiscal Year 2018 Financial Statements.--Section 
1003(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 
(Public Law 113-66; 10 U.S.C. 2222 note) is amended by striking ``are 
validated as ready for audit by not later than'' and inserting ``go 
under full financial statement audit beginning''.

SEC. 1004. AMENDMENTS TO DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FINANCIAL AUDIT PLAN.

    (a) Amendment to Name of Department of Defense Financial Audit 
Plan.--
            (1) In general.--Section 1003 of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 10 
        U.S.C. 2222 note) is amended by striking ``Financial 
        Improvement and Audit Readiness Plan'' each place such term 
        appears in heading and text and inserting ``Financial 
        Improvement and Audit Remediation Plan''.
            (2) Conforming amendment.--Section 1003(a) of the National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 113-
        66; 10 U.S.C. 2222 note) is amended by striking ``Financial 
        Improvement and Audit Readiness Plan'' each place such term 
        appears in heading and text and inserting ``Financial 
        Improvement and Audit Remediation Plan''
    (b) Report and Briefing Requirements.--
            (1) In general.--Subsection (b) of section 1003 of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public 
        Law 111-84; 10 U.S.C. 2222 note) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(b) Report and Briefing Requirements.--
            ``(1) Annual report.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Not later than March 31, 2019, 
                and annually thereafter, the Under Secretary of Defense 
                (Comptroller) shall submit to the congressional defense 
                committees a report on the status of the implementation 
                by the Department of Defense of the Financial 
                Improvement and Audit Remediation Plan required by 
                subsection (a).
                    ``(B) Elements.--Each report under subparagraph (A) 
                shall include, at a minimum--
                            ``(i) an analysis of the consolidated 
                        corrective action plan management summary 
                        prepared pursuant to section 1002 of this Act; 
                        and
                            ``(ii) current Department of Defense-wide 
                        information on the status of corrective actions 
                        plans related to critical capabilities and 
                        material weaknesses, including the standard 
                        data elements recommended in the implementation 
                        guide for Office of Management and Budget 
                        Circular A-123, for the armed forces, military 
                        departments, and Defense Agencies.
            ``(2) Semiannual briefings.--Not later than March 31 and 
        October 31 each year, the Under Secretary of Defense 
        (Comptroller) and the Comptrollers of the military departments 
        shall provide a briefing to the congressional defense 
        committees on the status of the corrective action plan.
            ``(3) Critical capabilities defined.--In this subsection, 
        the term `critical capabilities' means the critical 
        capabilities described in the Department of Defense report 
        titled `Financial Improvement and Audit Readiness (FIAR) Plan 
        Status Report' and dated May 2016.''.
            (2) Conforming amendments.--
                    (A) The Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization 
                Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-383; 10 U.S.C. 
                2222 note) is amended by striking section 881.
                    (B) The National Defense Authorization Act for 
                Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 10 U.S.C. 2222 
                note) is amended by striking section 1003.
                    (C) Section 1005(b) of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (Public Law 112-
                239; 10 U.S.C. 2222 note) is amended by striking 
                paragraph (2).
    (c) Effective Date.--Subsection (b) shall take effect December 1, 
2017.

SEC. 1005. REPORT ON AUDITABLE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.

    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 a report ranking all military departments and Defense 
Agencies in order of how advanced they are in achieving auditable 
financial statements as required by law. The report should not include 
information otherwise available in other reports to Congress.

                Subtitle B--Naval Vessels and Shipyards

SEC. 1011. NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND.

    (a) Fund Purposes; Deposits.--Section 2218 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) by striking subparagraph (D); and
                            (ii) by redesignating subparagraph (E) as 
                        subparagraph (D);
                    (B) in paragraph (3), by striking ``or (D)''; and
            (2) in subsection (d)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (B), by inserting 
                        ``and'' after the semicolon;
                            (ii) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``; 
                        and'' and inserting a period; and
                            (iii) by striking subparagraph (D);
                    (B) by striking paragraph (2);
                    (C) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph 
                (2); and
                    (D) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph (3):
            ``(3) Any other funds made available to the Department of 
        Defense to carry out any of the purposes described in 
        subsection (c).''.
    (b) Authority to Purchase Used Vessels.--Subsection (f) of such 
section is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(3)(A) Notwithstanding the limitations under subsection (c)(1)(E) 
and paragraph (1), the Secretary of Defense may, as part of a program 
to recapitalize the Ready Reserve Force component of the national 
defense reserve fleet and the Military Sealift Command surge fleet, 
purchase any used vessel, regardless of where such vessel was 
constructed if such vessel--
            ``(i) participated in the Maritime Security Fleet; and
            ``(ii) is available for purchase at a reasonable cost, as 
        determined by the Secretary.
    ``(B) If the Secretary determines that no used vessel meeting the 
requirements under clauses (i) and (ii) of subparagraph (A) is 
available, the Secretary may purchase a used vessel comparable to a 
vessel described in clause (i) of subparagraph (A), regardless of the 
source of the vessel or where the vessel was constructed, if such 
vessel is available for purchase at a reasonable cost, as determined by 
the Secretary.
    ``(C) The Secretary may not use the authority under this paragraph 
to purchase more than five additional foreign constructed ships. Any 
such ships may not be purchased at a rate that exceeds one vessel 
constructed outside the United States for every new Department of 
Defense sealift vessel authorized by law to be constructed.
    ``(D) Prior to the purchase of any vessel that was not constructed 
in the United States, the Secretary, in consultation with the Maritime 
Administrator, shall certify that there is no vessel available for 
purchase at a reasonable price that--
            ``(i) was constructed in the United States; and
            ``(ii) is suitable for use by the United States for 
        national defense or military purposes in a time of war or 
        national emergency.''.
    (c) Definition of Maritime Security Fleet.--Subsection (k) of such 
section is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(5) The term `Maritime Security Fleet' means the fleet 
        established under section 53102(a) of title 46.''.

SEC. 1012. NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND: CONSTRUCTION OF NATIONAL 
              ICEBREAKER VESSELS.

    Section 2218 of title 10, United States Code, as amended by section 
2211, is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (c)(1), by adding at the end the 
        following new subparagraph:
            ``(E) Construction (including design of vessels), purchase, 
        alteration, and conversion of national icebreaker vessels.''; 
        and
            (2) in subsection (d)(1),
                    (A) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``and'' and 
                the end;
                    (B) in subparagraph (C), by striking the period and 
                inserting ``; and''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                subparagraph:
            ``(D) construction (including design of vessels), purchase, 
        alteration, and conversion of national icebreaker vessels.''.

SEC. 1013. USE OF NATIONAL SEA-BASED DETERRENCE FUND FOR MULTIYEAR 
              PROCUREMENT OF CERTAIN CRITICAL COMPONENTS.

    (a) In General.--Subsection (i) of section 2218a of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``the common missile compartment'' each 
        place it appears and inserting ``critical components''; and
            (2) in paragraph (1), by striking ``critical parts, 
        components, systems, and subsystems'' and inserting ``critical 
        components''.
    (b) Definition of Critical Component.--Subsection (k) of such 
section is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(3) The term `critical component' means any--
                    ``(A) any item that is high volume or high value; 
                or
                    ``(B) any common missile compartment component, 
                shipyard manufactured component, valve, torpedo tube, 
                or Government furnished equipment, including propulsors 
                and strategic weapons system launchers.''.
    (c) Clerical Amendment.--The subsection heading for subsection (i) 
of such section is amended by striking ``of the Common Missile 
Compartment''.

SEC. 1014. RESTRICTIONS ON THE OVERHAUL AND REPAIR OF VESSELS IN 
              FOREIGN SHIPYARDS.

    (a) In General.--Section 7310(b)(1) of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``In the case'' and inserting ``(A) Except 
        as provided in subparagraph (B), in the case'';
            (2) by striking ``during the 15-month'' and all that 
        follows through ``United States)'';
            (3) by inserting before the period at the end the 
        following: ``, other than in the case of voyage repairs''; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
    ``(B) The Secretary of the Navy may waive the application of 
subparagraph (A) to a contract award if the Secretary determines that 
the waiver is essential to the national security interests of the 
United States.''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall 
take effect on the later of the following dates:
            (1) The date of the enactment of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019.
            (2) October 1, 2018.

SEC. 1015. AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR RETIREMENT OR INACTIVATION OF 
              TICONDEROGA-CLASS CRUISERS OR DOCK LANDING SHIPS.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 
2018 may be obligated or expended--
            (1) to retire, prepare to retire, or inactivate a cruiser 
        or dock landing ship; or
            (2) to place more than six cruisers and one dock landing 
        ship in the modernization program under section 1026(a)(2) of 
        the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 
        Stat. 3490).

SEC. 1016. POLICY OF THE UNITED STATES ON MINIMUM NUMBER OF BATTLE 
              FORCE SHIPS.

    It shall be the policy of the United States to have available, as 
soon as practicable, not fewer than 355 battle force ships, with 
funding subject to the annual authorization of appropriation and the 
annual appropriation of funds.

                      Subtitle C--Counterterrorism

SEC. 1021. TERMINATION OF REQUIREMENT TO SUBMIT ANNUAL BUDGET 
              JUSTIFICATION DISPLAY FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COMBATING 
              TERRORISM PROGRAM.

    Section 229 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(e) Termination.--The requirement to submit a budget 
justification display under this section shall terminate on December 
31, 2020.''.

SEC. 1022. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR TRANSFER OR RELEASE OF 
              INDIVIDUALS DETAINED AT UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION, 
              GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA TO THE UNITED STATES.

    No amounts authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made 
available for the Department of Defense may be used during the period 
beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act and ending on 
December 31, 2018, to transfer, release, or assist in the transfer or 
release to or within the United States, its territories, or possessions 
of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed or any other detainee who--
            (1) is not a United States citizen or a member of the Armed 
        Forces of the United States; and
            (2) is or was held on or after January 20, 2009, at United 
        States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, by the Department 
        of Defense.

SEC. 1023. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO CONSTRUCT OR MODIFY 
              FACILITIES IN THE UNITED STATES TO HOUSE DETAINEES 
              TRANSFERRED FROM UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION, GUANTANAMO 
              BAY, CUBA.

    (a) In General.--No amounts authorized to be appropriated or 
otherwise made available for the Department of Defense may be used 
during the period beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act 
and ending on December 31, 2018, to construct or modify any facility in 
the United States, its territories, or possessions to house any 
individual detained at Guantanamo for the purposes of detention or 
imprisonment in the custody or under the control of the Department of 
Defense.
    (b) Exception.--The prohibition in subsection (a) shall not apply 
to any modification of facilities at United States Naval Station, 
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
    (c) Individual Detained at Guantanamo Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``individual detained at Guantanamo'' has the meaning given 
that term in section 1034(f)(2) of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 971; 10 U.S.C. 
801 note).

SEC. 1024. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR TRANSFER OR RELEASE OF 
              INDIVIDUALS DETAINED AT UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION, 
              GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA, TO CERTAIN COUNTRIES.

    No amounts authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made 
available for the Department of Defense may be used during the period 
beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act and ending on 
December 31, 2018, to transfer, release, or assist in the transfer or 
release of any individual detained in the custody or under the control 
of the Department of Defense at United States Naval Station, Guantanamo 
Bay, Cuba, to the custody or control of any country, or any entity 
within such country, as follows:
            (1) Libya.
            (2) Somalia.
            (3) Syria.
            (4) Yemen.

SEC. 1025. BIANNUAL REPORT ON SUPPORT OF SPECIAL OPERATIONS TO COMBAT 
              TERRORISM.

    Section 127e(g) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``March 1'' and inserting 
        ``120 days after the last day of a fiscal year''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2) by striking ``September 1'' and 
        inserting ``six months after the date of the submittal of the 
        report most recently submitted under paragraph (1)''.

SEC. 1026. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO CLOSE OR RELINQUISH CONTROL 
              OF UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made 
available for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2018 may be 
used--
            (1) to close or abandon United States Naval Station, 
        Guantanamo Bay, Cuba;
            (2) to relinquish control of Guantanamo Bay to the Republic 
        of Cuba; or
            (3) to implement a material modification to the Treaty 
        Between the United States of America and Cuba signed at 
        Washington, D.C. on May 29, 1934, that constructively closes 
        United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay.

SEC. 1027. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING PROVIDING FOR TIMELY VICTIM AND 
              FAMILY TESTIMONY IN MILITARY COMMISSION TRIALS.

    It is the sense of Congress that in the interests of justice, 
efficiency, and providing closure to victims of terrorism and their 
families, military judges overseeing military commissions in United 
States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, should consider making 
arrangements to take recorded testimony from victims and their families 
should they wish to provide testimony before such a commission.

SEC. 1028. AUTHORITY TO USE VIDEO TELECONFERENCING TECHNOLOGY IN 
              MILITARY COMMISSION PROCEDURES.

    Section 949d of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(e) Use of Video Teleconferencing.--The military judge may 
provide for the participation of the accused, defense counsel, trial 
counsel, and any other participants by video teleconferencing for any 
matter for which the military judge may call the military commission 
into session. Any party who participates through the use of video 
teleconferencing shall be considered as present for purposes of 
subsection (a)(2).''.

SEC. 1029. PUBLIC AVAILABILITY OF MILITARY COMMISSION PROCEEDINGS.

    Section 949d(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(4) In the case of any proceeding of a military commission under 
this chapter that is made open to the public, the military judge may 
order arrangements for the availability of the proceeding to be watched 
remotely by the public through the internet.''.

         Subtitle D--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations

SEC. 1031. LIMITATION ON EXPENDITURE OF FUNDS FOR EMERGENCY AND 
              EXTRAORDINARY EXPENSES FOR INTELLIGENCE AND COUNTER-
              INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES AND REPRESENTATION ALLOWANCES.

    (a) Recurring Expenses.--The first sentence of subsection (a) of 
section 127 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
before the period at the end the following: ``, and is not a recurring 
expense''.
    (b) Limitation.--Subsection (c) of such section is amended by 
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(4) Funds may not be obligated or expended in an amount in excess 
of $25,000 under the authority of subsection (a) or (b) for 
intelligence or counter-intelligence activities or representation 
allowances until the Secretary of Defense has notified the 
congressional defense committees and the congressional intelligence 
committees of the intent to obligate or expend the funds, and--
            ``(A) in the case of an obligation or expenditure in excess 
        of $100,000, 15 days have elapsed since the date of the 
        notification; or
            ``(B) in the case of an obligation or expenditure in excess 
        of $25,000, but not in excess of $100,000, five days have 
        elapsed since the date of the notification.''.
    (c) Annual Report.--Subsection (d) of such section is amended--
            (1) by striking ``to the congressional defense committees'' 
        and all that follows through the period at the end and 
        inserting an em dash; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
            ``(1) to the congressional defense committees a report on 
        all expenditures during the preceding fiscal year under 
        subsections (a) and (b); and
            ``(2) to the congressional intelligence committees a report 
        on expenditures relating to intelligence and counter-
        intelligence during the preceding fiscal year under subsections 
        (a) and (b).''.
    (d) Definition.--Such section is further amended by adding at the 
end the following new subsection:
    ``(e) Definition of Congressional Intelligence Committees.--In this 
section, the term `congressional intelligence committees' means the 
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
Representatives and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
Senate.''.

SEC. 1032. MODIFICATIONS TO HUMANITARIAN DEMINING ASSISTANCE 
              AUTHORITIES.

    (a) Modification to the Role of Armed Forces in Providing 
Humanitarian Demining Assistance.--Subsection (a)(3) of section 407 of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by striking 
        ``or stockpiled conventional munitions assistance''; and
            (2) in subparagraph (A)--
                    (A) by inserting ``, unexploded explosive 
                ordnance,'' after ``landmines''; and
                    (B) by striking ``, or stockpiled conventional 
                munitions, as applicable''.
    (b) Modification to Definition of Humanitarian Demining 
Assistance.--Subsection (e)(1) of such section is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``, unexploded explosive ordnance,'' after 
        ``landmines'' in each place it appears; and
            (2) by striking ``, and the disposal'' and all that follows 
        and inserting a period.
    (c) Modification to Definition of Stockpiled Conventional Munitions 
Assistance.--Subsection (e)(2) of such section is amended, in the 
second sentence, by striking ``, the detection and clearance of 
landmines and other explosive remnants of war,''.

SEC. 1033. PROHIBITION ON CHARGE OF CERTAIN TARIFFS ON AIRCRAFT 
              TRAVELING THROUGH CHANNEL ROUTES.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 157 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2652. Prohibition on charge of certain tariffs on aircraft 
              traveling through channel routes
    ``The United States Transportation Command may not charge a tariff 
by reason of the use by a military service of an aircraft of that 
military service on a route designated by the United States 
Transportation Command as a channel route.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
such chapter is amended by adding at the end the following new item:

``2652. Prohibition on charge of certain tariffs on aircraft traveling 
                            through channel routes''.

SEC. 1034. LIMITATION ON DIVESTMENT OF U-2 OR RQ-4 AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Limitation.--
            (1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), none 
        of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
        otherwise made available for the Department of Defense for any 
        fiscal year before fiscal year 2024 may be obligated or 
        expended to prepare to divest, divest, place in storage, or 
        place in a status awaiting further disposition of the 
        possessing commander any U-2 or RQ-4 aircraft of the Department 
        of Defense.
            (2) Exception.--Paragraph (1) shall not apply to an 
        individual U-2 or RQ-4 aircraft that the Secretary of the Air 
        Force determines, on a case-by-case basis, to be non-returnable 
        to flying service due to any mishap, other damage, or being 
        uneconomical to repair.
    (b) Conforming Repeal.--Section 133 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81) is hereby 
repealed.

SEC. 1035. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR RETIREMENT OF LEGACY 
              MARITIME MINE COUNTERMEASURES PLATFORMS.

    (a) Prohibition.--Except as provided in subsection (b), the 
Secretary of the Navy may not obligate or expend funds to--
            (1) ) retire, prepare to retire, transfer, or place in 
        storage any AVENGER-class mine countermeasures ship or 
        associated equipment;
            (2) retire, prepare to retire, transfer, or place in 
        storage any SEA DRAGON (MH-53) helicopter or associated 
        equipment;
            (3) make any reductions to manning levels with respect to 
        any AVENGER-class mine countermeasures ship; or
            (4) make any reductions to manning levels with respect to 
        any SEA DRAGON (MH-53) helicopter squadron or detachment.
    (b) Waiver.--The Secretary of the Navy may waive the prohibition 
under subsection (a) if the Secretary certifies to the congressional 
defense committees that the Secretary has--
            (1) identified a replacement capability and the necessary 
        quantity of such systems to meet all combatant commander mine 
        countermeasures operational requirements that are currently 
        being met by any AVENGER-class ship or SEA DRAGON helicopter to 
        be retired, transferred, or placed in storage;
            (2) achieved initial operational capability of all systems 
        described in paragraph (1); and
            (3) deployed a sufficient quantity of systems described in 
        paragraph (1) that have achieved initial operational capability 
        to continue to meet or exceed all combatant commander mine 
        countermeasures operational requirements currently being met by 
        the AVENGER-class ships and SEA DRAGON helicopters to be 
        retired, transferred, or placed in storage.

SEC. 1036. RESTRICTION ON USE OF CERTAIN FUNDS PENDING SOLICITATION OF 
              BIDS FOR WESTERN PACIFIC DRY DOCK.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) Following closure of the Department of the Navy ship 
        repair facility in Guam in 1997 following the Base Realignment 
        and Closure round of 1995, operation of the facility was turned 
        over to a private company.
            (2) While streamlining operations, resulting in savings to 
        the Navy of approximately $38,000,000 each year, the company 
        was able to maintain the depot-level capabilities of the 
        facility with dry-docking capability that had existed in Apra 
        Harbor since World War II.
            (3) From 1997 to 2012, the private operator successfully 
        performed 28 major overhauls with dry-dockings of Navy, 
        Military Sealift Command, and Coast Guard vessels, 27 mid-term 
        availabilities, as well as the emergency dry-docking of USS San 
        Francisco (SSN-711) after the nuclear powered submarine 
        collided with a seamount off the coast of Guam in 2005.
            (4) While the privately owned dry-dock, Machinist, was 
        undergoing upgrades and refurbishment in 2013, the Navy 
        announced that it would split the long-standing depot-level 
        capability in Guam into two pieces, awarding an initial 
        contract for pier-side ship repair, to be followed by a 
        contract for dry-dock ship repair.
            (5) At this time, the Committee on Armed Services of the 
        House of Representatives, including the Delegate from Guam, as 
        well as the Governor of Guam, objected to this plan, and a 
        conditional agreement was made wherein the Navy committed to 
        restoring dry-docking capabilities expeditiously following 
        issuance of the pier-side contract.
            (6) Despite repeated requests from the Committee on Armed 
        Services of the House of Representatives, the Delegate from 
        Guam, and the Governor of Guam over the past four years, the 
        Secretary of the Navy has failed to issue the dry-dock 
        contract.
            (7) The Navy conducted a business case analysis to assess 
        options for a dry-docking capability in Guam in 2014 and agreed 
        to provide a copy of the report to Congress upon completion. 
        The draft business case analysis was provided to the Committee 
        on Armed Services of the House of Representatives on March 3, 
        2016, but a final document was not produced.
            (8) The draft business case analysis evaluated 200 
        potential options for restoring a dry-docking capability in 
        Guam, recommending seven potential courses of action, with 
        estimated costs ranging from $324,000,000 to $398,000,000 over 
        a 50-year life cycle. The business case analysis concluded that 
        any of these options are significant savings when compared with 
        the cost of not having a dry-docking capability in Guam, which 
        exceeds $700,000,000 over a 50-year period.
            (9) The Navy has removed machinery and equipment needed to 
        perform major overhauls from the former ship repair facility, 
        and shifted ship repair work previously performed in Guam to 
        various foreign locations in the Western Pacific. The total 
        cost of Navy ship repair contracts in Guam have gone from 
        $45,00,000 in 2010 to $16,000,000 in 2016.
            (10) As a result of Navy actions over the past five years, 
        the number of skilled workers engaged in ship repair in Guam 
        has been reduced from a combined total of approximately 550 at 
        three ship-repair companies in Guam to the current level of 
        150. Due to this degraded workforce and equipment capabilities, 
        the Navy is now forced to rely almost exclusively on foreign 
        ship repair instead at a time when the Committee believes 
        tensions and threats of crisis in the Western Pacific can put 
        access to foreign shipyards at risk.
            (11) Navy leadership has long acknowledged the importance 
        of a depot-level, dry-docking capability in Guam, as evidenced 
        by the following:
                    (A) ``Robust depot-level ship repair capability in 
                Guam is a matter of strategic importance and remains an 
                operational necessity because ships of the 7th Fleet 
                have high operational tempo and experience vast 
                distances between repair facilities.'' (Letter from the 
                Commander of the Pacific Fleet to the Governor of Guam, 
                dated February 15, 2013).
                    (B) ``We must maintain a viable ship maintenance 
                capability in Guam to include dry-docking in support of 
                operations and contingency plans (OPLANs and CONPLANs) 
                and the U.S. Navy rebalance to the Pacific. Guam is a 
                strategic in-theater location for depot-level ship 
                maintenance on sovereign U.S. territory. This is a 
                significant factor given that commercial dry docks 
                available in foreign countries considered friendly to 
                the United States may become unavailable to SEVENTH 
                Fleet ships in time of crisis or war. Availability of 
                CPF ships would be stressed if assets are required to 
                dry dock in CONUS due to the non-availability of a 
                secure dry docking capability in the Western Pacific. 
                Dry-docking in Guam is a critical component of depot-
                level ship repair. The capability must be maintained 
                and regularly exercised so that a capability and 
                expertise are available to support ships of the SEVENTH 
                Fleet in peace and war.'' (Letter from the Commander of 
                the Pacific Fleet to the Chief of Naval Operations, 
                dated February 7, 2014).
                    (C) On February 24, 2016, in testimony before the 
                Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
                Representatives, Admiral Harry Harris, Commander of the 
                United States Pacific Command, affirmed that he 
                continues to view robust ship repair capabilities as a 
                matter of strategic importance and an operational 
                priority for United States Pacific Fleet.
            (12) The Navy currently has four fast-attack nuclear 
        submarines homeported in Guam.
            (13) The Navy homeports submarine squadrons at seven 
        locations in the United States, each of which has a dry-docking 
        capability, with the exception of Guam.
            (14) The Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives believes that dry-docking capability in Guam is 
        a strategic requirement and a cost-effective means of ensuring 
        the Forward Deployed Fleet has depot-level repair capabilities 
        at a United States port in the Western Pacific.
            (15) Amounts were authorized to be appropriated in the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public 
        Law 114-328) and appropriated in the Consolidated 
        Appropriations Act, 2017 (Public Law 115-31) for funds be 
        applied to chartering a dry dock to meet fleet maintenance 
        requirements in the Western Pacific.
    (b) Limitation on Use of Funds.--Not more than 75 percent of the 
funds authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made available for the 
Office of the Secretary of the Navy may be obligated or expended until 
the Secretary submits to Congress notice that a request for proposals 
has been issued to solicit bids for the chartering of a dry dock in the 
Western Pacific that satisfies the minimum requirements for heavy ship 
depot-level repair.

SEC. 1037. NATIONAL GUARD FLYOVERS OF PUBLIC EVENTS.

    (a) Statement of Policy.--It shall be the policy of the Department 
of Defense that flyovers of public events in support of community 
relations activities may only be flown as part of an approved training 
mission at no additional expense to the Federal Government.
    (b) National Guard Flyover Approval Process.--The Adjutant General 
of a State or territory in which an Army National Guard or Air National 
Guard unit is based will be the approval authority for all Air National 
Guard and Army National Guard flyovers in that State or territory, 
including any request for a flyover in any civilian domain at a 
nonaviation related event.
    (c) Flyover Record Maintenance; Report.--
            (1) Record maintenance.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
        keep and maintain records of flyover requests, approvals, and 
        the total costs of all flyover missions, including the costs of 
        fuel, maintenance, and manpower, in a publicly accessible 
        database that is updated annually.
            (2) GAO 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 Committee on Armed Services 
        of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Armed 
        Services of the Senate a report on flyovers and the process 
        whereby flyover requests are made and evaluated, including--
                    (A) whether there is any cost to taxpayers 
                associated with flyovers;
                    (B) whether there is any appreciable public 
                relations or recruitment value that comes from 
                flyovers; and
                    (C) the impact flyovers have to aviator training 
                and readiness.
    (d) Flyover Defined.--In this section, the term ``flyover'' means 
aviation support--
            (1) in which a straight and level flight limited to one 
        pass by a single military aircraft, or by a single formation of 
        four or fewer military aircraft of the same type, from the same 
        military department over a predetermined point on the ground at 
        a specific time;
            (2) that does not involve aerobatics or demonstrations; and
            (3) uses bank angles of up to 90 degrees if required to 
        improve the spectator visibility of the aircraft.

SEC. 1038. TRANSFER OF FUNDS TO WORLD WAR I CENTENNIAL COMMISSION.

    (a) Authority To Transfer Funds.--The Secretary of Defense may 
transfer to the World War I Centennial Commission, from amounts 
described in subsection (b), such amount as the Secretary and the Chair 
of the World War I Centennial Commission consider appropriate to assist 
the Commission in carrying out activities under paragraphs (2) through 
(5) of section 5(a) of the World War I Centennial Commission Act 
(Public Law 112-272; 36 U.S.C. prec. 101 note) after fiscal year 2017.
    (b) Designated Account.--Funds transferred pursuant to subsection 
(a) shall be maintained in a specially designated account and may not 
be obligated or expended for the designation, establishment, or 
enhancement of a memorial or commemorative work by the World War I 
Centennial Commission.
    (c) Covered Funds.--The funds transferrable by the Secretary 
pursuant to subsection (a) shall be derived from amounts authorized to 
be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 for Civil Military Programs as 
provided in section 4301 of this Act.
    (d) Treatment as Gift.--Any amounts transferred to the World War I 
Centennial Commission pursuant to subsection (a) shall be treated as a 
gift to the Commission for purposes of sections 6(g) and 7(f) of the 
World War I Centennial Commission Act.
    (e) Limitation.--The total amount provided by the Secretary 
pursuant to subsection (a) shall not exceed $5,000,000.
    (f) World War I Centennial Commission Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``World War I Centennial Commission'' means the Commission 
established by section 4 of the World War I Centennial Commission Act.

SEC. 1039. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR PROVISION OF MAN-PORTABLE AIR 
              DEFENSE SYSTEMS TO THE VETTED SYRIAN OPPOSITION.

    (a) Limitation.--If a determination is made during fiscal year 2018 
to use funds available to the Department of Defense for that fiscal 
year to provide man-portable air defense systems (MANPADs) to the 
vetted Syrian opposition pursuant to the authority in section 1209 of 
the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 
3541), such funds may not be used for that purpose until--
            (1) the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State 
        jointly submit to the appropriate congressional committees a 
        report on the determination; and
            (2) 30 days elapses after the date of the submittal of such 
        report to the appropriate congressional committees.
    (b) Report Requirements.--The report under subsection (a) shall set 
forth the following: --
            (1) A description of each element of the vetted Syrian 
        opposition that will provided man-portable air defense systems 
        as described in subsection (a), including--
                    (A) the geographic location of such element;
                    (B) a detailed intelligence assessment of such 
                element;
                    (C) a description of the alignment of such element 
                within the broader conflict in Syria; and
                    (D) a description and assessment of the assurance, 
                if any, received by the commander of such element in 
                connection with the provision of man-portable air 
                defense systems.
            (2) The number and type of man-portable air defense systems 
        to be so provided.
            (3) The logistics plan for providing and resupplying each 
        element to be so provided man-portable air defense systems with 
        additional man-portable air defense systems.
            (4) The duration of support to be provided in connection 
        with the provision of man-portable air defense systems.
            (5) The justification for the provision of man-portable air 
        defense systems to each element of the vetted Syrian 
        opposition, including an explanation of the purpose and 
        expected employment of such systems.
            (6) Any other matters that the Secretary of Defense and the 
        Secretary of State jointly consider appropriate.
    (c) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' has the meaning given 
that term in section 1209(e)(2) of the Carl Levin and Howard P. 
``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 
(Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3541).
    (d) Prohibition on Use of Certain Funds.--None of the funds 
authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act 
for fiscal year 2018 for ``Counter-ISIS Train and Equip Fund'' Counter 
may be used to procure or transfer man-portable air defense systems 
(MANPADS).

SEC. 1040. DETERMINATION REGARDING TRANSFER OF DEFENSE ARTICLES TO 
              UNITS COMMITTING GROSS VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS.

    (a) Determination Required.--In carrying out the Golden Sentry 
program to monitor end-use compliance of the government of a foreign 
state to which defense articles and services have been provided, the 
Director of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, in consultation 
with the appropriate United States embassy personnel in the foreign 
state, shall determine whether the government of the foreign state has 
transferred any defense article to a unit that is prohibited from 
receiving assistance from the United States by reason of a 
determination by the Secretary of State that there is credible evidence 
that such unit has committed a gross violation of human rights.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on Foreign Relations of 
the Senate and the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives a report on the 
implementation of subsection (a).

SEC. 1041. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO DESIGNATE OR EXPAND FEDERAL 
              NATIONAL HERITAGE AREAS.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the Department of 
Defense may be obligated or expended to designate or expand any Federal 
National Heritage Area in any of Baca, Bent, Crowley Huerfano, Kiowa, 
Las Animas, Otero, Prowers, or Pueblo counties, Colorado.

SEC. 1042. REQUIREMENT RELATING TO TRANSFER OF EXCESS DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE EQUIPMENT TO FEDERAL AND STATE AGENCIES.

    Section 2576a of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(g) Preference for Border Security Purposes.--(1) In transferring 
the items of personal property described in paragraph (2) under this 
section, the Secretary of Defense may give first preference to the 
Department of Homeland Security and then to Federal and State agencies 
that agree to use the property primarily for the purpose of 
strengthening border security along the southern border of the United 
States.
    ``(2) The items of personal property described in this paragraph 
are--
            ``(A) unmanned aerial vehicles;
            ``(B) the Aerostat radar system;
            ``(C) night-vision goggles; and
            ``(D) high mobility multi-purpose wheel vehicles (commonly 
        known as `humvees').''.

SEC. 1043. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS TO CLOSE BIOSAFETY LEVEL 4 
              LABORATORIES.

    (a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated in 
this Act may be used to support the closure or transfer of a biosafety 
level 4 laboratory until the heads of the Federal agencies that use the 
laboratory jointly certify to the covered congressional committees that 
the closure or transfer of the lab would not have a negative effect on 
biological defense capabilities and would not result in a lapse of 
biological defense capabilities.
    (b) Covered Congressional Committees.--In this section, the term 
``covered congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and 
        House of Representatives;
            (2) the Committees on the Judiciary of the Senate and House 
        of Representatives;
            (3) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
        House of Representatives;
            (4) the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate;
            (5) the Committee on Homeland Security of the House of 
        Representatives;
            (6) the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
        Affairs of the Senate;
            (7) the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of the 
        House of Representatives; and
            (8) the Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and 
        House of Representatives.

                    Subtitle E--Studies and Reports

SEC. 1051. ELIMINATION OF REPORTING REQUIREMENTS TERMINATED AFTER 
              NOVEMBER 25, 2017, PURSUANT TO SECTION 1080 OF THE 
              NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2016.

    (a) Title 10, United States Code.--Title 10, United States Code, is 
amended as follows:
            (1) Section 113 reports.--
                    (A) Reserve forces policy board report.--Section 
                113(c) is amended--
                            (i) by striking paragraph (2);
                            (ii) by striking ``(1)'' after ``(c)''; and
                            (iii) by redesignating subparagraphs (A), 
                        (B), and (C) as paragraphs (1), (2), and (3), 
                        respectively.
                    (B) Total force management report.--Section 113 is 
                amended by striking subsection (l).
            (2) Defense industrial security report.--Section 428 is 
        amended by striking subsection (f).
            (3) Military musical units gift report.--Section 974(d) is 
        amended by striking paragraph (3).
            (4) Health protection quality report.--Section 1073b is 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (a); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsections (b) and (c) as 
                subsections (a) and (b), respectively.
            (5) Master plans for reductions in civilian positions.--
                    (A) In general.--Section 1597 is amended--
                            (i) by striking subsection (c);
                            (ii) by striking subsections (d), (e), and 
                        (f) as subsections (c), (d), and (e), 
                        respectively; and
                            (iii) in subsection (c), as redesignated, 
                        by striking ``or a master plan prepared under 
                        subsection (c)''.
                    (B) Conforming amendments.--Section 129a(d) is 
                amended--
                            (i) by striking paragraphs (1) and (2); and
                            (ii) by redesignating paragraphs (3) and 
                        (4) as paragraphs (1) and (2), respectively.
            (6) Acquisition workforce development fund report.--Section 
        1705 is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (e)(1), by striking ``subsection 
                (h)(2)'' and inserting ``subsection (g)(2)'';
                    (B) by striking subsection (f); and
                    (C) by redesignating subsections (g) and (h) as 
                subsections (f) and (g), respectively.
            (7) Acquisition corps report.--Section 1722b is amended by 
        striking subsection (c).
            (8) Military family readiness report.--Section 1781b is 
        amended by striking subsection (d).
            (9) Professional military education report.--
                    (A) Elimination.--Section 2157 is repealed.
                    (B) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at 
                the beginning of chapter 107 is amended by striking the 
                item relating to section 2157.
            (10) Department of defense conferences fee-collection 
        report.--Section 2262 is amended by striking subsection (d).
            (11) United states contributions to nato common-funded 
        budgets report.--Section 2263 is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (b); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection 
                (b).
            (12) Foreign counter-space programs report.--
                    (A) Elimination.--Section 2277 is repealed.
                    (B) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at 
                the beginning of chapter 135 is amended by striking the 
                item relating to section 2277.
            (13) Use of multiyear contracts report.--Section 
        2306b(l)(4) is amended by striking ``Not later than'' and all 
        that follows through the colon and inserting the following: 
        ``Each report required by paragraph (5) with respect to a 
        contract (or contract extension) shall contain the 
        following:''.
            (14) Burden sharing contributions report.--Section 2350j is 
        amended by striking subsection (f).
            (15) Contract prohibition waiver report.--Section 2410i(c) 
        is amended by striking the second sentence.
            (16) Strategic sourcing plan of action report.--Subsection 
        (a) of section 2475 is amended to read as follows:
    ``(a) Strategic Sourcing Plan of Action Defined.--In this section, 
the term `Strategic Sourcing Plan of Action' means a Strategic Sourcing 
Plan of Action for the Department of Defense (as identified in the 
Department of Defense Interim Guidance dated February 29, 2000, or any 
successor Department of Defense guidance or directive) in effect for a 
fiscal year.''.
            (17) Technology and industrial base policy guidance 
        report.--Section 2506 is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (b); and
                    (B) in subsection (a), by striking ``Such 
                guidance'' and inserting the following:
    ``(b) Purpose of Guidance.--The guidance prescribed pursuant to 
subsection (a)''.
            (18) Foreign-controlled contractors report.--Section 2537 
        is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (b); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsection (c).
            (19) Support for sporting events report.--Section 2564 is 
        amended--
                    (A) in subsection (b)(3), by striking ``section 
                377'' and inserting ``section 277'';
                    (B) by striking subsection (e);
                    (C) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as 
                subsections (e) and (f), respectively; and
                    (D) in subsection (e), as so redesignated, by 
                ``striking sections 375 and 376'' and inserting 
                ``sections 275 and 276''.
            (20) General and flag officer quarters report.--Section 
        2831 is amended by striking subsection (e).
            (21) Military installations vulnerability assessment 
        reports.--Section 2859 is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (c); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection 
                (c).
            (22) Industrial facility investment program construction 
        report.--Section 2861 is amended by striking subsection (d).
            (23) Statement of amounts available for water conservation 
        at military installations.--Section 2866(b) is amended by 
        striking paragraph (3).
            (24) Acquisition or construction of military unaccompanied 
        housing pilot projects report.--Section 2881a is amended by 
        striking subsection (e).
            (25) Statement of amounts available from energy cost 
        savings.--Section 2912 is amended by striking subsection (d).
            (26) Army training report.--
                    (A) Elimination.--Section 4316 is repealed.
                    (B) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at 
                the beginning of chapter 401 is amended by striking the 
                item relating to section 4316.
            (27) State of the army reserve report.--Section 3038(f) is 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking ``(1)'' before ``The''; and
                    (B) by striking paragraph (2).
            (28) State of the marine corps reserve report.--Section 
        5144(d) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``(1)'' before ``The''; and
                    (B) by striking paragraph (2).
            (29) State of the air force reserve report.--Section 
        8038(f) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``(1)'' before ``The''; and
                    (B) by striking paragraph (2).
    (b) Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1985.--Section 1003 of 
the Department of Defense Authorization Act, 1985 (Public Law 98-525; 
22 U.S.C. 1928 note), relating to an annual report on allied 
contributions to the common defense, is amended by striking subsections 
(c) and (d).
    (c) National Defense Authorization Act, Fiscal Year 1989.--Section 
1009 of the National Defense Authorization Act, Fiscal Year 1989 
(Public Law 100-456; 22 U.S.C. 1928 note), relating to an annual report 
on the official development assistance program of Japan, is amended by 
striking subsection (b).
    (d) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991.--
Section 1518 of the Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991 
(Public Law 101-510; 24 U.S.C. 418), relating to reports on the results 
of inspection of Armed Forces Retirement Homes, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (c)(1), by striking ``Congress and''; and
            (2) in subsection (e)--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (2);
                    (B) by striking ``(1)'' before ``Not later''; and
                    (C) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as 
                paragraphs (1) and (2), respectively.
    (e) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Years 1992 and 
1993.--Section 1046 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Years 1992 and 1993 (Public Law 102-190; 22 U.S.C. 1928 note), 
relating to an annual report on defense cost-sharing, is amended by 
striking subsections (e) and (f).
    (f) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1994.--
Section 1603 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
1994 (Public Law 103-160; 22 U.S.C. 2751 note), relating to an annual 
report on counterproliferation policy and programs of the United 
States, is amended by striking subsection (d).
    (g) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1995.--
Section 533 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
1995 (Public Law 103-337; 10 U.S.C. 113 note), relating to an annual 
report on personnel readiness factors by race and gender, is repealed.
    (h) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000.--
Section 366 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2000 (Public Law 106-65; 10 U.S.C. 113 note), relating to an annual 
report on spare parts, logistics, and sustainment standards, is amended 
by striking subsection (f).
    (i) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002.--The 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002 (Public Law 
107-107) is amended as follows:
            (1) Army workload and performance system report.--Section 
        346 (115 Stat. 1062) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsections (b) and (c); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection 
                (b).
            (2) Reliability of financial statements report.--Section 
        1008(d) (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``(1)'' before ``On each''; and
                    (B) by striking paragraph (2).
    (j) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2003.--
Section 817 of the Bob Stump National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2003 (Public Law 107-314; 10 U.S.C. 2306a note), relating 
to an annual report on commercial item and exceptional case exceptions 
and waivers, is amended--
            (1) by striking subsection (d); and
            (2) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (d).
    (k) National Defense Authorization Act for 2006.--The National 
Defense Authorization Act for 2006 (Public Law 109-163) is amended as 
follows:
            (1) Notification of adjustment in limitation amount for 
        next-generation destroyer program.--Section 123 (119 Stat. 
        3156) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (d); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection 
                (d).
            (2) Certification of budgets for joint tactical radio 
        system report.--Section 218(c) (119 Stat. 3171) is amended by 
        striking paragraph (3).
            (3) Department of defense costs to carry out united nations 
        resolutions report.--Section 1224 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is 
        repealed.
    (l) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007.--
Section 357(b) of the John Warner National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law 109-364; 22 U.S.C. 4865 note), 
relating to an annual report on Department of Defense overseas 
personnel subject to chief of mission authority, is amended by striking 
``shall submit to the congressional defense committees'' and inserting 
``shall prepare''.
    (m) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008.--The 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 
110-181) is amended as follows:
            (1) Army industrial facilities cooperative activities 
        report.--Section 328 (10 U.S.C. 4544 note) is amended by 
        striking subsection (b).
            (2) Army product improvement report.--Section 330 (122 
        Stat. 68) is amended by striking subsection (e).
    (n) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009.--The 
Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 
(Public Law 110-417) is amended as follows:
            (1) Support for non-conventional assisted recovery 
        activities report.--Section 943 (122 Stat. 4578) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (e); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsections (f), (g), and (h) 
                as subsections (e), (f), and (g), respectively.
            (2) Reimbursement of navy mess expenses report.--Section 
        1014 (122 Stat. 4585) is amended by striking subsection (c).
            (3) Electromagnetic pulse attack report.--Section 1048 (122 
        Stat. 4603) is repealed.
    (o) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010.--
Section 121 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2211), relating to an annual report 
on the Littoral Combat Ship Program, is amended by striking subsection 
(e).
    (p) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011.--The 
Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 
(Public Law 111-383) is amended as follows:
            (1) Navy airborne signals intelligence, surveillance, and 
        reconnaissance capabilities report.--Section 112(b) (124 Stat. 
        4153) is amended--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (3); and
                    (B) by redesignating paragraph (4) as paragraph 
                (3).
            (2) Inclusion of technology protection features during 
        research and development of defense systems report.--Section 
        243 (10 U.S.C. 2358 note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (c); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsections (d) and (e) as 
                subsections (c) and (d), respectively.
            (3) Acquisition of military purpose nondevelopmental items 
        report.--Section 866 (10 U.S.C. 2302 note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (d); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection 
                (d).
            (4) Nuclear triad report.--Section 1054 (10 U.S.C. 113 
        note) is repealed.
    (q) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012.--The 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 
112-81) is amended as follows:
            (1) Performance management system and appointment 
        procedures report.--Section 1102 (5 U.S.C. 9902 note) is 
        amended by striking subsection (b).
            (2) Global security contingency fund report.--Section 1207 
        (22 U.S.C. 2151 note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (n); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsections (o) and (p) as 
                subsections (n) and (o).
            (3) Data servers and centers cost savings report.--Section 
        2867 (10 U.S.C. 2223a note) is amended by striking subsection 
        (d).
    (r) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013.--The 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (Public Law 
112-239) is amended as follows:
            (1) F-22A raptor modernization program report.--Section 144 
        (126 Stat. 1663) is amended by striking subsection (c).
            (2) TRICARE mail-order pharmacy program report.--Section 
        716 (10 U.S.C. 1074g note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (e); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as 
                subsections (e) and (f).
            (3) Warriors in transition programs report.--Section 738 
        (10 U.S.C. 1071 note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (e); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection 
                (e).
            (4) Use of indemnification agreements report.--Section 865 
        (126 Stat. 1861) is repealed.
            (5) Counter space technology report.--Section 917 (126 
        Stat. 1878) is repealed.
            (6) Imagery intelligence and geospatial information support 
        report.--Section 921 (126 Stat. 1878) is amended by striking 
        subsection (c).
            (7) Computer network operations coordination report.--
        Section 1079 (10 U.S.C. 221 note) is amended by striking 
        subsection (c).
            (8) Updates of activities of office of security cooperation 
        in iraq report.--Section 1211 (126 Stat. 1983) is amended by 
        striking paragraph (3).
            (9) United states participation in the atares program 
        report.--Section 1276 (10 U.S.C. 2350c note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsections (e) and (f); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection 
                (e).
    (s) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014.--The 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 
113-66) is amended as follows:
            (1) Modernizing personnel security strategy metrics 
        report.--Section 907(c)(3) (10 U.S.C. 1564 note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``(A) Metrics required.--In'' and 
                inserting ``In''; and
                    (B) by striking subparagraph (B).
            (2) Defense clandestine service report.--Section 923 (10 
        U.S.C. prec. 421 note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (b); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsections (c), (d), and (e) 
                as subsection (b), (c), and (d), respectively.
            (3) International agreements relating to dod report.--
        Section 1249 (127 Stat. 925) is repealed.
            (4) Small business growth report.--Section 1611 (127 Stat. 
        946) is amended by striking subsection (d).
    (t) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015.--The 
Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291) is amended as follows:
            (1) Assignment of private sector personnel to defense 
        advanced research projects agency report.--Section 232 (10 
        U.S.C. 2358 note) is amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (e); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as 
                subsections (e) and (f), respectively.
            (2) Government lodging program report.--Section 914 (5 
        U.S.C. 5911 note) is amended by striking subsection (d).
            (3) DOD response to compromises of classified information 
        report.--Section 1052 (128 Stat. 3497) is repealed.
            (4) Personnel protection and personnel survivability 
        equipment loan report.--Section 1207 (10 U.S.C. 2342 note) is 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (d); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection 
                (d).
            (5) DOD assistance to counter isis report.--Section 1236 
        (128 Stat. 3558) is amended by striking subsection (d).
            (6) Cooperative threat reduction program use of 
        contributions report.--Section 1325 (50 U.S.C. 3715) is 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (e); and
                    (B) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as 
                subsections (e) and (f), respectively.
            (7) Cooperative threat reduction program facilities 
        certification report.--Section 1341 (50 U.S.C. 3741) is 
        repealed.
            (8) Cooperative threat reduction program project category 
        report.--Section 1342 (50 U.S.C. 3742) is repealed.
            (9) Statement on allocation of funds for space security and 
        defense program.--Section 1607 (128 Stat. 3625) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``(a) Allocation of Funds.--'';
                    (B) by striking subsections (b), (c), and (d); and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                sentence: ``This requirement shall terminate on 
                December 19, 2019.''.
    (u) Preservation of Certain Additional Reports.--Effective as of 
December 23, 2016, and as if included therein as enacted, section 
1061(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
(Public Law 114-328) is amended as follows:
            (1) General defense reports.--Paragraph (1) is amended by 
        striking ``113(i)'' and inserting ``113(c), (e), and (i)''.
            (2) Annual operations and maintenance report.--Paragraph 
        (2) is amended by inserting after ``Section'' the following: 
        ``116 and section''.
            (3) Selected acquisition reports.--Paragraph (44) is 
        amended by inserting after ``Section'' the following: ``2432 
        and section''.
            (4) National guard bureau report.--By inserting after 
        paragraph (63) the following new paragraph:
            ``(64) Section 10504(b).''.
            (5) Report on procurement of contract services.--By 
        inserting after paragraph (64), as added by paragraph (4), the 
        following new paragraph:
            ``(65) Section 235.''.
            (6) Annual defense manpower requirements report.--By 
        inserting after paragraph (64), as added by paragraph (4), the 
        following new paragraph:
            ``(65) Section 115a.''.
            (7) STARBASE program report.--By inserting after paragraph 
        (64), as added by paragraph (4), the following new paragraph:
            ``(65) Section 2193b(g).''.
    (v) Preservation of Vetted Syrian Opposition Report.--Effective as 
of December 23, 2016, and as if included therein as enacted, section 
1061(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
(Public Law 114-328) is amended by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
            ``(18) Section 1209(d) (127 Stat. 3542).''.
    (w) Preservation of National Guard Youth Challenge Report.--
Effective as of December 23, 2016, and as if included therein as 
enacted, section 1061(i) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) is amended by adding at the end 
the following new paragraph:
            ``(34) Section 509(k) of title 32, United States Code.''.
    (x)  Annual Report on Support to Law Enforcement Agencies 
Conducting Counter-terrorism Activities.--Effective as of December 23, 
2016, and as if included therein as enacted, section 1061(d) of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 
114-328) is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(5) Section 1022(c).''.
    (y) Effective Date.--Except as provided in subsections (u), (v), 
(w), and (x) the amendments made by this section shall take effect on 
the later of--
            (1) the date of the enactment of this Act; or
            (2) November 25, 2017.

SEC. 1052. REPORT ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ARCTIC CAPABILITY AND 
              RESOURCE GAPS AND REQUIRED INFRASTRUCTURE.

    (a) Report Required.--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 setting forth--
            (1) necessary steps the Department of Defense is 
        undertaking to resolve arctic security capability and resource 
        gaps; and
            (2) the requirements and investment plans for military 
        infrastructure required to protect United States national 
        security interests in the arctic region.
    (b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall include an 
analysis of each of the following:
            (1) The infrastructure needed to ensure national security 
        in the arctic region.
            (2) Any shortfalls in observation, remote sensing 
        capabilities, ice prediction, and weather forecasting.
            (3) Any shortfalls of the Department in navigational aids.
            (4) Any additional, necessary high-latitude electronic and 
        communications infrastructure requirements.
            (5) Any gaps in intelligence, surveillance, and 
        reconnaissance coverage and recommendations for additional 
        intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance capabilities
            (6) Any shortfalls in personnel recovery capabilities.
            (7) Any additional capabilities the Secretary determines 
        should be incorporated into future Navy surface combatants.
    (c) Additional Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall 
also include the following:
            (1) A review of United States national security interests 
        in the arctic region, including strategic national assets, 
        United States citizens, territory, freedom of navigation, and 
        economic and trade interests in the region.
            (2) A description of United States military capabilities 
        needed for operations in arctic terrain, including types of 
        forces, major weapon systems, and logistics required for 
        operations in such terrain.
            (3) A description of the installations, infrastructure, and 
        deep water ports for deployment of assets required to support 
        operations in the arctic region, including the stationing, 
        deployment, and training of military forces for operations in 
        the region.
            (4) An investment plan to establish the installations and 
        infrastructure required for operations in the arctic region.
    (d) Form of Report.--The report under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1053. REVIEW AND ASSESSMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PERSONNEL 
              RECOVERY AND NONCONVENTIONAL ASSISTED RECOVERY 
              MECHANISMS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the Secretary of 
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a review 
and assessment of personnel recovery and nonconventional assisted 
recovery programs, authorities, and policies.
    (b) Elements.--The assessment required under subsection (a) shall 
include each of the following elements:
            (1) An overall strategy defining personnel recovery and 
        nonconventional assisted recovery programs and activities, 
        including how such programs and activities support the 
        requirements of the geographic combatant commanders.
            (2) A comprehensive review and assessment of statutory 
        authorities, policies, and interagency coordination mechanisms, 
        including limitations and shortfalls, for personnel recovery 
        and nonconventional assisted recovery programs and activities.
            (3) A comprehensive description of current and anticipated 
        future personnel recovery and nonconventional assisted recovery 
        requirements across the future years defense program, as 
        validated by the Joint Staff.
            (4) An overview of validated current and expected future 
        force structure requirements necessary to meet near-, mid-, and 
        long-term personnel recovery and nonconventional assisted 
        recovery programs and activities of the geographic combatant 
        commanders.
            (5) Any other matters the Secretary considers appropriate.
    (c) Form of Assessment.--The assessment required under subsection 
(a) shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a 
classified annex.
    (d) Comptroller General Review.--Not later than 90 days after the 
date on which the assessment required under subsection (a) is 
submitted, the Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees a review of such assessment.

SEC. 1054. MINE WARFARE READINESS INSPECTION PLAN AND REPORT.

    (a) Inspection Plan.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this subsection, the Chief of Naval Operations, in 
consultation with the Combatant Commanders, shall submit a plan for 
inspections of each unit and organization tasked with delivering 
operational capability, missions and mission essential tasks, 
functions, supporting roles, organization, manning, training, and 
materiel for naval mine warfare. At a minimum, inspected units and 
organizations shall include those required in the Joint Strategic 
Capabilities Plan and those assigned in the Forces For Unified Commands 
document or have the potential to support, by deployment or otherwise, 
a directed Operation Plan, Concept Plan, contingency operation, 
homeland security operation, or Defense Support of Civil Authorities 
requirements for naval offensive or defensive mine warfare.
    (b) Criteria.--This inspection plan shall propose methods to 
analytically assess, evaluate, improve and assure mission readiness of 
each unit or organization with required operational capabilities for 
naval mine warfare. Inspection shall include--
            (1) an assessment or verification of material condition;
            (2) unit wide training and personnel readiness as measured 
        by established tasks, conditions and standards that demonstrate 
        the unit readiness to perform their wartime or homeland defense 
        mission;
            (3) force through unit level training;
            (4) readiness to support multi-echelon, joint service mine 
        warfare operations as part of an offensive, defensive mining or 
        mine countermeasures task;
            (5) readiness to support combatant commander campaign 
        plans, operational plan, concept plan, or the Joint Strategic 
        Capabilities Plan;
            (6) required operational capability;
            (7) inspection and reinspection process; and
            (8) inspection periodicy.
    (c) Applicability.--The inspection requirements under this 
subsection apply to the following units and organizations:
            (1) Surface MCM vessels or vessels performing MCM tasks.
            (2) Airborne MCM squadrons.
            (3) Mobile mine assembly groups and mobile mine assembly 
        units.
            (4) Fleet patrol squadrons with mine laying capabilities.
            (5) LCS and LCS MCM mission modules upon reaching IOC.
            (6) Mine countermeasures squadrons.
            (7) Units exercising command and control over MIW forces.
            (8) MCM operational support ships.
            (9) Attack and guided missile submarines with mine laying 
        capabilities.
            (10) Magnetic and acoustic silencing facilities.
            (11) EOD MCM or VSW Companies and Platoons.
            (12) SEAL (ESG / CSG) USMC units with VSW capability.
    (d) Certification.--The Chief of Naval Operations shall submit to 
the Secretary of Defense, the Combatant Commanders, the Chairman of the 
Joint Chiefs of Staff and to Congress a report on the program under 
this subsection. The report shall contain a classified section which 
addresses capability and capacity to meet JSCP, OPLAN, CONPLAN and 
contingency requirements and unclassified section with general summary 
and readiness trends.
    (e) Conforming Repeal.--Section 1090 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92) is repealed.

SEC. 1055. REPORT ON CIVILIAN CASUALTIES FROM DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              STRIKES.

    (a) Report Required.--For each calendar year, the Secretary of 
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
on strikes carried out by the Department of Defense against terrorist 
targets located outside Government-designated areas of active 
hostilities and against enemy combatants located inside Government-
designated areas of active hostilities during the period beginning on 
January 1 and ending on December 31 of the year covered by the report. 
Such report shall include each of the following, for the period covered 
by the report:
            (1) The number of such strikes carried out in--
                    (A) locations outside Government-designated areas 
                of active hostilities; and
                    (B) locations inside Government-designated areas of 
                active hostilities.
            (2) An assessment of the combatant and non-combatant deaths 
        resulting from those strikes, including the number of such 
        deaths--
                    (A) occurring outside of Government-designated 
                areas of active hostilities; and
                    (B) occurring within Government-designated areas of 
                active hostilities, with the number of such deaths 
                displayed to indicate the Government-designated country 
                or location within the Government-designated country 
                where such deaths occurred.
            (3) To the extent feasible and appropriate, the general 
        reasons for any discrepancies between post-strike assessments 
        from the Department of Defense and credible reporting from 
        nongovernmental organizations regarding non-combatant deaths 
        resulting from such strikes.
            (4) A description of steps taken by the Department of 
        Defense to mitigate harm to civilians in conducting such 
        strikes.
            (5) Definitions of the terms ``combatant'' and 
        ``noncombatant'' as used in the report.
            (6) The monthly tabulations collected by the Department of 
        Defense of combatant and non-combatant casualties occurring 
        inside of areas of active hostilities, and any revisions to 
        previously reported tabulations.
            (7) A specification of the countries where strikes 
        occurred, or locations within countries where strikes 
        occurred--
                    (A) designated as areas of active hostilities; and
                    (B) not designated as areas of active hostilities.
    (b) Deadline for Reports.--The reports required by subsection (a) 
shall be submitted as follows:
            (1) The report for 2018 shall be submitted not later than 
        December 31, 2018.
            (2) The report for 2019, and for each subsequent year, 
        shall be submitted by not later than March 1 of the year 
        following the year covered by the report.
    (c) Review of Reporting.--In preparing a report under this section, 
the Secretary of Defense shall review relevant and credible post-strike 
all-source reporting, including such information from nongovernmental 
sources.
    (d) Form of Report.--The reports required under subsection (a) 
shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified 
annex.
    (e) Public Availability.--The Secretary of Defense shall make the 
unclassified form of the reports publicly available.

SEC. 1056. REPORTS ON INFRASTRUCTURE AND CAPABILITIES OF LAJES FIELD, 
              PORTUGAL.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) Lajes Field, Portugal, is an enabler of United States 
        operations in Europe, Africa, and the Atlantic.
            (2) Lajes field has capabilities and infrastructure that 
        reflect significant long-term investments by the United States, 
        including a 10,000 foot runway, housing for more than 650 
        personnel and their families, a power plant and water 
        facilities, significant communication capability, and an award-
        winning medical clinic.
            (3) Lajes Field provides a strategic location to monitor 
        the activities of foreign powers in the Atlantic and 
        Mediterranean, including Russia's increased naval presence and 
        China's efforts to establish a military presence in the 
        Atlantic.
            (4) The Department of Defense has not fully utilized the 
        infrastructure at Lajes Field.
    (b) Infrastructure and Capabilities Report.--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 
House of Representatives a report on the infrastructure and 
capabilities of Lajes Field, Portugal. Such report shall include each 
of the following:
            (1) An assessment of the communications infrastructure at 
        Lajes Field, including the estimated cost to--
                    (A) upgrade the existing infrastructure to add 
                additional bandwidth of 56 giga-bits-per-second; and
                    (B) connect the existing infrastructure to any 
                currently planned additional undersea cables to 
                increase the available bandwidth by at least 56 giga-
                bits-per-second.
            (2) A justification for the current status of Lajes Field 
        as an unaccompanied tour location and an assessment of the 
        estimated costs of converting assignments at Lajes Field to an 
        accompanied tour location.
            (3) An assessment of the estimated cost of allowing members 
        of the Armed Forces of the United States to occupy the on-base 
        housing owned by the United States.
            (4) An update to the Housing Requirements and Market 
        Analysis for Lajes Field to assess the housing availability for 
        a base population of up to 2000 military and civilian 
        personnel.
            (5) The cost to establish Lajes Field as a location for 
        air-to-air training or anti-submarine warfare missions, 
        including the costs of any necessary infrastructure upgrades, 
        as well as any potential operational benefits.
    (c) Fuel Storage System Report.--Not later than one year 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 House of 
Representatives a report on the environmental impact of fuel storage 
systems at Lajes Field, Portugal. Such report shall include an impact 
assessment of the soil contamination from Department of Defense fuel 
storage systems at Lajes Field, including an assessment of the causes 
of the leak of the Cabrito Pipeline.

SEC. 1057. REPORT ON JOINT PACIFIC ALASKA RANGE COMPLEX MODERNIZATION.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to 
the congressional defense committees a report regarding proposed 
improvements to the Joint Pacific Alaska Range Complex.
    (b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall include the 
following:
            (1) An analysis of existing JPARC infrastructure.
            (2) A summary of improvements to the range infrastructure 
        the Secretary determines are necessary--
                    (A) for fifth generation fighters to train at 
                maximum potential; and
                    (B) to provide a realistic air warfare environment 
                versus a near-peer adversary for--
                            (i) four squadrons of fifth generation 
                        fighters;
                            (ii) annual Red Flag-Alaska exercises; and
                            (iii) biannual Operation Northern Edge 
                        exercises.

SEC. 1058. REPORT ON POTENTIAL AGREEMENT WITH THE GOVERNMENT OF RUSSIA 
              ON THE STATUS OF SYRIA.

    Before entering into any agreement or understanding with the 
government of Russia regarding the status of Syria, the President shall 
submit to Congress a report that includes--
            (1) a description of any understanding between the 
        President and the government of Russia regarding a plan to 
        divide territory among parties to the conflict; and
            (2) a description of any such understanding that would 
        provide Iran with access to the border between Israel and 
        Syria.

SEC. 1059. REPORT ON PRIOR ATTEMPTED RUSSIAN CYBER ATTACKS AGAINST 
              DEFENSE SYSTEMS.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Director of National Intelligence, shall submit to the Congress a 
written report on all attempts to breach, intrude, or otherwise hack 
into Department of Defense systems that--
            (1) occurred during the last 24-month period ending on the 
        date of the enactment of this Act; and
            (2) were attributable either to the government of the 
        Russian Federation or actors substantially supported by the 
        government of the Russian Federation.
    (b) Form of Report.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1060. REPORT ON ALTERNATIVES TO AQUEOUS FILM FORMING FOAM.

    (a) Report Required.--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 Department's status toward developing a 
new military specification for safe and effective alternatives to 
aqueous film forming foam (hereinafter referred to as ``AFFF'') that do 
not contain perfluorooctanoic acid (hereinafter referred to as 
``PFOA'') or erfluorooctanesulfonic acid (hereinafter referred to as 
``PFOS'').
    (b) Elements.--The report required by subparagraph (1) shall 
include the following:
            (1) A detailed explanation of the Department's status 
        toward developing a new military specification for safe and 
        effective alternatives to AFFF that do not contain PFOA or 
        PFOS.
            (2) An update on the Department's plans for replacing AFFF 
        containing PFOA or PFOS at military installations across the 
        country and methods of disposal for AFFF containing PFOA or 
        PFOS.
            (3) An overview of current and planned research and 
        development for AFFF alternatives that do not contain PFOA or 
        PFOS.
            (4) An assessment of how the establishment of a maximum 
        contaminant level for PFOA or PFOS under the Safe Drinking 
        Water Act (42 U.S.C. 300f et seq), rather than the current 
        health advisory level, would impact the Department's mitigation 
        actions, prioritization of such actions, and research and 
        development related to PFOA and PFOS.

SEC. 1060A. REPORT ON PROJECT, PROGRAM, AND PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT 
              STANDARDS.

    (a) Report on Project, Program, and Portfolio Management 
Standards.--
            (1) Report.--The Comptroller General of the United States 
        shall deliver, not later than 90 days after enactment, a report 
        to Congress on the adoption of project, program, and portfolio 
        management standards within the Department of Defense.
            (2) Elements.--The report under paragraph (1) shall 
        address, at a minimum, the following:
                    (A) Existing policy, guidance, and instruction of 
                the Department of Defense related to project, program, 
                and portfolio management.
                    (B) An assessment of how the Department of Defense 
                can incorporate nationally accredited standards for 
                project, program, and portfolio management--as required 
                by Public Law 104-113 and Public Law 114-264--into its 
                existing project, program, and portfolio management 
                policy, guidance, and instruction, as well as how it 
                may replace or revise existing policy, guidance, and 
                instruction related to project, program, and portfolio 
                management.
    (b) Report on Department of Defense Portfolio Management.--
            (1) Report.--The Comptroller General of the United States 
        shall deliver, not later than nine months after enactment, a 
        report to Congress on enhancing portfolio management 
        capabilities and structure within the Department of Defense.
            (2) Elements.--The report under paragraph (1) shall 
        address, at a minimum, the following:
                    (A) Existing policy and guidance of the Department 
                of Defense related to portfolio management, the 
                management and alignment of portfolios of projects and 
                programs to realize organization strategy and 
                objectives.
                    (B) An assessment of how milestone decision 
                authority and budget allocations in a portfolio 
                management model at the enterprise, Program Executive 
                Officer, and Service Acquisition Executive levels could 
                be revised in a manner consistent with the existing 
                Defense Acquisition Management System framework and 
                Office of Management and guidance set forth in Office 
                of Management and Budget Circular A-11 to streamline 
                decisionmaking authority and enhance agility, including 
                the appropriate roles for developing, managing, and 
                overseeing portfolio strategies, portfolio roadmaps and 
                portfolio documentation, portfolio decisionmaking, and 
                portfolio budget decisions.
                    (C) An assessment of portfolio organizational 
                structures within government and industry with the 
                potential to improve integration of overall Department 
                of Defense enterprise strategy and program execution.
                    (D) An assessment of nationally accredited 
                standards-based portfolio management models for 
                adoption by the Department of Defense to manage its 
                portfolios of projects and programs and streamline 
                decisionmaking.
                    (E) An assessment of the Department of Defense's 
                existing standards, policy, guidance, and instruction 
                for portfolio management and how the adoption of 
                nationally accredited standards for portfolio 
                management may replace or revise existing policy, 
                guidance and instruction.
                    (F) Any other matters related to Department of 
                Defense portfolio management the Comptroller General 
                determines are relevant.

SEC. 1060B. STUDY ON HEALTH EFFECTS OF EXPOSURE TO PERFLUOROOCTANE 
              SULFONATE AND PERFLUOROOCTANOIC ACID FROM FIREFIGHTING 
              FOAM USED AT MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.

    (a) Study.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the 
Administrator of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, 
shall carry out a study on any health effects experienced by 
individuals who are exposed to perfluorooctane sulfonate and 
perfluorooctanoic acid from firefighting foam used at military 
installations or former military installations, including exposure 
through a well that provides water for human consumption that the 
Secretary determines is contaminated with perfluorooctane sulfonate and 
perfluorooctanoic acid from such firefighting foam.
    (b) Design of Study.--The Secretary shall ensure that the study 
under subsection (a) meets the following criteria:
            (1) The study includes a review of relevant literature.
            (2) The study includes community input through community 
        advisory groups or focus groups.
            (3) The study identifies existing research regarding health 
        effects relating to exposure described in subsection (a).
            (4) The study includes protocols based on expertise from 
        epidemiologists.
            (5) The study identifies and characterizes one or more 
        sources of water contamination and collects preliminary 
        information on the magnitude and distribution of such exposure.
            (6) Based on the information learned under paragraphs (1) 
        through (5), the study determines the specific health effects 
        and perfluorooctane sulfonates and perfluorooctanoic acids to 
        evaluate.
            (7) The study includes biomonitoring from a sample of 
        community members, including with respect to specific subgroups 
        considered at risk for such exposure.
            (8) The study collects data on possible biological changes 
        potentially associated with such exposure.
            (9) The study includes detailed exposure and health 
        questionnaires.
            (10) The study includes the review of medical records.
            (11) The study analyzes data for an association between 
        such exposure and potential health effects.
    (c) Submission.--Not later than five years after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees the study under subsection (a). The Secretary shall 
make such study publicly available pursuant to section 122a of title 
10, United States Code.

SEC. 1060C. REPORT ON THE NATIONAL BIODEFENSE ANALYSIS AND 
              COUNTERMEASURES CENTER.

    (a) Report.--Not later than December 31, 2017, the Secretary of 
Defense shall submit to the appropriate Congressional committees a 
report, prepared in consultation with the officials listed in 
subsection (b), on the National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasures 
Center (referred to in this section as the ``NBACC'') containing the 
following information:
            (1) The functions of the NBACC.
            (2) The end users of the NBACC, including those whose 
        assets may be managed by other agencies.
            (3) The cost and mission impact for each user identified 
        under paragraph (2) of any potential closure of the NBACC, 
        including an analysis of the functions of the NBACC that cannot 
        be replicated by other departments and agencies of the Federal 
        Government.
            (4) In the case of closure of the NBACC, a transition plan 
        for any essential functions currently performed by the NBACC to 
        ensure mission continuity, including the storage of samples 
        needed for ongoing criminal cases.
    (b) Consultation.--The officials listed in this subsection are the 
following:
            (1) The Secretary of Homeland Security.
            (2) The Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
            (3) The Attorney General.
            (4) The Director of National Intelligence.
            (5) As determined by the Secretary of Homeland Security, 
        the leaders of other offices that utilize the NBACC.
    (c) Form.--The report submitted under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may contain a classified annex.
    (d) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--For purposes of 
this section, the term ``appropriate Congressional Committees'' means 
the Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and the House of 
Representatives, the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the 
House of Representatives, the Committee on Homeland Security of the 
House of Representatives, the Committee on Homeland Security and 
Government Affairs of the Senate, the Committees on Judiciary of the 
Senate and the House of Representatives, and the Committee on Oversight 
and Government Reform of the House of Representatives.

                       Subtitle F--Other Matters

SEC. 1061. TECHNICAL, CONFORMING, AND CLERICAL AMENDMENTS.

    (a) Title 10, United States Code.--Title 10, United States Code, is 
amended as follows:
            (1) Section 113(j)(1) is amended by striking ``the 
        Committee on'' the first place it appears and all that follows 
        through ``of Representatives'' and inserting ``congressional 
        defense committees''.
            (2) Section 115(i)(9) is amended by striking ``section 
        1203(b) of the Cooperative Threat Reduction Act of 1993 (22 
        U.S.C. 5952(b))'' and inserting ``section 1321(a) of the 
        Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Act (50 
        U.S.C. 3711(a))''.
            (3) Section 122a(a) is amended by striking ``acting through 
        the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public 
        Affairs'' and inserting ``acting through the Assistant to the 
        Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs''.
            (4) Section 127(c)(1) is amended by striking ``the 
        Committee on'' the first place it appears and all that follows 
        through ``of Representatives'' and inserting ``congressional 
        defense committees''.
            (5) Section 129a(b) is amended by striking ``(as identified 
        pursuant to section 118b of this title)''.
            (6) Section 130f(b)(1) is amended by adding a period at the 
        end.
            (7) Section 139b(c)(2) is amended by inserting a period at 
        the end of subparagraph (K).
            (8) Section 153(a) is amended by inserting a colon after 
        ``the following'' in the matter preceding paragraph (1).
            (9) Section 162(a)(4) is amended by striking the comma 
        after ``command of''.
            (10) Section 164(a)(1)(B) is amended by striking ``section 
        664(f)'' and inserting ``section 664(d)''.
            (11) Section 166(c) is amended by striking ``section 2011'' 
        and inserting ``section 322''.
            (12) Section 167b(e)(2)(A)(iii)(II) is amended by striking 
        ``Fiscal Year 2014'' and inserting ``Fiscal Year 2016''.
            (13) Section 171a is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (f), by striking ``(4))'' and 
                inserting ``(4)))''; and
                    (B) in subsection (i)(3), by striking ``section 
                2366(e)'' and inserting ``sections 2366(e) and 
                2366a(d)''.
            (14) Section 179(f)(3)(B)(iii) is amended by striking 
        ``Joints'' and inserting ``Joint''.
            (15) Section 181(b)(1) is amended by striking ``section 
        118'' and inserting ``section 113(g)''.
            (16) Section 222(b) is amended by striking ``both'' through 
        the period at the end and inserting ``major force programs.''.
            (17) Section 342(j)(2) is amended by striking the second 
        period at the end.
            (18) Section 347(a)(1)(A) is amended by inserting 
        ``section'' in clauses (i) and (iii) after ``Academy under''.
            (19) Section 494(b)(2)(B) is amended by striking ``of title 
        10'' and inserting ``of this title''.
            (20) Section 661(c) is amended by striking ``section 
        664(f)'' in paragraphs (1)(B)(i) and (3)(A) and inserting 
        ``section 664(d)''.
            (21) Section 801 (article 1 of the Uniform Code of Military 
        Justice) is amended in the matter preceding paragraph (1) by 
        striking ``chapter:'' and inserting ``chapter (the Uniform Code 
        of Military Justice):''.
            (22) Section 806b(b) (article 6b(b) of the Uniform Code of 
        Military Justice) is amended by striking ``(the Uniform Code of 
        Military Justice)''.
            (23) Section 1073c(a)(1)(E) is amended by striking 
        ``miliary'' and inserting ``military''.
            (24) Section 1074g(a)(9) is amended by moving subparagraphs 
        (B) and (C) two ems to the left.
            (25) Section 1451 is amended in subsections (a) and (b) by 
        striking ``section 1450(a)(4)'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``section 1450(a)(5)''.
            (26) Section 1452(c) is amended in paragraphs (1) and (3) 
        by striking ``section 1450(a)(4)'' both places it appears and 
        inserting ``section 1450(a)(5)''.
            (27) Subsection (i) of section 1552, as redesignated by 
        section 511(a)(1) of this Act, is amended by striking 
        ``calender'' each place it appears and inserting ``calendar''.
            (28) Section 1553(f) is amended by striking ``calender'' 
        each place it appears and inserting ``calendar''.
            (29) Section 2264(b)(3) is amended by striking ``the date 
        of the'' and all the follows through ``2015'' and inserting 
        ``December 19, 2014''.
            (30) Section 2330a is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (d)(1)(C), by striking 
                ``management.;'' and inserting ``management;''; and
                    (B) in subsection (h)--
                            (i) in paragraph (1), by inserting 
                        ``Performance-based.--'' after ``(1)'';
                            (ii) by designating the four paragraphs 
                        after paragraph (4) as paragraphs (5), (6), 
                        (7), and (8), respectively;
                            (iii) in paragraph (5), as redesignated, by 
                        inserting ``Service acquisition portfolio 
                        groups.--'' after ``(5)''; and
                            (iv) in paragraph (6), as redesignated, by 
                        inserting ``Staff augmentation contracts.--'' 
                        after ``(6)''.
            (31) Section 2334(a)(6)(B) is amended by adding a semicolon 
        at the end.
            (32) Section 2335 is amended by striking ``(2 U.S.C. 431 et 
        seq.)'' in subsections (c)(1) and (d)(3) and inserting ``(52 
        U.S.C. 30101 et seq.)''.
            (33) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 139 
        is amended by inserting at period at the end of the items 
        relating to sections 2372 and 2372a.
            (34) Section 2364(a)(6) is amended by striking ``conveys'' 
        and inserting ``convey''.
            (35) Section 2411(1)(D) is amended by striking ``(Public 
        Law 93-638; 25 U.S.C. 450b(l))'' and inserting ``(25 U.S.C. 
        5304(1))''.
            (36) The item relating to section 2431b in the table of 
        sections at the beginning of chapter 144 is amended to read as 
        follows:

``2431b. Risk management and mitigation in major defense acquisition 
                            programs and major systems.''.
            (37) Section 2430 is amended by striking ``subsection 
        (a)(2)'' in subsections (b) and (c) and inserting ``subsection 
        (a)(1)(B)''.
            (38) Section 2431a(d) is amended by inserting ``(1)'' after 
        ``Review.--''.
            (39) Section 2446b(e) is amended--
                    (A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by 
                striking ``in writing that--'' and inserting ``in 
                writing--''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``, that'' after 
                ``open system approach''.
            (40) Section 2548(e) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``Requirements'' and all that 
                follows through ``by the Secretary'' and inserting 
                ``Requirement.--The annual report prepared by the 
                Secretary'';
                    (B) by striking ``system; and'' and inserting 
                ``system.''; and
                    (C) by striking paragraph (2).
            (41) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 152 
        is amended by inserting a period at the end of the item 
        relating to section 2567.
            (42) Section 2576a(b) is amended by striking ``and'' at the 
        end of paragraph (4).
            (43) Section 2612(a) is amended by striking ``section 
        2166(f)(4)'' and inserting ``section 343(f)(4)''.
            (44) Section 2662(f)(1)(D) is amended by striking ``section 
        334'' and inserting ``section 254''.
            (45) Section 2667(e) is amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)(E), by striking ``military 
                museum described in section 489(a) of this title'' and 
                inserting ``military museum'';
                    (B) in paragraph (4), by striking ``before January 
                1, 2005, shall be deposited into the account'' and 
                inserting ``shall be deposited into the Department of 
                Defense Base Closure Account''; and
                    (C) by striking paragraph (5).
            (46) Section 2667(k) is amended by striking ``section 
        9101'' and inserting ``section 8101''.
            (47) Section 2674(f)(2) is amended by adding at the end the 
        following new sentence: ``The term includes the Raven Rock 
        Mountain Complex.''.
            (48) Section 2925(b)(1) is amended by striking ``section 
        138c'' and inserting ``section 2926(b)''.
            (49) Chapter 449 is amended--
                    (A) by striking the second section 4781; and
                    (B) in the table of sections, by striking the item 
                relating to the second section 4781.
            (50) Section 7235(e)(1) is amended by striking ``24 months 
        after the date of the enactment of this section'' and inserting 
        ``November 25, 2017,''.
            (51) The item relating to section 9517 in the table of 
        sections at the beginning of chapter 931 is amended by making 
        the first letter of the third word lower case.
    (b) Amendments Related to Repeal of Pending Authority To Establish 
Under Secretary of Defense for Business Management and Information.--
            (1) National defense authorization act for fiscal year 
        2015.--Effective as of December 23, 2016, section 901 of the 
        Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 
        Stat. 3462), as amended by section 901(d) of the National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-
        328; 130 Stat. 2342), is further amended--
                    (A) by striking subsection (j);
                    (B) in subsection (l)(1), by striking subparagraph 
                (A);
                    (C) in subsection (m), by striking paragraphs (1) 
                and (2); and
                    (D) in subsection (n), by striking paragraph (1).
            (2) National defense authorization act for fiscal year 
        2016.--Effective as of November 25, 2015, subsection (f) of 
        section 883 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92), as added by section 
        1081(c)(5) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
        Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328), is amended by striking 
        paragraph (1).
    (c) Technical Corrections Related to Uniform Code of Military 
Justice Reform.--
            (1) In general.--Chapter 47 of title 10, United States Code 
        (the Uniform Code of Military Justice), as amended by the 
        Military Justice Act of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-
        328), is further amended as follows:
                    (A) Subsection (a)(4) of section 839 (article 39), 
                as added by section 5222(1) of the Military Justice Act 
                of 2016 (130 Stat. 2909), is amended by striking ``in 
                non-capital cases unless the accused requests 
                sentencing by members under section 825 of this title 
                (article 25)'' and inserting ``under section 853(b)(1) 
                of this title (article 53(b)(1))''.
                    (B) Subsection (i) of section 843 (article 43), as 
                added by section 5225(c) of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2909), is amended by striking ``Dna 
                Evidence.--'' and inserting ``DNA Evidence.--''.
                    (C) Section 848(c)(1) (article 48(c)(1)), as 
                amended by section 5230 of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2913), is further amended by striking 
                ``section 866(g) of this title (article 66(g))'' and 
                inserting ``section 866(h) of this title (article 
                66(h))''.
                    (D) Section 853(b)(1)(B) (article 53(b)(1)(B)), as 
                amended by section 5236 of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2937), is further amended by striking 
                ``in a trial''.
                    (E) Subsection (d) of section 853a (article 53a), 
                as added by section 5237 of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2917), is amended by striking 
                ``military judge'' the second place it appears and 
                inserting ``court-martial''.
                    (F) Section 864(a) (article 64(a)), as amended by 
                section 5328(a) of the Military Justice Act of 2016 
                (130 Stat. 2929), is further amended by striking ``(a) 
                (a) In General.--'' and inserting ``(a) In General.--
                ''.
                    (G) Subsection (b)(1) of section 865 (article 65), 
                as added by section 5329 of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2930), is amended by striking ``section 
                866(b)(2) of this title (article 66(b)(2))'' and 
                inserting ``section 866(b)(3) of this title (article 
                66(b)(3))''.
                    (H) Subsection (f)(3) of section 866 (article 66), 
                as added by section 5330 of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2932), is amended by inserting after 
                ``Court'' the first place it appears the following: 
                ``of Criminal Appeals''.
                    (I) Section 869(c)(1)(A) (article 69(c)(1)(A)), as 
                amended by section 5333 of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2935), is further amended by inserting 
                a comma after ``in part''.
                    (J) Section 882(b) (article 82(b)), as amended by 
                section 5403 of the Military Justice Act of 2016 (130 
                Stat. 2939), is further amended by striking ``section 
                99'' and inserting ``section 899''.
                    (K) Section 919a(b) (article 119a(b)), as amended 
                by section 5401(13)(B) of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2939), is further amended--
                            (i) by striking ``928a, 926, and 928'' and 
                        inserting ``926, 928, and 928a''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``128a 126, and 128'' and 
                        inserting ``126, 128, and 128a''.
                    (L) Section 920(g)(2) (article 120(g)(2)), as 
                amended by section 5430(b) of the Military Justice Act 
                of 2016 (130 Stat. 2949), is further amended in the 
                first sentence by striking ``brest'' and inserting 
                ``breast''.
                    (M) Section 928(b)(2) (article 128(b)(2)), as 
                amended by section 5441 of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2954), is further amended by striking 
                the comma after ``substantial bodily harm''.
                    (N) Subsection (b)(2) of section 932 (article 132), 
                as added by section 5450 of the Military Justice Act of 
                2016 (130 Stat. 2957), is amended by striking ``section 
                1034(h)'' and inserting ``section 1034(j)''.
                    (O) Section 937 (article 137), as amended by 
                section 5503 of the Military Justice Act of 2016 (130 
                Stat. 2960), is further amended by striking ``(the 
                Uniform Code of Military Justice)'' each place it 
                appears as follows:
                            (i) In subsection (a)(1), in the matter 
                        preceding subparagraph (A).
                            (ii) In subsection (b), in the matter 
                        preceding subparagraph (A).
                            (iii) In subsection (d), in the matter 
                        preceding paragraph (1).
            (2) Cross-references to stalking.--Title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended as follows:
                    (A) Section 673(a) is amended--
                            (i) by striking ``920a, or 920c'' and 
                        inserting ``920c, or 930''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``120a, or 120c'' and 
                        inserting ``120c, or 130''.
                    (B) Section 674(a) is amended--
                            (i) by striking ``920a, 920b, 920c, or 
                        925'' and inserting ``920b, 920c, 125, or 
                        930''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``120a, 120b, 120c, or 
                        125'' and inserting ``120b, 120c, 125, or 
                        130''.
                    (C) Section 1034(c)(2)(A) is amended by striking 
                ``sections 920 through 920c of this title (articles 120 
                through 120c of the Uniform Code of Military Justice)'' 
                and inserting ``section 920, 920b, 920c, or 930 of this 
                title (article 120, 120b, 120c, or 130 of the Uniform 
                Code of Military Justice)''.
                    (D) Section 1044e(g)(1) is amended--
                            (i) by striking ``920a, 920b, 920c, or 
                        925'' and inserting ``920b, 920c, 125, or 
                        930''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``120a, 120b, 120c, or 
                        125'' and inserting ``120b, 120c, 125, or 
                        130''.
            (3) Effective date.--The amendments made by this subsection 
        shall take effect immediately after the amendments made by the 
        Military Justice Act of 2016 (division E of Public Law 114-328) 
        take effect as provided for in section 5542 of that Act (130 
        Stat. 2967).
    (d) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017.--
Effective as of December 23, 2016, and as if included therein as 
enacted, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
(Public Law 114-328) is amended as follows:
            (1) Section 217(a)(2) (130 Stat. 2051) is amended by 
        striking ``section 821b'' and inserting ``section 821(b)''.
            (2) Section 233 (10 U.S.C. 2358 note; 130 Stat. 2061) is 
        amended in subsections (a)(1) and (b)(1), by striking 
        ``secretaries'' and inserting ``Secretaries''.
            (3) Section 728(b)(1) (130 Stat. 2234) is amended by 
        inserting ``(c)'' after ``Section 1073b''.
            (4) Section 805(a)(2) (130 Stat. 2255) is amended by 
        striking ``The table of chapters for title 10, United States 
        Code, is'' and inserting ``The tables of chapters at the 
        beginning of subtitle A, and at the beginning of part IV of 
        subtitle A, of title 10, United States Code, are''.
            (5) The matter to be inserted by section 824(d)(1)(B) (130 
        Stat. 2279) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``(3)'' and inserting ``(4)''; and
                    (B) by striking ``(4)'' and inserting ``(5)''.
            (6) Section 833(b)(2)(C) (130 Stat. 2284) is amended--
                    (A) in clause (ii), by striking ``Section 2330a(j) 
                of title 10, United States Code,'' and inserting 
                ``Section 2330a(h) of title 10, United States Code, as 
                redesignated by section 812(d),''; and
                    (B) in clause (iii), in the matter proposed to be 
                inserted, by striking ``section 2330a(j)'' and 
                inserting ``section 2330a(h)''.
            (7) Section 865(b)(2) (130 Stat. 2305) is amended by 
        striking ``section 2330a(g)(5)'' and inserting ``section 
        2330a(h)(6)''.
            (8) Section 893(c) (130 Stat. 2324) is amended by inserting 
        ``paragraph (2) of'' after ``is further amended in''.
            (9) Section 902(b) (130 Stat. 2344) is amended by striking 
        ``Section 151(b)(5)'' and inserting ``Section 131(b)(5)''.
            (10) Section 921(c) (130 Stat. 2351) is amended by 
        inserting after ``The text of'' the following: ``subsection (a) 
        (after the subsection heading)''.
            (11) Section 1061(c)(23) (130 Stat. 2400) is amended by 
        striking ``488(c)'' and inserting ``488''.
            (12) Section 1061(i) (130 Stat. 2404) is amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (23), by striking ``2010 (Public 
                Law 110-417)'' and inserting ``2009 (Public Law 110-
                417; 10 U.S.C. prec. 701 note)''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (24), by striking ``2010'' and 
                inserting ``2009''.
            (13) Section 1064(b) (130 Stat. 2409) is amended by 
        striking ``Public Law 113-239'' and inserting ``Public Law 112-
        239''.
            (14) Section 1253(b) (130 Stat. 2532) is amended by 
        striking ``this subchapter'' both places it appears and 
        inserting ``this subtitle''.
            (15) Section 2811(c) (130 Stat. 2716) is amended by 
        striking ``, and the provisions of law amended by subsections 
        (a) and (b) of that section shall be restored as if such 
        section had not been enacted into law''.
            (16) Section 2829E(a) (130 Stat. 2733) is amended by 
        striking paragraph (3).
            (17) Section 5225(f) (130 Stat. 2910) is amended by 
        striking ``this subsection'' and inserting ``this section''.
            (18) The table of sections to be inserted by section 5452 
        (130 Stat. 2958) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``Art.'' each place it appears, 
                except the first place it appears;
                    (B) in the item relating to section 887a, by 
                striking ``Resistence'' and inserting ``Resistance'';
                    (C) in the item relating to section 908, by 
                striking ``of the United States-Loss'' and inserting 
                ``of United States-Loss,'';
                    (D) in the item relating to section 909, by 
                striking ``of the'' and inserting ``of''; and
                    (E) in the item relating to section 909a, by 
                striking the second period at the end.
            (19) The matters to be inserted by section 5541 (130 Stat. 
        2965) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``Art.'' each place it appears;
                    (B) by striking ``825.'' and inserting ``825a.''; 
                and
                    (C) by striking ``830.'' and inserting ``830a.''.
    (e) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016.--
Effective as of November 25, 2015, and as if included therein as 
enacted, section 574 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 831) is amended by 
striking ``1785 note'' both places it appears and inserting ``1788 
note''.
    (f) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015.--
Effective as of December 19, 2014, and as if included therein as 
enacted, section 1044(a)(2)(A) of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3493) is 
amended by striking ``October 28'' and inserting ``September 30''.
    (g) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011.--
Effective as of January 7, 2011, and as if included therein as enacted, 
section 896(b) of the Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2011 (Public Law 111-398; 124 Stat. 4315) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``Chapter'' and inserting 
        ``Subchapter II of chapter''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``chapter'' and inserting 
        ``subchapter''.
    (h) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009.--
Section 943(d)(1) of the Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public Law 110-417), as amended by section 
1205(c)(2) of Public Law 112-81 (125 Stat. 1623), is further amended by 
striking the second period at the end of the first sentence.
    (i) National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004.--
Section 1022(e) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2004 (Public Law 108-136; 10 U.S.C. 271 note) is amended by 
striking ``section 1004(j)'' and all that follows through the end of 
the subsection and inserting ``section 284(i) of title 10, United 
States Code''.
    (j) Coordination With Other Amendments Made by This Act.--For 
purposes of applying amendments made by provisions of this Act other 
than this section, the amendments made by this section shall be treated 
as having been enacted immediately before any such amendments by other 
provisions of this Act.

SEC. 1062. WORKFORCE ISSUES FOR RELOCATION OF MARINES TO GUAM.

    (a) In General.--Section 6(b) of the Joint Resolution entitled ``A 
Joint Resolution to approve the `Covenant To Establish a Commonwealth 
of the Northern Mariana Islands in Political Union With the United 
States of America', and for other purposes'', approved March 24, 1976 
(48 U.S.C. 1806(b)) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(b) Numerical Limitations for Nonimmigrant Workers.--An alien, if 
otherwise qualified, may seek admission to Guam or to the Commonwealth 
during the transition program as a nonimmigrant worker under section 
101(a)(15)(H) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 
1101(a)(15)(H)) without counting against the numerical limitations set 
forth in section 214(g) of such Act (8 U.S.C. 1184(g)). An alien, if 
otherwise qualified, may, before October 1, 2020, be admitted under 
section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(b) of such Act for a period of up to 3 years 
(which may be extended by the Secretary of Homeland Security before 
October 1, 2020, for an additional period or periods not to exceed 3 
years each) to perform services or labor on Guam pursuant to any 
agreement entered into by a prime contractor or subcontractor calling 
for services or labor required for performance of the contract or 
subcontract in direct support of all military-funded construction, 
repairs, renovation, and facilities services, or to perform services or 
labor on Guam as a health-care worker, notwithstanding the requirement 
of such section that the service or labor be temporary. This subsection 
does not apply to any employment to be performed outside of Guam or the 
Commonwealth.''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall 
take effect on the date that is 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1063. PROTECTION OF SECOND AMENDMENT RIGHTS OF MILITARY FAMILIES.

    (a) Short Title.--This section may be cited as the ``Protect Our 
Military Families' 2nd Amendment Rights Act''.
    (b) Residency of Spouses of Members of the Armed Forces to Be 
Determined on the Same Basis as the Residency of Such Members for 
Purposes of Federal Firearms Laws.--Section 921(b) of title 18, United 
States Code, is amended to read as follows:
    ``(b) For purposes of this chapter:
            ``(1) A member of the Armed Forces on active duty and the 
        spouse of such a member are residents of the State in which the 
        permanent duty station of the member is located.
            ``(2) The spouse of such a member may satisfy the 
        identification document requirements of this chapter by 
        presenting--
                    ``(A) the military identification card issued to 
                the spouse; and
                    ``(B) the official Permanent Change of Station 
                Orders annotating the spouse as being authorized for 
                collocation, or an official letter from the commanding 
                officer of the member verifying that the member and the 
                spouse are collocated at the permanent duty station of 
                the member.''.
    (c) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (b) shall 
apply to conduct engaged in after the 6-month period that begins with 
the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1064. TRANSFER OF SURPLUS FIREARMS TO CORPORATION FOR THE 
              PROMOTION OF RIFLE PRACTICE AND FIREARMS SAFETY.

    (a) In General.--Section 40728(h) of title 36, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) by striking ``(1) Subject to paragraph (2), the 
        Secretary may transfer'' and inserting ``The Secretary shall 
        transfer'';
            (2) by striking ``The Secretary shall determine a 
        reasonable schedule for the transfer of such surplus 
        pistols.''; and
            (3) by striking paragraph (2).
    (b) Termination of Pilot Program.--Section 1087 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 
Stat. 1012) is amended by striking subsections (b) and (c).

SEC. 1065. NATIONAL GUARD ACCESSIBILITY TO DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ISSUED 
              UNMANNED AIRCRAFT.

    (a) Review Required.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Chief of the National Guard Bureau, the Commander of United States 
Northern Command, and the Commander of United States Pacific Command, 
shall conduct an efficiency and effectiveness review of the governance 
structure, coordination processes, documentation, and timing and 
deadline requirements stipulated in Department of Defense Policy 
Memorandum 15-002, entitled ``Guidance for the Domestic Use of Unmanned 
Aircraft Systems'' and dated February 17, 2015. In conducting the 
review, the Secretary shall take into account information and data 
points provided by State governors and State adjutant generals in 
assessing the efficiency and effectiveness of accessing Department of 
Defense issued unmanned aircraft systems for State and National Guard 
operations.
    (b) Submittal to Congress.--Not later than 30 days after the 
completion of the review required by subsection (a), the Secretary 
shall submit the review to the Committees on Armed Services of the 
Senate and House of Representatives.

SEC. 1066. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING AIRCRAFT CARRIERS.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) Naval aviation was born in the United States when 
        Eugene Ely launched from the deck of a United States Navy ship 
        on November 14, 1910, in a Curtiss Model D.
            (2) In 1915, Cpt. Henry C. Mustin made the first catapult 
        launch and first take off in a ship underway in a Curtiss Model 
        AB-2, beginning a century of technological advancements that 
        have led to today's Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System 
        which has replaced the steam pistons with powerful magnets to 
        launch jet aircraft.
            (3) In 1924, Lt. Dixie Kiefer made the first night catapult 
        launch in a Vought UO-1 in San Diego harbor, leading to today's 
        aircraft carriers being a floating city at sea with a 24-hour 
        airport.
            (4) The first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, USS 
        Enterprise (CVN 65), was commissioned in 1961, ushering in a 
        new era of the world's most dominant and capable warships.
            (5) In 2013, the first of the next generation of aircraft 
        carriers, Gerald R. Ford, was christened, marking a 
        continuation of the innovative naval aviation spirit, 
        technological advancement, and war fighting capabilities of 
        aircraft carriers.
            (6) In 2013, aircraft carrier USS George Washington (CVN 
        73) provided humanitarian assistance, medical supplies, food, 
        and water to the victims in the Philippines of Super Typhoon 
        Haiyan, once again demonstrating versatility of the aircraft 
        carrier for combat, diplomatic and humanitarian operations.
            (7) For over 70 years, aircraft carriers have been employed 
        in every major and many smaller conflicts, including World War 
        II, Korea, Vietnam, Grenada, Lebanon, Libya, Operation Desert 
        Storm, Afghanistan, Iraq, and the fight against terrorism.
            (8) The United States Navy's aircraft carriers are a 
        cornerstone of the Nation's ability to project its power and 
        strength.
            (9) When aircraft carriers sail the globe they are a 
        statement of national purpose and a symbol of the Nation's 
        industrial strength, competitive edge, and economic prosperity.
            (10) Aircraft carriers are 4.5 acres of sovereign United 
        States territory enabling the Nation to reduce its dependency 
        on other nations while it pursues its national security 
        interests.
            (11) Aircraft carriers enable the United States Armed 
        Forces to carry out operations from international waters, 
        avoiding the complications of securing fly-over rights and 
        land-base rights from other nations.
            (12) Aircraft carriers are a modern, very mobile United 
        States military base complete with airfield, hospital, and 
        communications systems from which the United States can strike 
        at its enemies.
            (13) Over 90 percent of world trade is moved by sea, 
        including much of the world's gas and oil supply, and aircraft 
        carriers and their strike forces are constantly on patrol in 
        vital regions of the world to keep shipping lanes open and 
        protect the interests of the United States and its allies.
            (14) There are more than 2,450 companies in 48 States and 
        over 364 congressional districts, and more than 13,100 
        shipbuilders who proudly contribute to the construction and 
        maintenance of these complex and technologically advanced 
        ships.
            (15) Thousands of members of the United States Armed Forces 
        have served the Nation aboard aircraft carriers in war, peace, 
        and times of crisis.
            (16) When crisis occurs the first question that comes to 
        everyone's lips is ``Where is the nearest carrier?''.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) United States aircraft carriers are the preeminent 
        power projection platform and have served the Nation's 
        interests in times of war and in times of peace, adapting to 
        the immediate and ever-changing nature of the world for over 90 
        years;
            (2) aircraft carrier contributions and heritage should be 
        celebrated; and
            (3) the people of the United States should be encouraged to 
        celebrate the history of aircraft carriers in the United States 
        and to always remember the vital role these vessels play in 
        defending the Nation's freedom.

SEC. 1067. NOTICE TO CONGRESS OF TERMS OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              SETTLEMENT AGREEMENTS.

    (a) In General.--Notwithstanding any other provision of law or any 
court order, at the request of the Chairman of the Committee on Armed 
Services of the Senate or the House of Representatives or the Chairman 
of the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate or the House of 
Representatives, the Secretary of Defense shall make available (in an 
appropriate manner with respect to classified information, if 
necessary) to such chairman a settlement agreement (including a consent 
decree) in any civil action involving the Department of Defense, a 
military department, or a Defense Agency, if, in the opinion of the 
Secretary, in consultation with the Attorney General, the terms of the 
settlement agreement affect the congressional authorization or 
appropriations process with respect to the Department of Defense.
    (b) Consultation Requirement.--Before making a request under 
subsection (a)--
            (1) the Chairman of the Committee on Armed Services or the 
        Committee on Appropriations of the Senate shall consult with 
        the Chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary of the Senate; 
        and
            (2) the Chairman of the Committee on Armed Services or the 
        Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives 
        shall consult with the Chairman of the Committee on the 
        Judiciary of the House of Representatives.

SEC. 1068. SENSE OF CONGRESS RECOGNIZING THE UNITED STATES NAVY 
              SEABEES.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) On March 5, 1942, Navy Construction Battalion personnel 
        were officially named Seabees by the Navy Department.
            (2) The purpose of the Navy Seabees is to build, maintain, 
        and support base infrastructure in remote locations for the 
        Navy and Marine Corps, while simultaneously being capable of 
        engaging in combat operations.
            (3) The Navy Seabees dual-role is exemplified by the Seabee 
        motto Construimus, Batuimus: We Build, We Fight.
            (4) Throughout their history, the Navy Seabees have 
        answered the call of duty to protect the United States and its 
        democratic values both in times of war and peace.
            (5) The Navy Seabees support United States national 
        security at combatant commands worldwide, through the 
        construction, both on land and underwater, of bases, airfields, 
        roads, bridges, and other infrastructure.
            (6) Members of the Navy Seabees and their families have 
        demonstrated unmatched courage and dedication to sacrifice for 
        the United States, from service in World War II, Korea, and 
        Vietnam to the recent conflicts in Afghanistan, Iraq, and 
        elsewhere.
            (7) The Navy Seabees exhibit honor, personal courage, and 
        commitment as they sacrifice their personal comfort to keep the 
        United States safe from threats.
            (8) The Navy Seabees continue to display strength, 
        professionalism, and bravery in the all-volunteer force.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--Congress recognizes the United States Navy 
Seabees and the Navy personnel who comprise the construction force for 
the Navy and the Marine Corps as critical elements in deterring 
conflict, overcoming aggression, and rebuilding democratic 
institutions.

SEC. 1069. RECOGNITION OF THE UNITED STATES SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) On April 16, 1987, Congress required the establishment 
        of a Special Operations Command, which was to be an elite 
        fighting force drawn from all of the branches of the Armed 
        Forces.
            (2) As a headquarters organization, USSOCOM comprises four 
        service-component commands, consisting of the United States 
        Army Special Operations Command, United States Naval Special 
        Warfare Command, United States Marine Corps Forces Special 
        Operations Command, and United States Air Force Special 
        Operations Command, and includes various sub-unified commands.
            (3) Each service-component command has sub-component 
        commands consisting of--
                    (A) Army Special Forces (Green Berets), Rangers, 
                Special Operations Aviation, Civil Affairs, Military 
                Information Support Operations;
                    (B) Navy SEALS and Special Warfare Combatant-Craft 
                Crewmen;
                    (C) Air Force Commandos and Special Tactics Airmen;
                    (D) Marine Raiders; and
                    (E) other Joint Special Operations Forces;
            (4) USSOCOM protects and defends the United States in a 
        variety of ways, including direct action, special 
        reconnaissance, unconventional warfare, foreign internal 
        defense, civil affairs operations, counterterrorism, military 
        information support operations, counter-proliferation of 
        weapons of mass destruction, security force assistance, 
        counterinsurgency, hostage rescue and recovery, foreign 
        humanitarian assistance, and other missions as assigned.
            (5) USSOCOM has an unequaled ability to analyze and respond 
        to terrorist threats and USSOCOM has led many successful 
        missions globally.
            (6) Many USSOCOM missions are classified, so the American 
        people may never know the details and extent of the bravery of 
        Special Operations Forces, but a sample of missions provide a 
        glimpse into the bravery and talents of these members of the 
        Armed Forces:
                    (A) On May 2, 2011, Osama bin Laden was killed in a 
                special operations mission in Pakistan, for which the 
                outstanding men and women in America's intelligence and 
                Armed Forces, especially those from SOCOM, remained 
                focused on bringing Osama bin Laden to justice, and on 
                May 2, 2011, justice was done.
                    (B) On April 12, 2009, the Maersk Alabama was 
                rescued unharmed in a special operations mission in the 
                Indian Ocean, after a five-day standoff between the 
                United States Navy and Somalian pirates.
                    (C) On April 1, 2003, Jessica Lynch, a United 
                States Army clerk taken prisoner for nine days in Iraq, 
                was rescued by Special Operations Forces during a night 
                raid in the hospital where she was being held.
                    (D) On December 13, 2003, in Operation Red Dawn, 
                Special Operations Forces captured deposed Iraqi 
                president Saddam Hussein, who was hiding in a spider 
                hole.
                    (E) On January 17, 1991, as Operation Desert Storm 
                began, Special Operations Forces slipped hundreds of 
                miles into Iraq to identify Iraqi Scud missiles as 
                targets for American fighter jets.
                    (F) On December 20, 1989, in Operation Just Cause 
                and Operation Nifty Package, Special Operations Forces 
                ventured into Panama to bring its then President Manuel 
                Noriega to justice for drug-trafficking.
            (7) Approximately 70,000 Regular component, National Guard, 
        and reserve component personnel from all four services and 
        Department of Defense civilians are assigned to USSOCOM 
        headquarters in Tampa, its four service-component commands, and 
        eight sub-unified commands.
            (8) The heroism, skill, and patriotism of USSOCOM personnel 
        and their families are without parallel.
            (9) The responsibilities of USSOCOM are growing and its 
        mission is now and will continue to be central to the defense 
        of the United States in future decades.
            (10) The sacrifices of many, the service of all, and the 
        talents of the Special Operations Forces are cause for 
        confidence and optimism.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines, and civilians who, together with 
their family members, comprise the United States Special Operations 
Forces community should be honored for their service and commitment to 
keeping the United States safe.

SEC. 1070. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING WORLD WAR I.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) The United States declared war against Germany on April 
        6, 1917, to redress wrongs, including Germany's resumption of 
        unrestricted submarine warfare, violation of United States 
        neutrality, and denial of freedom of the seas to nonbelligerent 
        nations.
            (2) The United States associated itself with the allied 
        powers of the United Kingdom and its Commonwealth, France and 
        its colonies, Russia, Italy, and Japan to defeat the German 
        Empire
            (3) The United States Army, consisting of the Regular Army, 
        National Guard, and Reserve Corps, with the addition of 
        volunteers and the draftees of the National Army, underwent a 
        transformation from a frontier constabulary and coastal defense 
        force to a modern land warfare force.
            (4) Early 20th century military and technological advances 
        resulted in the incorporation of motor transport, aviation, 
        anti-aircraft artillery, tanks, chemical weapons, aircraft 
        carriers, submarines and anti-submarine warfare, sonar, 
        underwater mines, and other innovations into the military 
        arsenal of the United States.
            (5) The need to quickly build a military strength of four 
        million soldiers and half a million sailors required the 
        mobilization of the human resources of the United States, 
        during which members of diverse ethnic groups, races, and 
        creeds, both native-born and immigrant, forged a new American 
        identity.
            (6) The United States Army maintained its defense of 
        American seacoasts, southern border, and overseas possessions, 
        while the Army American Expeditionary Forces deployed ``Over 
        There'' for combat operations in Europe starting in June 1917.
            (7) By the end of World War I, almost two million members 
        of the Army served overseas in the American Expeditionary 
        Forces; Whereas, during World War I, the United States Navy 
        increased in strength from approximately 69,000 officers and 
        sailors and 342 vessels to more than 533,000 officers and 
        sailors and 774 vessels.
            (8) The Navy operated in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, 
        and the North and Mediterranean Seas in cooperation with allied 
        navies.
            (9) The Navy began the fight against the German U-boat 
        menace by dispatching destroyers, which eventually totaled 70 
        in number, and 169 other vessels to counter the submarine 
        threat.
            (10) Navy vessels escorted troop transports carrying 
        1,250,000 passengers and escorted supply transports carrying 27 
        percent of all cargo shipped to Europe.
            (11) The Navy deployed five batteries of large-caliber 
        battleship guns mounted on railroad trains to France for 
        service as long-range artillery for the Army;.
            (12) The United States Coast Guard transferred to the 
        operational control of the Navy, and augmented that service 
        with approximately 5,000 officers and sailors, 47 vessels of 
        all types, and 279 shore stations;.
            (13) The United States Marine Corps, with an eventual 
        wartime strength of 75,000 officers and men, detached two 
        regiments and a machine gun battalion to constitute an infantry 
        brigade integrated into the Army's 2d Division for service in 
        France;.
            (14) On July 4, 1917, Colonel Charles E. Stanton, one of 
        the officers on the staff of General John Pershing, commander 
        of the American Expeditionary Forces in Europe, famously 
        announced America's commitment to the fight when Colonel 
        Stanton proclaimed upon his arrival in France, ``Lafayette, we 
        are here!''.
            (15) Whereas the American Expeditionary Forces formed three 
        field armies, nine corps and forty-three divisions, plus 
        various units of the Services of Supply.
            (16) The American Expeditionary Forces suffered 244,000 
        casualties in fighting in thirteen named campaigns in World War 
        I;.
            (17) Participation in World War I resulted in the 
        completion of a period of reform and professionalism that 
        transformed the Armed Forces from a small dispersed 
        organization to a modern industrialized fighting force capable 
        of global reach and influence.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--Congress--
            (1) honors the memory of the fallen heroes who wore the 
        uniform of the United States Armed Forces during World War I;
            (2) commends the Unites States Armed Forces for preserving 
        and protecting the interests of the United States during World 
        War I;
            (3) commends the brave members of the United States Armed 
        Forces for their efforts in ``making the world safe for 
        democracy,'' and preserving the founding principles of the 
        United States at home and abroad during World War I;
            (4) commends the brave members of the United States Armed 
        Forces for preserving and protecting the sea lanes of commerce 
        and communications during World War I that ensured the 
        continued prosperity of the United States;
            (5) celebrates and congratulates the United States Army, 
        Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and Coast Guard during the 
        commemoration of the centennial of World War I for a job well 
        done; and
            (6) calls on all people of the United States to join in the 
        commemoration of the centennial of World War I in events 
        throughout the United States and overseas.

SEC. 1071. FINDINGS AND SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING THE NATIONAL GUARD 
              YOUTH CHALLENGE PROGRAM.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Fewer than 30 percent of youth in the United States 
        qualify for military service, either because of poor physical 
        health, a criminal record, or lack of a high school degree.
            (2) The National Guard Youth Challenge Program provides the 
        Department of Defense an opportunity to work with State and 
        local governments to engage with the youth of the nation, 
        providing military-based training, the opportunity to earn a 
        high school degree, and high physical fitness standards.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that it is 
critical to allocate the necessary resources to the National Guard 
Youth Challenge Program of the Department of Defense as it plays a 
critical role in preparing the next generation of qualified youth for 
military service.

SEC. 1072. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING NATIONAL PURPLE HEART 
              RECOGNITION DAY.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) On August 7, 1782, during the Revolutionary War, 
        General George Washington established what is now known as the 
        Purple Heart medal when he issued an order establishing the 
        Badge of Military Merit.
            (2) The Badge of Military Merit was designed in the shape 
        of a heart in purple cloth or silk.
            (3) While the award of the Badge of Military Merit ceased 
        with the end of the Revolutionary War, the Purple Heart medal 
        was authorized in 1932 as the official successor decoration to 
        the Badge of Military Merit.
            (4) The Purple Heart medal is the oldest United States 
        military decoration in present use.
            (5) The Purple Heart medal is awarded in the name of the 
        President of the United States to recognize members of the 
        Armed Forces who are killed or wounded in action against an 
        enemy of the United States or are killed or wounded while held 
        as prisoners of war.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--Congress--
            (1) supports the goals and ideals of National Purple Heart 
        Recognition Day; and
            (2) encourages all people of the United States--
                    (A) to learn about the history of the Purple Heart 
                medal;
                    (B) to honor recipients of the Purple Heart medal; 
                and
                    (C) to conduct appropriate ceremonies, activities, 
                and programs to demonstrate support for people who have 
                been awarded the Purple Heart medal.

SEC. 1073. PROVIDING ASSISTANCE TO HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES IN RESPONSE 
              TO CYBERSECURITY EVENTS.

    (a) Provision of Assistance.--If the Speaker of the House of 
Representatives (or the Speaker's designee), with the concurrence of 
the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives (or the Minority 
Leader's designee), determines that a cybersecurity event has occurred 
and that containing, mitigating, or resolving the event exceeds the 
resources of the House of Representatives, then notwithstanding any 
other provision of law or any rule, regulation, or executive order--
            (1) the Speaker may request assistance in responding to the 
        event from the head of any Executive department, military 
        department, or independent establishment;
            (2) not later than 24 hours after receiving the request, 
        the head of the department or establishment shall begin to 
        provide appropriate assistance in response to the incident, 
        including (if necessary) restoring the information systems of 
        the House to an operational state which allows for the 
        continuation of the legislative process and for Members, 
        officers, and employees of the House to continue to meet their 
        official and representational duties; and
            (3) such assistance shall be provided without reimbursement 
        by the House of Representatives.
    (b) Scope of Assistance.--
            (1) In general.--The assistance provided to the Speaker by 
        the head of a department or establishment under this section 
        may consist only of a type that the head of the department or 
        establishment is authorized under law to provide to the 
        department or establishment, another Executive department, 
        military department, or independent establishment, or a private 
        entity.
            (2) Connections between department or establishment and 
        house information systems.--In providing assistance under this 
        section--
                    (A) personnel of a department or establishment may 
                not log onto the information systems of the House 
                without the authorization of the Speaker (or the 
                Speaker's designee); and
                    (B) personnel of a department or establishment may 
                provide the House with access to technological support 
                services of the department or establishment, including 
                by authorizing personnel or systems of the House to 
                connect with and operate services or programs of the 
                department or establishment with guidance from subject 
                matter experts of the department or establishment.
    (c) Termination of Assistance.--
            (1) Termination upon notice from speaker.--After initiating 
        assistance under this section, the head of the department or 
        establishment shall continue providing assistance until the 
        Speaker (or Speaker's designee) notifies the head of the 
        department or establishment that the cybersecurity incident has 
        terminated and that it is no longer necessary for the 
        department or establishment to provide post-incident 
        assistance.
            (2) Removal of technological support services.--Upon 
        receiving notice from the Speaker under paragraph (1), the head 
        of the department or establishment shall ensure that any 
        technological support services or programs of the department or 
        establishment are removed from the information systems of the 
        House, and that personnel of the department or establishment 
        are no longer monitoring such systems.
    (d) Compliance With Existing Standards.--In providing assistance 
under this section, the head of the Executive department, military 
department, or independent establishment shall meet the requirements of 
section 113 of the Legislative Branch Appropriations Act, 2017 (Public 
Law 115-31).
    (e) No Effect on Other Authority to Provide Support.--Nothing in 
this section may be construed to affect the authority of an Executive 
department, military department, or independent establishment to 
provide any support, including cybersecurity support, to the House of 
Representatives under any other law, rule, or regulation.
    (f) Definitions.--In this section, each of the terms ``Executive 
department'', ``military department'', and ``independent 
establishment'' has the meaning given such term in chapter 1 of title 
5, United States Code.

SEC. 1074. REVIEW AND UPDATE OF REGULATIONS GOVERNING DEBT COLLECTORS 
              INTERACTIONS WITH UNIT COMMANDERS OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED 
              FORCES.

    Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Secretary of Defense shall review and update Department of 
Defense Directive 1344.09 and any associated regulations to ensure that 
such regulations comply with Federal consumer protection laws with 
respect to the collection of debt.

SEC. 1075. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING PACIFIC WAR MEMORIAL.

    (a) Finding.--Congress recognizes that there is currently no 
memorial that specifically honors the members of the United States 
Armed Forces who served in the Pacific Theater of World War II, also 
known as the Pacific War.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that a Pacific 
War memorial should be established at a suitable location at or near 
the Pearl Harbor site of the World War II Valor in the Pacific National 
Monument in Honolulu, Hawaii.

SEC. 1076. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON CYBERSECURITY COOPERATION WITH UKRAINE.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) There is a strong history of cyber attacks in Ukraine.
            (2) The United States supports Ukraine and the European 
        Deterrence Initiative.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the United States reaffirms support for the sovereignty 
        and territorial integrity of Ukraine; and
            (2) the United States should assist Ukraine in improving 
        its cybersecurity capabilities.

SEC. 1077. APOLLO I MEMORIAL.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) On January 27, 1967, NASA Astronauts Command Pilot 
        Virgil I. ``Gus'' Grissom, Senior Pilot Edward H. White II, and 
        Pilot Roger B. Chaffee were killed in an electrical fire that 
        broke out inside the Apollo I Command Module on Launch Pad 34 
        at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
            (2) Command Pilot Virgil Grissom was selected by NASA in 
        1959 as one of the original seven Mercury astronauts. He 
        piloted the Liberty Bell 7 spacecraft on July 21, 1963, on the 
        second and final Mercury suborbital test flight, served as 
        command pilot on the first manned Gemini flight on March 23, 
        1965, and was named as Command Pilot of the first Apollo 
        flight. He began his career in the United States Army Air Corps 
        and was a Lieutenant Colonel in the United States Air Force at 
        the time of the accident, and he is buried at Arlington 
        National Cemetery.
            (3) Senior Pilot Edward H. White II was selected by NASA as 
        a member of the second astronaut team in 1962. He piloted the 
        Gemini-4 mission, a 4-day mission that took place in June 1965, 
        during which he conducted the first extravehicular activity in 
        the United States human spaceflight program. He was named as 
        Command Module Pilot for the first Apollo flight. He began his 
        career as a cadet in United States Military Academy at West 
        Point and was a Lieutenant Colonel in the United States Air 
        Force at the time of the accident.
            (4) Pilot Roger B. Chaffee was selected by NASA as part of 
        the third group of astronauts in 1963. He was named as the 
        Lunar Module Pilot for the first Apollo flight. He began his 
        career as a ROTC cadet before commissioning as an ensign in the 
        United States Navy, he was a Lieutenant Commander in the United 
        States Navy at the time of the accident, and he is buried at 
        Arlington National Cemetery.
            (5) All 3 astronauts were posthumously awarded the 
        Congressional Space Medal of Honor.
            (6) As Arlington National Cemetery is where we recognize 
        heroes who have passed in the service of our Nation, it is 
        fitting on the 50th anniversary of the Apollo I accident that 
        we acknowledge those astronauts by building a memorial in their 
        honor.
    (b) Construction of Memorial to the Crew of the Apollo I Launch 
Test Accident at Arlington National Cemetery.--
            (1) Construction required.--The Secretary of the Army 
        shall, in consultation with the Administrator of the National 
        Aeronautics and Space Administration, construct at an 
        appropriate place in Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia, a 
        memorial marker honoring the three members of the crew of the 
        Apollo I crew who died during a launch rehearsal test on 
        January 27, 1967, in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
            (2) Funding.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated 
        in section 4201 for management support, Space and Missile 
        Center (SMC) civilian workforce (Line 152), as specified in the 
        corresponding funding table in section 4201, $50,000 shall be 
        available for the construction required under paragraph (1) of 
        this subsection.

SEC. 1078. NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR COUNTERING VIOLENT EXTREMIST GROUPS.

    (a) Strategy Required.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than June 1, 2018, the President 
        shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report 
        on a comprehensive, interagency national strategy for 
        countering violent extremist groups.
            (2) Elements.--The comprehensive, interagency national 
        strategy required by paragraph (1) shall include the following 
        elements:
                    (A) Identification and prioritization of the 
                threats, including a description of capability and 
                intent posed to the United States and United States 
                interests, from violent extremist groups and their 
                ideologies, by region and affiliated group, including 
                any state-sponsors for such groups.
                    (B) Identification of the interagency tools for 
                combating and countering violent extremist groups, 
                including--
                            (i) countering violent extremist group 
                        messaging and ideological support;
                            (ii) combating terrorist group financing; 
                        intelligence gathering and cooperation;
                            (iii) law enforcement activities; 
                        sanctions; counterterrorism and 
                        counterintelligence activities;
                            (iv) support to civil-society groups, 
                        commercial entities, allies and counter 
                        radicalization activities of such groups; and
                            (v) support by the Armed Forces of the 
                        United States to combat violent extremist 
                        groups.
                    (C) Use of, coordination with, or liaison to 
                international partners, non-governmental organizations, 
                or commercial entities that support United States 
                policy goals in countering violent extremist ideologies 
                and organizations.
                    (D) Synchronization processes for these use of 
                these interagency tools against the priority threats, 
                including the roles and responsibilities of the Global 
                Engagement Center, as well as the National Security 
                Council in coordinating the interagency tools.
                    (E) Recommendations for improving coordination 
                between Federal Government agencies, as well as with 
                State, local, international, and non-governmental 
                entities.
                    (F) Other matters as the President considers 
                appropriate.
    (b) Assessment.--Not later than one year after the date of the 
submission of the strategy required by subsection (a), the President 
shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress an assessment of 
the strategy, including--
            (1) the status of implementation of the strategy;
            (2) progress toward the achievement of benchmarks or 
        implementation of any recommendations; and
            (3) any changes to the strategy since such submission.
    (c) Form.--Each report required by this section shall be submitted 
in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
    (d) Appropriate Committees of Congress.--In this section, the term 
``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
            (1) the Committees on Foreign Relations, Armed Services, 
        Appropriations, Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, and 
        the Judiciary and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
        Senate; and
            (2) the Committees on Foreign Affairs, Armed Services, 
        Appropriations, Homeland Security, and the Judiciary and the 
        Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 1079. ADEQUACY OF THE REPORT ON THE VULNERABILITIES OF THE DEFENSE 
              INDUSTRIAL BASE.

    (a) Comprehensive Report on Vulnerabilities of, and Concentration 
of Purchases in, the Defense Industrial Base.--
            (1) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, and at least annually until September 
        30, 2023, before March 31, thereafter the President shall issue 
        to the appropriate congressional committees a comprehensive 
        report combining all of the elements of the reports described 
        in paragraph (4) and any other relevant reports on the adequacy 
        of, vulnerabilities of, and concentration of purchases in the 
        defense industrial sector.
            (2) Consultation.--In preparing a report under paragraph 
        (1), the President shall consult with the Secretary of State, 
        the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of Defense, the 
        Attorney General, the Secretary of Homeland Security, the 
        Director of National Intelligence, the Director of the National 
        Security Agency and such other cabinet officials and heads of 
        Federal departments and agencies? as the President determines 
        to be appropriate.
            (3) Form of report.--Each report issued under paragraph (1) 
        shall be in unclassified form, but may contain a classified 
        annex.
            (4) List of reports.--Each report issued under paragraph 
        (1) shall contain all relevant information and analysis from 
        the following reports, as well as such other relevant 
        information as the President determines to be appropriate:
                    (A) The report described under section 721(m) of 
                the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4565(m)), 
                relating to concentrations of purchases of the defense 
                industrial base.
                    (B) The report described under section 723(a) of 
                the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. 4568(a)), 
                relating to offsets in defense production.
                    (C) The report described under section 2504 of 
                title 10, United States Code, relating to annual 
                industrial capabilities.
                    (D) The ``Report on Defense Industrial Base'' 
                described under section 842(c) of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Years 1990 and 1991.
                    (E) The ``Study of Field Failures Involving 
                Counterfeit Electronic Parts'' described under section 
                238 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
                Fiscal Year 2016.
                    (F) The ``Report on Alternative Capabilities to 
                Procure and Sustain Nonstandard Rotary Wing Aircraft 
                Historically Procured Through Rosoboronexport'' 
                described under section 1249 of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016.
                    (G) The report described under section 843 of the 
                Ike Skelton National Defense Authorization Act for 
                Fiscal Year 2011, relating to rare earth materials 
                critical to national security.
                    (H) The ``Biennial Report on Nuclear Triad'' 
                described under section 1054 of the Ike Skelton 
                National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
                2011.
                    (I) The ``Report on Solid Rocket Motor Industrial 
                Base''described under section 1050 of the National 
                Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008.
                    (J) The ``Assessment of United States Defense 
                Industrial Base Capabilities'' described under section 
                812 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
                Fiscal Year 2004.
                    (K) The report related to ``Monitoring and 
                Enforcement of Mitigation Agreements Related to Foreign 
                Investment in the United States'' described under House 
                Report 113-102.
                    (L) The additive manufacturing recommendation 
                described in House Report 113-446.
                    (M) The ``Assessment of the directed energy 
                industrial base'' described in House Report 114-102.
    (b) Comprehensive Database of Proposed Transactions or Purchases in 
the Defense Industrial Base Involving a Foreign Person.--
            (1) Establishment and maintenance of database.--
                    (A) In general.--The President shall establish and 
                keep current a database of proposed transactions that 
                would result in all of, a substantial part of, or a 
                controlling interest in, a U. S. corporation, or the U. 
                S. assets of a foreign corporation, being owned or 
                controlled by a foreign person, in the defense 
                industrial base and any manufacturing or intellectual 
                property related to the defense industrial base.
                    (B) Confidentiality of information.--Except as 
                provided under subparagraph (C), the President shall 
                ensure that the information contained in the database 
                is kept confidential.
                    (C) Access to database.--The President shall--
                            (i) ensure that access to information in 
                        the database is strictly controlled;
                            (ii) make the database available to the 
                        Secretary of State, the Secretary of the 
                        Treasury, the Secretary of Defense, the 
                        Attorney General, the Secretary of Homeland 
                        Security, the Director of National 
                        Intelligence, and the National Security Agency, 
                        with such limitations as the President may 
                        determine appropriate;
                            (iii) require that records are kept each 
                        time a person accesses information in the 
                        database; and
                            (iv) require that any person receiving 
                        information from the database continues to 
                        preserve the confidentiality of the 
                        information.
            (2) Mandatory filing requirement.--
                    (A) In general.--With respect to any proposed 
                transaction described under paragraph (1)(A), the 
                proposed purchaser and proposed seller in such proposed 
                transaction shall file, and keep current, a report with 
                the database containing a description of the proposed 
                transaction.
                    (B) Additional information for proposed 
                transactions involving a foreign government-controlled 
                corporation.--If, with respect to proposed transaction 
                described in subparagraph (A), any foreign person is a 
                foreign government-controlled corporation, the report 
                required under subparagraph (A) shall also disclose 
                whether such foreign government-controlled corporation 
                is--
                            (i) a Chinese corporation;
                            (ii) a Russian corporation;
                            (iii) an Iranian corporation; or
                            (iv) a North Korean corporation.
                    (C) Civil penalty.--Any person who willfully 
                violates a provision of this paragraph shall be fined 
                not more than $100,000 per violation.
    (c) Defense Industrial Base Technologies Controlled.--
            (1) Sense of congress.--It is the sense of Congress that 
        statutes and mechanisms to control the export of critical 
        technologies or related intellectual property must be kept up-
        to-date, reflecting changes in the defense industrial base, 
        technology, and the global market, in order to adequately 
        protect United States national security.
            (2) Report.--Annually, until September 30, 2023, before 
        March 31, the President shall deliver to the appropriate 
        congressional committees a report describing any need for 
        reforms of policies governing the export of technology or 
        related intellectual property, along with any proposed 
        legislative changes the President believes are necessary.
    (d) Separate Reports Required.--The reports required under 
subsections (a)(1) and (c)(2) may be issued concurrently, but shall be 
issued as separate reports.
    (e) Definitions.--For purposes of this section:
            (1) Appropriate congressional committees.--The term 
        ``appropriate congressional committees'' means the Committee on 
        Armed Services, the Committee on Financial Services, the 
        Committee on Foreign Affairs, and the Permanent Select 
        Committee on Intelligence of the House of Representatives and 
        the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on Banking, 
        Housing, and Urban Affairs, the Committee on Foreign Relations, 
        and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate.
            (2) Database.--The term ``database'' means the database 
        established pursuant to subsection (b)(1)(A).
            (3) Defense industrial base.--The term ``defense industrial 
        base'' shall have the meaning given the term ``national 
        technology and industrial base'' within the context of section 
        2503 of title 10, United States Code.
            (4) Definitions related to corporations.--
                    (A) Corporation.--The term ``corporation'' means a 
                corporation, partnership, or other organization.
                    (B) Foreign corporation.--The term ``foreign 
                corporation'' means a corporation organized under the 
                laws of a foreign country.
                    (C) U.S. corporation.--The term ``U.S. 
                corporation'' means a corporation organized under the 
                laws of the United States.

SEC. 1080. FEDERAL CHARTER FOR SPIRIT OF AMERICA.

    (a) Federal Charter.--
            (1) In general.--Part B of subtitle II of title 36, United 
        States Code, is amended by inserting after chapter 2003 the 
        following new chapter:

                   ``CHAPTER 2005--SPIRIT OF AMERICA

``Sec.
``200501. Organization.
``200502. Purposes.
``200503. Powers.
``200504. Duty to maintain tax-exempt status.
``200505. Annual report.
``Sec. 200501. Organization
    ``(a) Federal Charter.--Spirit of America (in this chapter `the 
corporation'), a nonprofit corporation, is a federally chartered 
corporation.
    ``(b) Expiration of Charter.--If the corporation does not comply 
with the provisions of this chapter, the charter granted by this 
chapter expires.
    ``(c) Scope of Charter.--Nothing in the charter granted by this 
chapter shall be construed as conferring special rights or privileges 
upon the corporation, or as placing upon the Department of Defense any 
obligation with respect to the corporation.
``Sec. 200502. Purposes
    ``The purposes of the corporation are as provided in its 
constitution and bylaws and include the following patriotic, 
charitable, and inspirational purposes:
            ``(1) To respond to the needs of local populations abroad, 
        as identified by members of the Armed Forces and diplomats of 
        the United States abroad.
            ``(2) To provide privately-funded humanitarian, economic, 
        and other nonlethal assistance to address such needs.
            ``(3) To support the safety and success of members of the 
        Armed Forces and diplomats of the United States abroad.
            ``(4) To connect the people of the United States more 
        closely to the members of the Armed Forces and diplomats of the 
        United States abroad, and to the missions carried out by such 
        personnel abroad.
            ``(5) To demonstrate the goodwill of the people of the 
        United States to peoples around the world.
``Sec. 200503. Powers
    ``The corporation may--
            ``(1) adopt and amend a constitution, by-laws, and 
        regulations to carry out the purposes of the corporation;
            ``(2) adopt and alter a corporate seal;
            ``(3) establish and maintain offices to conduct its 
        activities;
            ``(4) enter into contracts;
            ``(5) acquire, own, lease, encumber, and transfer property 
        as necessary and appropriate to carry out the purposes of the 
        corporation;
            ``(6) establish, regulate, and discontinue subordinate 
        State and territorial subdivisions and local chapters or posts;
            ``(7) publish a magazine and other publications (including 
        through the Internet);
            ``(8) sue and be sued; and
            ``(9) do any other act necessary and proper to carry out 
        the purposes of the corporation as provided in its 
        constitution, by-laws, and regulations.
``Sec. 200504. Duty to maintain tax-exempt status
    ``If the corporation fails to maintain its status as an 
organization exempt from taxation under the Internal Revenue Code of 
1986, the charter granted under this chapter shall terminate.
``Sec. 200505. Annual report
    ``The corporation shall submit an annual report to Congress on the 
activities of the corporation during the prior fiscal year. The report 
shall be submitted at the same time as the report of the audit required 
by section 10101 of this title. The report may not be printed as a 
public document.''.
            (2) Tables of chapters.--The table of chapters at the 
        beginning of title 36, United States Code, and at the beginning 
        of subtitle II of such title, are each amended by inserting 
        after the item relating to chapter 2003 the following new item:

``2005. Spirit of America................................... 200501.''.
    (b) Distribution of Corporation Assistance Abroad Through 
Department of Defense.--
            (1) Acceptance and coordination of assistance.--The 
        Department of Defense (including members of the Armed Forces) 
        may, in the discretion of the Secretary of Defense and in 
        accordance with guidance issued by the Secretary--
                    (A) accept from Spirit of America, a federally-
                chartered corporation under chapter 2005 of title 36, 
                United States Code (as added by subsection (a)), 
                humanitarian, economic, and other nonlethal assistance 
                funded by private funds in the carrying out of the 
                purposes of the corporation; and
                    (B) respond to requests from the corporation for 
                the identification of the needs of local populations 
                abroad for assistance, and coordinate with the 
                corporation in the provision and distribution of such 
                assistance, in the carrying out of such purposes.
            (2) Distribution of assistance to local populations.--In 
        accordance with guidance issued by the Secretary, members of 
        the Armed Forces abroad may provide to local populations abroad 
        humanitarian, economic, and other nonlethal assistance provided 
        to the Department by the corporation pursuant to this 
        subsection.
            (3) Scope of guidance.--The guidance issued pursuant to 
        this subsection shall ensure that any assistance distributed 
        pursuant to this subsection shall be for purposes of supporting 
        the mission or missions of the Department and the Armed Forces 
        for which such assistance is provided by the corporation.
            (4) DoD support for corporation activities.--In accordance 
        with guidance issued by the Secretary, the Department and the 
        Armed Forces may--
                    (A) provide transportation, lodging, storage, and 
                other logistical support--
                            (i) to personnel of the corporation 
                        (whether in the United States or abroad) who 
                        are carrying out the purposes of the 
                        corporation; and
                            (ii) in connection with the acceptance and 
                        distribution of assistance provided by the 
                        corporation; and
                    (B) use assets of the Department and the Armed 
                Forces in the provision of support described in 
                subparagraph (A).

SEC. 1081. AIR TRANSPORTATION OF CIVILIAN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              PERSONNEL TO AND FROM AFGHANISTAN.

    (a) Policy Review.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall conduct a policy 
review regarding the use of commercial air transportation or 
alternative forms of air transportation to transport civilian personnel 
of the Department of Defense to and from Afghanistan.
    (b) Report to Congress.--Not later than 90 days after the 
completion of the policy review required by subsection (a), the 
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
on the results of such review.
    (c) Updated Guidelines.--Not later than 90 days after the 
completion of the policy review required by subsection (a), the 
Secretary shall issue updated guidelines, based on the report submitted 
under subsection (b), regarding the use of commercial air 
transportation or alternative forms of air transportation to transport 
civilian personnel of the Department to and from Afghanistan.

SEC. 1082. COLLABORATION BETWEEN FAA AND DOD ON UNMANNED AIRCRAFT 
              SYSTEMS.

    (a) Collaboration.--
            (1) In general.--The Administrator of the Federal Aviation 
        Administration and the Secretary of Defense are encouraged to 
        collaborate on sense-and-avoid capabilities for unmanned 
        aircraft systems.
            (2) Elements.--The collaboration described in paragraph (1) 
        should include the following:
                    (A) Sharing information on safely integrating 
                unmanned aircraft systems and manned aircraft in the 
                national airspace system.
                    (B) Building upon the experience of the Department 
                of Defense, including the Air Force, to inform the 
                Federal Aviation Administration's development of civil 
                standards, policies, and procedures for integrating 
                unmanned aircraft systems in the nation airspace 
                system.
                    (C) Informing--
                            (i) development of airborne and ground-
                        based sense-and-avoid capabilities for unmanned 
                        aircraft systems; and
                            (ii) research and development on unmanned 
                        aircraft systems, especially with respect to 
                        matters involving human factors, information 
                        assurance, and security.
    (b) Participation by FAA in DOD Activities.--
            (1) In general.--The Administrator of the Federal Aviation 
        Administration is encouraged to participate, and provide 
        assistance for participation, in test and evaluation efforts of 
        the Department of Defense, including the Air Force, relating to 
        airborne and ground-based sense-and-avoid capabilities for 
        unmanned aircraft systems.
            (2) Participation through centers of excellence and test 
        sites.--Participation under paragraph (1) may include provision 
        of assistance through unmanned aircraft systems test sites.
    (c) Unmanned Aircraft Systems Defined.--In this section, the term 
``unmanned aircraft system'' has the meaning given that term in section 
331 of the FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012 (Public Law 112-95; 
49 U.S.C. 40101 note).

                  TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL MATTERS

SEC. 1101. EXTENSION OF DIRECT HIRE AUTHORITY FOR DOMESTIC DEFENSE 
              INDUSTRIAL BASE FACILITIES AND MAJOR RANGE AND TEST 
              FACILITIES BASE.

    (a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 1125 of subtitle B of 
title XI of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
(Public Law 114-328) is amended by striking ``During fiscal years 2017 
and 2018,'' and inserting ``During each of fiscal years 2017 through 
2021,''.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the end of each of 
fiscal years 2018 through 2021, the Secretary of Defense shall provide 
a briefing to the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of 
the House of Representatives including--
            (1) a description of the effect of such section 1125 (as 
        amended by subsection (a)) on the management of the Department 
        of Defense civilian workforce during the most recently ended 
        fiscal year; and
            (2) the number of employees--
                    (A) hired under such section during such fiscal 
                year; and
                    (B) expected to be hired under such section during 
                the fiscal year in which the briefing is provided.

SEC. 1102. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE VOLUNTARY SEPARATION 
              INCENTIVE PAY FOR CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE.

    (a) In General.--Section 1107 of subtitle A of title XI of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 
114-328) is amended by striking ``September 30, 2018'' and inserting 
``September 30, 2021''.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the end of each of 
fiscal years 2018 through 2021, the Secretary of Defense shall provide 
a briefing to the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of 
the House of Representatives including--
            (1) a description of the effect of such section 1107 (as 
        amended by subsection (a)) on the management of the Department 
        of Defense civilian workforce during the most recently ended 
        fiscal year;
            (2) the number of employees offered voluntary separation 
        incentive payments during such fiscal year by operation of such 
        section; and
            (3) the number of such employees that accepted such 
        payments.

SEC. 1103. ADDITIONAL DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 
              REINVENTION LABORATORIES.

    Section 1105(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2487; 10 U.S.C. 2358 
note) is amended by adding at the end the following:
            ``(20) The Naval Medical Research Center.
            ``(21) The Joint Warfighting Analysis Center.''.

SEC. 1104. ONE YEAR EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO WAIVE ANNUAL LIMITATION 
              ON PREMIUM PAY AND AGGREGATE LIMITATION ON PAY FOR 
              FEDERAL CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES WORKING OVERSEAS.

    Subsection (a) of section 1101 of the Duncan Hunter National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public Law 110-417; 122 
Stat. 4615), as most recently amended by section 1137 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 
Stat. 2460), is amended by striking ``through 2017'' and inserting 
``through 2018''.

SEC. 1105. APPOINTMENT OF RETIRED MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES TO 
              POSITIONS IN OR UNDER THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.

    (a) In General.--During fiscal years 2017 through 2021, in addition 
to the authority provided under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection 
(b) of section 3326 of title 5, United States Code, and consistent with 
the requirements of such section, a retired member of the armed forces 
may be appointed under such subsection if--
            (1) the Department of Defense has been granted direct hire 
        authority to fill the position;
            (2) the appointment is to fill an emergency appointment for 
        which the Secretary concerned determines competitive 
        appointment is not appropriate or reasonable due to the need to 
        fill the emergency need as quickly as possible; or
            (3) the appointment is for a highly qualified expert under 
        section 9903 of such title.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the end of each of 
fiscal years 2017 through 2021, the Secretary of Defense shall provide 
a briefing to the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of 
the House of Representatives including--
            (1) with respect to the waiver process under section 
        3326(b)(1) of title 5, United States Code--
                    (A) the number of individuals appointed during the 
                most recently ended fiscal year under such process; and
                    (B) the Department of Defense's plan on the use of 
                such process during the fiscal year in which the report 
                is submitted;
            (2) the number of individuals--
                    (A) appointed under the authority provided by 
                subsection (a) during the most recently ended fiscal 
                year; and
                    (B) expected to be appointed under such subsection 
                during the fiscal year in which the briefing is 
                provided; and
            (3) the impact of subsection (a) on the management of the 
        Department civilian workforce during the most recently ended 
        fiscal year.

SEC. 1106. DIRECT HIRE AUTHORITY FOR FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EXPERTS IN 
              THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE WORKFORCE.

    (a) In General.--Section 1110 of the National Defense Authorization 
Act for 2017 (Public Law 114-328) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``the Defense Agencies 
        or the applicable military Department'' and inserting ``a 
        Department of Defense component'';
            (2) in subsection (b)(1), by striking ``the Defense 
        Agencies'' and inserting ``each Department of Defense component 
        listed in subsection (f)(2) other than the Department of the 
        Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Department of the Air 
        Force'';
            (3) in subsection (d)--
                    (A) by striking ``any Defense Agency or military 
                department'' and inserting ``any Department of Defense 
                component''; and
                    (B) by striking ``such Defense Agency or military 
                department'' and inserting ``such Department of Defense 
                component''; and
            (4) by striking subsection (f) and inserting the following:
    ``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) Employee.--The term `employee' has the meaning given 
        that term in section 2105 of title 5, United States Code.
            ``(2) Department of defense component.--The term 
        `Department of Defense component' means the following:
                    ``(A) A Defense Agency.
                    ``(B) The Office of the Chairman of the Joint 
                Chiefs of Staff.
                    ``(C) The Joint Staff.
                    ``(D) A combatant command.
                    ``(E) The Office of the Inspector General of the 
                Department of Defense.
                    ``(F) A Field Activity of the Department of 
                Defense.
                    ``(G) The Department of the Army.
                    ``(H) The Department of the Navy.
                    ``(I) The Department of the Air Force.
                    ``(J) Any organizational entity within the 
                Department of Defense that is not described in 
                subparagraphs (A) through (I).''.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the end of each of 
fiscal years 2017 through 2021, the Secretary of Defense shall provide 
a briefing to the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of 
the House of Representatives including--
            (1) a description of the effect of section 1110 of subtitle 
        A of title XI of the National Defense Authorization Act, 2017 
        (Public Law 114-328), as amended by subsection (a), on the 
        management of the Department of Defense civilian workforce 
        during the most recently ended fiscal year; and
            (2) the number of employees--
                    (A) hired under such section during such fiscal 
                year; and
                    (B) expected to be hired under such section during 
                the fiscal year in which the briefing is provided.

SEC. 1107. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR TEMPORARY PERSONNEL FLEXIBILITIES 
              FOR DOMESTIC DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE FACILITIES AND MAJOR 
              RANGE AND TEST FACILITIES BASE CIVILIAN PERSONNEL.

    (a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 1132 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 
Stat. 2457) is amended by striking ``and 2018'' and inserting ``through 
2021''.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the end of each of 
fiscal years 2017 through 2021, the Secretary of Defense shall provide 
a briefing to the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of 
the House of Representatives including--
            (1) a description of the effect of such section 1132 (as 
        amended by subsection (a)) on the management of civilian 
        personnel at domestic defense industrial base facilities and 
        Major Range and Test Facilities Base during the most recently 
        ended fiscal year; and
            (2) the number of employees--
                    (A) hired under such section during such fiscal 
                year; and
                    (B) expected to be hired under such section during 
                the fiscal year in which the briefing is provided.

SEC. 1108. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF TEMPORARY AUTHORITY TO GRANT 
              ALLOWANCES, BENEFITS, AND GRATUITIES TO CIVILIAN 
              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 as most recently 
amended by section 1133 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2459), is further 
amended by striking ``2018'' and inserting ``2019''.

SEC. 1109. EXTENSION OF OVERTIME RATE AUTHORITY FOR DEPARTMENT OF THE 
              NAVY EMPLOYEES PREFORMING WORK ABOARD OR DOCKSIDE IN 
              SUPPORT OF THE NUCLEAR-POWERED AIRCRAFT CARRIER FORWARD 
              DEPLOYED IN JAPAN.

    Section 5542(a)(6)(B) of title 5, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``September 30, 2018'' and inserting ``September 30, 2019''.

SEC. 1110. BRIEFING ON DIVERSITY IN THE CIVILIAN WORKFORCE ON AIR FORCE 
              INSTALLATIONS.

    Not later than 120 days after the date of enactment of this Act, 
the Secretary of the Air Force shall brief the Committee on Armed 
Services of the Senate, the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives, the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
Affairs of the Senate, and the Committee on Oversight and Government 
Reform of the House of Representatives on efforts to increase diversity 
in the civilian workforce on each Air Force installation, including 
regional and State demographics regarding diversity.

             TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS

                  Subtitle A--Assistance and Training

SEC. 1201. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF LOGISTICAL SUPPORT FOR COALITION 
              FORCES SUPPORTING CERTAIN UNITED STATES MILITARY 
              OPERATIONS.

    Section 1234 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2008 (Public Law 110-181; 122 Stat. 394), as most recently amended 
by section 1201 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2473), is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``fiscal year 2017'' and 
        inserting ``fiscal year 2018'';
            (2) in subsection (d), by striking ``during the period 
        beginning on October 1, 2016, and ending on December 31, 2017'' 
        and inserting ``during the period beginning on October 1, 2017, 
        and ending on December 31, 2018''; and
            (3) in subsection (e)(1), by striking ``December 31, 2017'' 
        and inserting ``December 31, 2018''.

SEC. 1202. MODIFICATION TO SPECIAL DEFENSE ACQUISITION FUND.

    (a) In General.--Effective as of October 1, 2017, paragraph (1) of 
section 114(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking 
``$2,500,000,000'' and inserting ``$2,000,000,000''.
    (b) Increase in Size of Fund.--Such section is further amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``The size'' and 
        inserting ``Except as provided in paragraph (3), the size''; 
        and
            (2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``Of the amount available 
        in the Special Defense Acquisition Fund in any fiscal year 
        after fiscal year 2016, $500,000,000'' and inserting ``The size 
        of the Special Defense Acquisition Fund in any fiscal year 
        after fiscal year 2017 may exceed the dollar amount limitation 
        described in paragraph (1) by an amount not to exceed 
        $500,000,000 and such excess amount''.

SEC. 1203. MODIFICATION TO MINISTRY OF DEFENSE ADVISOR AUTHORITY.

    (a) Ministry of Defense Advisor Authority.--Subsection (a) of 
section 332 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting 
``and members of the armed forces'' after ``civilian employees of the 
Department of Defense''.
    (b) Training of Personnel of Foreign Ministries With Security 
Missions.--Subsection (b) of such section is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``to assign civilian 
        employees of the Department of Defense and members of the armed 
        forces as advisors or trainers'' after ``carry out a program''; 
        and
            (2) in paragraph (2)(B)--
                    (A) by striking ``employees'' in each place it 
                appears and inserting ``advisors or trainers''; and
                    (B) by striking ``each assigned employee's 
                activities'' and inserting ``the activities of each 
                assigned advisor or trainer''.
    (c) Congressional Notice.--Subsection (c) of such section is 
amended--
            (1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by inserting 
        ``or a member of the armed forces'' after ``a civilian employee 
        of the Department of Defense'';
            (2) in paragraph (1), by striking ``employee as an 
        advisor'' and inserting ``advisor or trainer''; and
            (3) in paragraph (3), by striking ``employee'' and 
        inserting ``advisor or trainer''.

SEC. 1204. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO BUILD CAPACITY OF FOREIGN 
              SECURITY FORCES.

    Subsection (c) of section 333 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2), by adding at the end the following:
                    ``(C) Institutional capacity building to organize, 
                administer, employ, manage, maintain, sustain, or 
                oversee national security forces.'';
            (2) in paragraph (3), by inserting ``or the Department of 
        State'' after ``Department of Defense'';
            (3) in paragraph (4)--
                    (A) in the heading, by striking ``Institutional 
                capacity building'' and inserting ``Respect for 
                civilian control of the military'';
                    (B) in the first sentence, by striking ``that the 
                Department is already undertaking, or will undertake as 
                part of the program'' and all that follows and 
                inserting ``that the Department of Defense or another 
                department or agency is already undertaking, or will 
                undertake as part of the security sector assistance 
                provided to the foreign country concerned, a program to 
                enhance the capacity of such foreign country to 
                exercise responsible civilian control of the national 
                security forces of such foreign country.''; and
                    (C) by striking the second sentence; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) Institutional capacity building.--In order to meet 
        the requirement in paragraph (2)(C) with respect to a 
        particular foreign country under a program under subsection 
        (a), the Secretary shall certify, prior to the initiation of 
        the program, that the Department of Defense or another 
        department or agency is already undertaking, or will undertake 
        as part of the security sector assistance provided to the 
        foreign country concerned, a program of institutional capacity 
        building with appropriate institutions of such foreign country 
        to enhance the capacity of such foreign country to organize, 
        administer, employ, manage, maintain, sustain, or oversee the 
        national security forces of such foreign country.''.

SEC. 1205. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY ON TRAINING FOR 
              EASTERN EUROPEAN NATIONAL MILITARY FORCES IN THE COURSE 
              OF MULTILATERAL EXERCISES.

    (a) One-Year Extension.--Subsection (h) of section 1251 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 
114-92; 129 Stat. 1070; 10 U.S.C. 2282 note), as amended by section 
1233 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
(Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2489), is further amended--
            (1) by striking ``September 30, 2018'' and inserting 
        ``December 31, 2019''; and
            (2) by striking ``fiscal years 2016 through 2018'' and 
        inserting ``for the period beginning on October 1, 2015, and 
        ending on December 31, 2019''.
    (b) Regulations for Administration of Incremental Expenses.--
Subsection (d) of such section, as so amended, is further amended by 
adding at the end the following:
            ``(4) Regulations.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
                prescribe regulations for payment of incremental 
                expenses under subsection (a). Not later than 120 days 
                after the date of the enactment of this paragraph, the 
                Secretary shall submit the regulations to the Committee 
                on Armed Services of the Senate and the Committee on 
                Armed Services of the House of Representatives.
                    ``(B) Procedures to be included.--The regulations 
                required under subparagraph (A) shall include the 
                following:
                            ``(i) Procedures to limit the payment of 
                        incremental expenses to developing countries 
                        determined pursuant to subsection (c) to be 
                        eligible for the provision of training under 
                        subsection (a), except in the case of 
                        exceptional circumstances as specified in the 
                        regulations.
                            ``(ii) Procedures to require reimbursement 
                        of incremental expenses from non-developing 
                        countries determined pursuant to subsection (c) 
                        to be eligible for the provision of training 
                        under subsection (a), except in the case of 
                        exceptional circumstances as specified in the 
                        regulations.
                    ``(C) Developing country defined.--In this 
                paragraph, the term `developing country' has the 
                meaning given such term in section 301(4) of title 10, 
                United States Code.''.
    (c) Technical and Conforming Amendments.--Such section, as so 
amended, is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (e), by striking ``that'' and inserting 
        ``than'';
            (2) in subsection (f), by striking ``section 2282'' and 
        inserting ``chapter 16''; and
            (3) in subsection (g), by striking ``means'' and all that 
        follows and inserting ``has the meaning given such term in 
        section 301(5) of title 10, United States Code.''.

SEC. 1206. EXTENSION OF PARTICIPATION IN AND SUPPORT OF THE INTER-
              AMERICAN DEFENSE COLLEGE.

    Subsection (c) of section 1243 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 
2516; 10 U.S.C. 1050 note) is amended--
            (1) in the heading, by striking ``Fiscal Year 2017'' and 
        inserting ``Fiscal Years 2017 and 2018''; and
            (2) by striking ``fiscal year 2017'' and inserting ``fiscal 
        years 2017 and 2018''.

        Subtitle B--Matters Relating to Afghanistan and Pakistan

SEC. 1211. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO TRANSFER DEFENSE ARTICLES AND 
              PROVIDE DEFENSE SERVICES TO THE MILITARY AND SECURITY 
              FORCES OF AFGHANISTAN.

    (a) Extension of Expiration.--Subsection (h) of section 1222 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (Public Law 
112-239; 126 Stat. 1992), as most recently amended by section 1213 of 
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 
114-328; 130 Stat. 2478), is further amended by striking ``December 31, 
2017'' and inserting ``December 31, 2018''.
    (b) Excess Defense Articles.--Subsection (i)(2) of such section, as 
so amended, is further amended by striking ``December 31, 2017,'' in 
each place it appears and inserting ``December 31, 2018''.

SEC. 1212. REPORT ON UNITED STATES STRATEGY IN AFGHANISTAN.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than February 15, 2018, the 
Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of State, 
shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees a report that 
describes the United States strategy in Afghanistan.
    (b) Matters to Be Included.--The report required by subsection (a) 
shall include the following:
            (1) A description of United States assumptions, security 
        interests, and corresponding objectives in Afghanistan.
            (2) A description of how current military efforts align to 
        such objectives and, given current or projected progress, a 
        realistic prognosis for a timeline necessary to achieve such 
        objectives.
            (3) An explanation of the conditions necessary for the 
        Afghan National Defense and Security Forces to become self-
        sufficient.
            (4) A description of the projected long-term and 
        sustainable United States role in Afghanistan.
            (5) A description of the threat of harm to United States 
        forces in Afghanistan and a justification based on the threat 
        to United States interests.
            (6) A description of--
                    (A) support provided to the Taliban, al-Qaeda, the 
                Haqqani network, the Islamic State of Iraq and the 
                Levant, and other terrorist organizations operating in 
                Afghanistan by Russia, Iran, Pakistan, and other 
                countries; and
                    (B) United States military and diplomatic efforts 
                to disrupt such support.
            (7) The projected casualties and costs associated with the 
        deployment of members of the Armed Forces to Afghanistan.
            (8) The objectives of deployment of members of the Armed 
        Forces to Afghanistan, including a time line to achieve such 
        objectives as determined by the Secretary of Defense.
    (c) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the congressional defense committees; and
            (2) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and 
        the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 1213. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY FOR REIMBURSEMENT OF 
              CERTAIN COALITION NATIONS FOR SUPPORT PROVIDED TO UNITED 
              STATES MILITARY OPERATIONS.

    (a) Extension.--
            (1) In general.--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 1218(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2482), is 
        further amended--
                    (A) by striking ``October 1, 2016'' and inserting 
                ``October 1, 2017''; and
                    (B) by striking ``December 31, 2017'' and inserting 
                ``December 31, 2018''.
            (2) Report required.--
                    (A) In general.--Not later than December 31, 2018, 
                the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
                appropriate congressional committees a report on the 
                expenditure of funds under the authority in subsection 
                (a)(2) of section 1233 of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 110-
                181; 122 Stat. 393), including a description of the 
                following:
                            (i) The purpose for which such funds were 
                        expended.
                            (ii) Each organization on whose behalf such 
                        funds were expended, including the amount 
                        expended on such organization and the number of 
                        members of such organization supported by such 
                        amount.
                            (iii) Any limitation imposed on the 
                        expenditure of funds under such subsection, 
                        including on any recipient of funds or any use 
                        of funds expended.
                    (B) Appropriate congressional committees defined.--
                In this paragraph, the term ``appropriate congressional 
                committees'' means--
                            (i) the congressional defense committees; 
                        and
                            (ii) the Committee on Foreign Affairs of 
                        the House of Representatives and the Committee 
                        on Foreign Relations of the Senate.
    (b) Notice Requirement.--Section 1232(b)(6) of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 110-181; 122 Stat. 
393), as most recently amended by section 1218(e) of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 
Stat. 2484), is further amended by striking ``December 31, 2017'' and 
inserting ``December 31, 2018''.
    (c) Limitation on Reimbursement Pending Certification.--Section 
1227(d)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 2001), as most recently amended by 
section 1218(f) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2484), is further amended by 
striking ``December 31, 2017'' and inserting ``December 31, 2018''.
    (d) Additional Limitations on Reimbursement.--
            (1) Extension of limitations on amounts.--Subsection (d)(1) 
        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 1218(c) of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 
        Stat. 2483), is further amended--
                    (A) in the first sentence, by striking 
                ``$1,100,000,000'' and inserting ``$1,000,000,000'';
                    (B) in the second sentence, by striking 
                ``$900,000,000'' and inserting ``$800,000,000'';
                    (C) by striking ``October 1, 2016'' in each place 
                it appears and inserting ``October 1, 2017''; and
                    (D) by striking ``December 31, 2017'' in each place 
                it appears and inserting ``December 31, 2018''.
            (2) Extension of limitation on amounts eligible for 
        waiver.--Subsection (g) of section 1218 of the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 
        Stat. 2484) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``October 1, 2016'' and inserting 
                ``October 1, 2017'';
                    (B) by striking ``December 31, 2017'' and inserting 
                ``December 31, 2018'';
                    (C) in paragraph (3), strike ``and'' at the end;
                    (D) in paragraph (4), strike the period at the end 
                and insert ``; and'' ; and
                    (E) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) Pakistan is not using its military or any funds or 
        equipment provided by the United States to persecute minority 
        groups seeking political or religious freedom, including the 
        Balochi, Sindhi, and Hazara ethnic groups and minority 
        religious groups, including Christian, Hindu, and Ahmadiyya 
        Muslim.
            ``(6) Pakistan is not providing military, financial, or 
        logistical support to specially designated global terrorists 
        operating in Afghanistan or Pakistan.''.

SEC. 1214. SENSE OF CONGRESS RELATING TO DR. SHAKIL AFRIDI.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) The attacks of September 11, 2001, killed approximately 
        3,000 people, most of whom were Americans, but also included 
        hundreds of individuals with foreign citizenships, nearly 350 
        New York Fire Department personnel, and about 50 law 
        enforcement officers.
            (2) Downed United Airlines flight 93 was reportedly 
        intended, under the control of the al-Qaeda high-jackers, to 
        crash into the White House or the Capitol in an attempt to kill 
        the President of the United States or Members of the United 
        States Congress.
            (3) The September 11, 2001, attacks were largely planned 
        and carried out by the al-Qaeda terrorist network led by Osama 
        bin Laden and his deputy Ayman al Zawahiri, after which Osama 
        bin Laden enjoyed safe haven in Pakistan from where he 
        continued to plot deadly attacks against the United States and 
        the world.
            (4) Since 2001, the United States has provided more than 
        $30 billion in security and economic aid to Pakistan.
            (5) The United States very generously and swiftly responded 
        to the 2005 Kashmir Earthquake in Pakistan with more than $200 
        million in emergency aid and the support of several United 
        States military aircraft, approximately 1,000 United States 
        military personnel, including medical specialists, thousands of 
        tents, blankets, water containers and a variety of other 
        emergency equipment.
            (6) The United States again generously and swiftly 
        contributed approximately $150 million in emergency aid to 
        Pakistan following the 2010 Pakistan flood, in addition to the 
        service of nearly twenty United States military helicopters, 
        their flight crews, and other resources to assist the Pakistan 
        Army's relief efforts.
            (7) The United States continues to work tirelessly to 
        support Pakistan's economic development, including millions of 
        dollars allocated towards the development of Pakistan's energy 
        infrastructure, health services and education system.
            (8) The United States and Pakistan continue to have many 
        critical shared interests, both economic and security related, 
        which could be the foundation for a positive and mutually 
        beneficial partnership.
            (9) Dr. Shakil Afridi, a Pakistani physician, is a hero to 
        whom the people of the United States, Pakistan and the world 
        owe a debt of gratitude for his help in finally locating Osama 
        bin Laden before more innocent American, Pakistani and other 
        lives were lost to this terrorist leader.
            (10) Pakistan, the United States and the international 
        community had failed for nearly 10 years following attacks of 
        September 11, 2001, to locate and bring Osama bin Laden, who 
        continued to kill innocent civilians in the Middle East, Asia, 
        Europe, Africa and the United States, to justice without the 
        help of Dr. Afridi.
            (11) The Government of Pakistan's imprisonment of Dr. 
        Afridi presents a serious and growing impediment to the United 
        States' bilateral relations with Pakistan.
            (12) The Government of Pakistan has leveled and allowed 
        baseless charges against Dr. Afridi in a politically motivated, 
        spurious legal process.
            (13) Dr. Afridi is currently imprisoned by the Government 
        of Pakistan, a deplorable and unconscionable situation which 
        calls into question Pakistan's actual commitment to countering 
        terrorism and undermines the notion that Pakistan is a true 
        ally in the struggle against terrorism.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that Dr. Shakil 
Afridi is an international hero and that the Government of Pakistan 
should release him immediately from prison.

         Subtitle C--Matters Relating to Syria, Iraq, and Iran

SEC. 1221. REPORT ON UNITED STATES STRATEGY IN SYRIA.

    (a) In General.--Not later than February 1, 2018, the Secretary of 
Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of State, shall submit to 
the appropriate congressional committees a report that describes the 
strategy of the United States in Syria.
    (b) Matters to Be Included.--The report required by subsection (a) 
shall include each of the following:
            (1) A description of the key security and geopolitical 
        interests, objectives, and long-term goals in Syria for the 
        United States and indicators for the effectiveness of efforts 
        to achieve such objectives and goals.
            (2) A description of United States assumptions regarding 
        the current intelligence picture, the roles and ambitions of 
        other countries, and the interests of relevant Syrian groups 
        with respect to such objectives.
            (3) A description of how current military and diplomatic 
        efforts in Syria align with such objectives, and a realistic 
        projection of the timeline necessary to achieve such 
        objectives.
            (4) The resources required to achieve such objectives, 
        including the funding estimated to be needed each year by the 
        Department of Defense and by the Department of State (including 
        the United States Agency for International Development).
            (5) An analysis of the threats posed to United States 
        interests by Russian and Iranian influences in Syria, as well 
        as the threats posed to such interests by the Islamic State of 
        Iraq and the Levant, Al Qaeda, Hezbollah, and other violent 
        extremist organizations in Syria.
            (6) A description of long-term and sustainable United 
        States involvement in Syria and the conclusion of the current 
        United States effort in Syria.
            (7) A description of the coordination between the 
        Department of Defense and the Department of State regarding the 
        transition from military operations to stabilization 
        programming, including a description of how local governance 
        and civil society will be restored in areas secured through 
        United States military operations in Syria.
            (8) A description of the threat of harm to United States 
        forces in Syria and a justification based on the threat to 
        United States interests.
            (9) A description of amounts and sources of Islamic State 
        of Iraq and the Levant financing in Syria and efforts to 
        disrupt this financing as part of the broader strategy of the 
        United States in Syria.
            (10) A description of the legal authority needed to 
        introduce United States ground combat forces in Syria or needed 
        to accomplish long term and short term military objectives in 
        Syria and a description of the capabilities and willingness of 
        the Syrian government (and its allies) to use chemical or other 
        weapons of mass destructions against its citizens and 
        potentially United States and associated military forces Syria.
            (11) A description of all necessary contact between the 
        United States and the governments of Russia and other state 
        actors in order to achieve the United States strategy in Syria.
    (c) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the congressional defense committees; and
            (2) the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the 
        Senate.

SEC. 1221A. REPORT ON IMPACT OF HUMANITARIAN CRISIS ON ACHIEVEMENT OF 
              UNITED STATES SECURITY OBJECTIVES IN SYRIA.

    (a) In General.--Not later than February 1, 2018, the Secretary of 
Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of State, shall submit to 
the appropriate congressional committees (as defined in section 
1221(c)) a report that provides an assessment of the impact of the 
humanitarian crisis in Syria on the achievement of goals of the United 
States in the region, such as destroying and dismantling the Islamic 
State in Iraq and the Levant and peace and stability in Syria and the 
broader region.
    (b) Contents.--The assessment under subsection (a) shall include a 
description of--
            (1) the response of the United States to the short-term and 
        long-term humanitarian crisis in Syria caused by attacks on the 
        people of Syria by its government, including attacks on 
        hospitals and other medical and educational facilities; and
            (2) how the United States intends to support the needs of 
        refugees and internally displaced populations and intends to 
        improve access to humanitarian aid for areas where such aid has 
        been blocked.

SEC. 1222. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE 
              ASSISTANCE TO COUNTER THE ISLAMIC STATE OF IRAQ AND THE 
              LEVANT.

    (a) Authority.--Subsection (a) of section 1236 of the Carl Levin 
and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3559), as most recently 
amended by section 1222 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2485), is further 
amended by striking ``December 31, 2018'' and inserting ``December 31, 
2019''.
    (b) Quarterly Progress Report.--Subsection (d) of such section is 
further amended--
            (1) in the first sentence of the matter preceding paragraph 
        (1), by adding at the end before the period the following: ``, 
        which shall be provided in unclassified form with a classified 
        annex if necessary''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(12) An assessment of--
                    ``(A) security in liberated areas in Iraq;
                    ``(B) the extent to which security forces trained 
                and equipped, directly or indirectly, through the 
                Office of Security Cooperation in Iraq (OSC-I) are 
                prepared to provide post-conflict stabilization and 
                security in such liberated areas; and
                    ``(C) the effectiveness of security forces in the 
                post-conflict environment and an identification of 
                which such forces will provide post-conflict 
                stabilization and security in such liberated areas.''.
    (c) Funding.--Subsection (g) of such section is further amended--
            (1) by striking ``National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2017'' and inserting ``National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018'';
            (2) by striking ``fiscal year 2017'' and inserting ``fiscal 
        year 2018''; and
            (3) by striking ``$630,000,000'' and inserting 
        ``$1,269,000,000''.
    (d) Sense of Congress.--Recognizing the important role of the Iraqi 
Christian militias within the military campaign against ISIL in Iraq, 
and the specific threat to the Christian population in Iraq, it is the 
sense of Congress that the United States should provide arms, training, 
and appropriate equipment to vetted elements of the Nineveh Plain 
Council.

SEC. 1223. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO SUPPORT 
              OPERATIONS AND ACTIVITIES OF THE OFFICE OF SECURITY 
              COOPERATION IN IRAQ.

    (a) Extension of Authority.--Subsection (f)(1) 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), as most recently amended 
by section 1223 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2486), is further amended by 
striking ``fiscal year 2017'' and inserting ``fiscal year 2018''.
    (b) Limitation on Amount.--Subsection (c) of such section is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``fiscal year 2017'' and inserting ``fiscal 
        year 2018'' ; and
            (2) by striking ``$70,000,000'' and inserting 
        ``$42,000,000''.
    (c) Source of Funds.--Subsection (d) of such section is amended by 
striking ``fiscal year 2017'' and inserting ``fiscal year 2018''.

SEC. 1224. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON THREATS POSED BY THE GOVERNMENT OF 
              IRAN.

    (a) Finding.--Congress expressed concerns over state-sponsored 
threats posed by Iran and over Iran's integration of conventional 
warfare, cyber and information operations, intelligence operations, and 
other activities to undermine United States national security 
interests.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the United States should counter the malign activities 
        of the Government of Iran;
            (2) the United States should maintain a capable military 
        presence in the Arabian Gulf region to deter, and, if 
        necessary, respond to Iranian aggression;
            (3) the United States should strengthen ballistic missile 
        defense capabilities;
            (4) the United States should ensure freedom of navigation 
        at the Bab al Mandab strait and the Strait of Hormuz; and
            (5) the United States should counter Iranian efforts to 
        illicitly proliferate weapons, including cruise and ballistic 
        missiles.

SEC. 1225. REPORT ON MERITS OF AN INCIDENTS AT SEA AGREEMENT BETWEEN 
              THE UNITED STATES, IRAN, AND CERTAIN OTHER COUNTRIES.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with 
the Secretary of State, shall submit to the appropriate congressional 
committees a report assessing the relative merits of a multilateral or 
bilateral Incidents at Sea military-to-military agreement between the 
United States, the Government of Iran, and other countries operating in 
the Persian Gulf aimed at preventing accidental naval conflict in the 
Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.
    (b) Matters to Be Included.--Such assessment should consider and 
evaluate the current maritime security situation in the Persian Gulf 
and the effect that such an agreement might have on military and other 
maritime activities in the region, as well as other United States 
regional strategic interests.
    (c) Form.--The report required by this section shall be submitted 
in unclassified form but may contain a classified annex.
    (d) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
            (2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.

SEC. 1226. EXTENSION OF QUARTERLY REPORTS ON CONFIRMED BALLISTIC 
              MISSILE LAUNCHES FROM IRAN AND IMPOSITION OF SANCTIONS IN 
              CONNECTION WITH THOSE LAUNCHES.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Iran continues to test ballistic missile technology 
        notwithstanding the restrictions imposed under United Nations 
        Security Council Resolution 2231 (2015).
            (2) On January 29, 2017, Iran tested the medium-range 
        Khorramshahr ballistic missile that flew 600 miles before 
        exploding, in a failed test of a reentry vehicle.
            (3) According to press reports, in March 2017 Iran tested 
        two short-range Fateh 110 ballistic missiles.
            (4) Iran has inscribed anti-Israel propaganda on its 
        missiles, including ``Israel should be wiped off the Earth''.
    (b) Extension.--Section 1226(e) of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 
2487) is amended by striking ``December 31, 2019'' and inserting 
``December 31, 2022''.

SEC. 1227. REPORT ON STEPS AND PROTOCOLS RELATED TO THE RESCUE, CARE, 
              AND TREATMENT OF CAPTIVES OF THE ISLAMIC STATE.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 60 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
Congress a report containing each of the following:
            (1) A description of any steps the Department of Defense is 
        taking to ensure coordination between the Armed Forces of the 
        United States and local forces in conducting military 
        operations in regions controlled by the Islamic State where 
        religious or minority groups are known or thought to be held 
        captive, in order to incorporate the rescue of such captives as 
        a secondary objective.
            (2) A description of any protocols that will be put in 
        place by the Department of Defense, including protocols 
        developed in coordination with the Government of Iraq, for the 
        care and treatment of religious or minority groups rescued from 
        captivity under the Islamic State, including any protocol for 
        relocating such groups of captives to safe locations.
    (b) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted 
in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1228. REPORTS ON DEPLOYMENT OF UNITED STATES COMBAT FORCES TO 
              SYRIA.

    (a) In General.--The President shall submit to Congress a report on 
the deployment of United States combat forces to Syria, including 
number of troops, extent of deployment, and purpose of deployment.
    (b) Deadline.--The President shall submit the report required under 
subsection (a) not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment 
of this Act and every 90 days thereafter through the end of calendar 
year 2020.

SEC. 1229. REPORT ON USE BY THE GOVERNMENT OF IRAN OF COMMERCIAL 
              AIRCRAFT AND RELATED SERVICES FOR ILLICIT ACTIVITIES.

    (a) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and every 180 days thereafter, the President, in 
consultation with the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of State, and 
the Director of National Intelligence, shall submit to the Committee on 
Armed Services, Committee on Foreign Affairs, Committee on Financial 
Services, and the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
House of Representatives a report on use by the Government of Iran of 
commercial aircraft and related services for illicit activities.
    (b) Elements of Report.--The report required under subsection (a) 
shall include a description of the extent to which--
            (1) the Government of Iran is using commercial aircraft, 
        including aircraft of Iran Air, or related services to 
        transport illicit cargo to or from Iran, including military 
        goods, weapons, military personnel, military-related electronic 
        parts and mechanical equipment, or rocket or missile 
        components; and
            (2) the commercial aviation sector of Iran, including Iran 
        Air, is providing financial, material, or technological support 
        to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Iran's Ministry of 
        Defense and Armed Forces Logistics, the Bashar al Assad Regime, 
        Hezbollah, Hamas, Kata'ib Hezbollah, or any other Foreign 
        Terrorist Organization or entities designated as a specially 
        designated national and blocked person on the list maintained 
        by the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the Department of 
        the Treasury.
    (c) Sunset.--This section shall cease to be effective on the date 
that is 30 days after the date on which the President certifies to 
Congress that the Government of Iran has ceased providing support for 
acts of international terrorism.

SEC. 1230. LIMITATION ON FUNDING.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the Counter-ISIS 
Train and Equip Fund are authorized to be made available to provide 
assistance to any recipient of such funds that the Secretary of Defense 
has reported, pursuant to a quarterly progress report submitted 
pursuant to section 1209 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3541), as having 
previously misused training or equipment provided by the United States.

SEC. 1230A. STRATEGY FOR SYRIA AND IRAQ.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in coordination 
with the Secretary of State, submit to the appropriate congressional 
committees a strategy for Syria and Iraq.
    (b) Elements.--The strategy required by paragraph (1) shall include 
the following:
            (1) A description of the political and military objectives 
        and end states for Syria and Iraq.
            (2) A description of the plan for achieving the political 
        and military objectives and end states for Syria and Iraq, 
        including--
                    (A) with respect to Syria, a plan for political 
                transition;
                    (B) with respect to Iraq--
                            (i) a plan for political reform and 
                        reconciliation among ethnic groups and 
                        political parties; and
                            (ii) an assessment of the required future 
                        size and structure of the Iraqi Security 
                        Forces, including irregular forces; and
                    (C) a description of the roles and responsibilities 
                of United States allies and partners and other 
                countries in the region in establishing regional 
                stability.
            (3) A description of the military conditions that must be 
        met for the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria to be considered 
        defeated.
    (c) Appropriate Congressional Committees.--In this section, the 
term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Committee on 
        Armed Services of the House of Representatives; and
            (2) the Committee on Foreign Relations and the Committee on 
        Armed Services of the Senate.

         Subtitle D--Matters Relating to the Russian Federation

SEC. 1231. EXTENSION OF LIMITATION ON MILITARY COOPERATION BETWEEN THE 
              UNITED STATES AND THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION.

    Section 1232(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2488) is amended by 
striking ``fiscal year 2017'' and inserting ``fiscal year 2018''.

SEC. 1232. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS RELATING TO SOVEREIGNTY 
              OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION OVER CRIMEA.

    (a) Prohibition.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated 
by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the 
Department of Defense may be obligated or expended to implement any 
activity that recognizes the sovereignty of the Russian Federation over 
Crimea.
    (b) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of the 
Secretary of State, may waive the restriction on the obligation or 
expenditure of funds required by subsection (a) if the Secretary--
            (1) determines that to do so is in the national security 
        interest of the United States; and
            (2) submits a notification of the waiver, at the time the 
        waiver is invoked, to the Committee on Armed Services and the 
        Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives 
        and the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Foreign Relations of the Senate.

SEC. 1233. STATEMENT OF POLICY ON THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION.

    (a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) The Russian Federation, under the leadership of 
        President Vladimir Putin, continues to demonstrate its malign 
        activities to expand its sphere of influence and undermine 
        international norms and institutions both regionally and 
        globally, including through the following activities:
                    (A) An assessment of the United States intelligence 
                community stated ``. . .Russian President Vladimir 
                Putin ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at 
                the U.S. presidential election'', presented in the 
                intelligence community's January 6, 2017, declassified 
                report, ``Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions 
                in Recent U.S. Elections''.
                    (B) The Russian Federation has interfered in the 
                April 2017 election and runoff election in May 2017 of 
                the French Presidential elections. As confirmed by 
                Admiral Mike Rogers, Director of the National Security 
                Agency, at a Senate Committee on Armed Services hearing 
                on May 9, 2017, ``If you look at the French elections . 
                . . we had become aware of Russian activity.''
                    (C) The Russian Federation has threatened stability 
                in their sphere of influence. As stated by General 
                Curtis M. Scaparrotti, Commander of the United States 
                European Command, in testimony at a House Committee on 
                Armed Services hearing on March 28, 2017, ``In the 
                east, a resurgent Russia has turned from partner to 
                antagonist. Countries along Russia's periphery, 
                especially Ukraine and Georgia, are under threat from 
                Moscow's malign influence and military aggression.''.
                    (D) The Russian Federation has occupied and 
                attempted to annex Crimea from Ukraine.
                    (E) The Russian Federation has employed hybrid 
                warfare tactics, including cyber warfare, electronic 
                warfare, and information warfare to gain influence. 
                This includes the use of hybrid tactics in assisting 
                combined Russian-separatist forces in eastern Ukraine 
                and, in 2008, the Russian incursion in Georgia.
                    (F) Military intervention in the civil war in 
                Syria.
            (2) Both the Secretary of Defense, James Mattis, and the 
        Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Joseph Dunford, 
        highlight the Russian Federation as the number one geo-
        strategic threat to the United States.
            (3) The Government of the Russian Federation continues its 
        decades' long modernization of its conventional military force 
        with the buildup of large numbers of professionalized forces on 
        Russia's borders with Europe, re-establishing military presence 
        in the Arctic, investment in its nuclear triad, advanced 
        weapons systems, fighter jets, and naval vessels.
            (4) In June 2016, the Center for Strategic and 
        International Studies released its report, ``Evaluating U.S. 
        Army Force Posture in Europe: Phase II'', which included the 
        recommendation that an Armed Brigade Combat Team and a combat 
        aviation brigade should be permanently assigned to Europe. The 
        report also recommends additional prepositioned equipment in 
        Western Europe.
            (5) In January 2016, the National Commission on the Future 
        of the Army released its findings and recommendations, which 
        included Recommendation 14, calling for permanently stationing 
        an Armored Brigade Combat Team Forward in Europe and 
        Recommendation 15 calling for the conversion of Army Europe 
        Aviation Headquarters to a warfighting mission command.
            (6) In the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
        Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291), the National Defense 
        Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92), and 
        the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
        (Public Law 114-328), Congress authorized approximately 
        $5,200,000 for the European Reassurance Initiative, now the 
        European Deterrence Initiative, to reassure partners and allies 
        and begin building a credible deterrence to the Russian 
        Federation through--
                    (A) large increases in conventional resources, 
                including additional rotational deployments of United 
                States troops and prepositioning of equipment into 
                Europe; and
                    (B) increased funding for unconventional warfare 
                resources, including cyber and special operations 
                forces, and for intelligence and indicators and 
                warnings.
    (b) Statement of Policy.--
            (1) In general.--It is the policy of the United States to 
        develop, implement, and sustain credible deterrence against 
        aggression by the Government of the Russian Federation, in 
        order to enhance regional and global security and stability.
            (2) Conduct of policy.--The policy described in paragraph 
        (1) shall, among other things, be carried out through a 
        comprehensive defense strategy and guidance to outline and 
        resource the necessary defense capabilities in the European 
        theater. Such policy shall include the following:
                    (A) Increased United States presence in Europe 
                through additional permanently stationed forces.
                    (B) Continued United States presence in Europe 
                through additional rotational forces.
                    (C) Increased United States prepositioned military 
                equipment to include logistics enablers and a division 
                headquarters.
                    (D) Sufficient and necessary infrastructure 
                additions and improvements throughout the European 
                theater.
                    (E) Increased investment and priority to counter 
                unconventional methods of warfare, including sufficient 
                cyber warfare resources, information operations 
                resources, and intelligence resources.
                    (F) Effective security cooperation resources and 
                opportunities with partners and allies, including NATO 
                member countries.

SEC. 1234. MODIFICATION AND EXTENSION OF UKRAINE SECURITY ASSISTANCE 
              INITIATIVE.

    Section 1250 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1068), as amended by section 
1237 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
(Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2494), is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``$175,000,000 of 
                the funds available for fiscal year 2017 pursuant to 
                subsection (f)(2)'' and inserting ``$75,000,000 of the 
                funds available for fiscal year 2018 pursuant to 
                subsection (f)(3)''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (3)--
                            (i) by striking ``fiscal year 2017'' and 
                        inserting ``fiscal year 2018''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``$100,000,000'' and 
                        inserting ``$50,000,000'';
            (2) in subsection (f), by adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) For fiscal year 2018, $150,000,000.''; and
            (3) in subsection (h), by striking ``December 31, 2018'' 
        and inserting ``December 31, 2019''.

SEC. 1235. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS RELATING TO 
              IMPLEMENTATION OF THE OPEN SKIES TREATY.

    (a) Limitation on Conduct of Flights.--
            (1) In general.--None of the funds authorized to be 
        appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for any 
        fiscal year after fiscal year 2017 for the Department of 
        Defense for operation and maintenance, Defense-wide, or 
        operation and maintenance, Air Force, may be obligated or 
        expended to conduct any flight during such fiscal year for 
        purposes of implementing the Open Skies Treaty until the date 
        that is seven days after the date on which the President 
        submits to the appropriate congressional committees a plan 
        described in paragraph (2) with respect to such fiscal year.
            (2) Plan described.--The plan described in this paragraph 
        is a plan developed by the Secretary of Defense, in 
        coordination with the Secretary of State, the Chairman of the 
        Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Director of National 
        Intelligence, that contains a description of the objectives for 
        all planned flights described in paragraph (1) during such 
        fiscal year.
            (3) Update.--To the extent necessary and appropriate, the 
        Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of 
        State, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the 
        Director of National Intelligence, may update the plan 
        described in paragraph (2) with respect to a fiscal year and 
        submit the updated plan to the appropriate congressional 
        committees.
            (4) Appropriate congressional committees defined.--In this 
        section, the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees; and
                    (B) the Select Committee on Intelligence and 
                Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and the 
                Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and the 
                Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
                Representatives.
            (5) Sunset.--The requirements of this subsection shall 
        terminate on the date that is five years after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act.
    (b) Prohibition on Activities to Modify United States Aircraft.--
None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for research, 
development, test, and evaluation, Air Force, for arms control 
implementation (PE 0305145F) or procurement, Air Force, for digital 
visual imaging system (BA-05, Line Item #1900) may be obligated or 
expended to carry out any activities to modify any United States 
aircraft for purposes of implementing the Open Skies Treaty.
    (c) Open Skies Treaty Defined.--In this section, the term ``Open 
Skies Treaty'' means the Treaty on Open Skies, done at Helsinki March 
24, 1992, and entered into force January 1, 2002.

SEC. 1236. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON IMPORTANCE OF NUCLEAR CAPABILITIES OF 
              NATO.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) The Warsaw Summit Communique, issued on July 9, 2016, 
        by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (in this section 
        referred to as ``NATO'') clearly defines the need for, and the 
        importance of, the nuclear mission of NATO.
            (2) The Warsaw Summit Communique states--
                    (A) with respect to the nuclear deterrence 
                capability of NATO, ``As a means to prevent conflict 
                and war, credible deterrence and defence is essential. 
                Therefore, deterrence and defence, based on an 
                appropriate mix of nuclear, conventional, and missile 
                defence capabilities, remains a core element of our 
                overall strategy. . . The fundamental purpose of NATO's 
                nuclear capability is to preserve peace, prevent 
                coercion, and deter aggression. Nuclear weapons are 
                unique. Any employment of nuclear weapons against NATO 
                would fundamentally alter the nature of a conflict. The 
                circumstances in which NATO might have to use nuclear 
                weapons are extremely remote'';
                    (B) with respect to the nature of the nuclear 
                deterrence posture of NATO, ``NATO must continue to 
                adapt its strategy in line with trends in the security 
                environment-including with respect to capabilities and 
                other measures required-to ensure that NATO's overall 
                deterrence and defence posture is capable of addressing 
                potential adversaries' doctrine and capabilities, and 
                that it remains credible, flexible, resilient, and 
                adaptable.''; and
                    (C) with respect to the importance of contributions 
                to the nuclear deterrence mission from across the NATO 
                alliance, ``The strategic forces of the Alliance, 
                particularly those of the United States, are the 
                supreme guarantee of the security of the Allies. The 
                independent strategic nuclear forces of the United 
                Kingdom and France have a deterrent role of their own 
                and contribute to the overall security of the Alliance. 
                These Allies' separate centres of decision-making 
                contribute to deterrence by complicating the 
                calculations of potential adversaries. NATO's nuclear 
                deterrence posture also relies, in part, on United 
                States' nuclear weapons forward-deployed in Europe and 
                on capabilities and infrastructure provided by Allies 
                concerned. These Allies will ensure that all components 
                of NATO's nuclear deterrent remain safe, secure, and 
                effective. That requires sustained leadership focus and 
                institutional excellence for the nuclear deterrence 
                mission and planning guidance aligned with 21st century 
                requirements. The Alliance will ensure the broadest 
                possible participation of Allies concerned in their 
                agreed nuclear burden-sharing arrangements.''.
            (3) Secretary of Defense James Mattis, in response to the 
        advance policy questions for his Senate confirmation hearing on 
        January 12, 2017, stated that--
                    (A) ``NATO's nuclear deterrence posture relies in 
                part on U.S. nuclear weapons forward-deployed in Europe 
                and on capabilities and infrastructure provided by NATO 
                allies. These capabilities include dual-capable 
                aircraft that contribute to current burden-sharing 
                arrangements within NATO. In general, we must take care 
                to maintain this particular capability, and to 
                modernize it appropriately and in a timely fashion.''; 
                and
                    (B) the role of the nuclear weapons of the United 
                States is ``to deter nuclear war and to serve as last 
                resort weapons of self-defense. In this sense, U.S. 
                nuclear weapons are fundamental to our nation's 
                security and have historically provided a deterrent 
                against aggression and security assurance to U.S. 
                allies. A robust, flexible, and survivable U.S. nuclear 
                arsenal underpins the U.S. ability to deploy 
                conventional forces worldwide.''.
            (4) On March 28, 2017, General Curtis Scaparrotti, 
        Commander of the United States European Command and the Supreme 
        Allied Commander, Europe, testified to the Committee on Armed 
        Services of the House of Representatives that ``NATO and U.S. 
        nuclear forces continue to be a vital component of our 
        deterrence. Our modernization efforts are crucial; we must 
        preserve a ready, credible, and safe nuclear capability.''.
            (5) The Russian Federation is currently undergoing 
        significant modernization and recapitalization of all three 
        legs of its nuclear triad, continues to field and modernize a 
        large variety of non-strategic nuclear weapons, and is 
        developing and deploying new and unique nuclear capabilities.
            (6) Russia remains in violation of the INF Treaty due to 
        the development, testing, and, most recently, the operational 
        deployment of ground-launched cruise missiles in violation of 
        the INF Treaty.
            (7) On March 28, 2017, General Paul Selva, Vice Chairman of 
        the Joint Chiefs of Staff, described the security consequences 
        of the deployment of such INF Treaty-violating missiles, 
        testifying to the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives that ``our assessment of the impact is that it 
        more threatens NATO and infrastructure within the European 
        continent than any other...area of the world that we have 
        national interests in or alliance interests in.''.
            (8) On March 28, 2017, General Curtis Scaparrotti, in 
        testimony before the Committee on Armed Services of the House 
        of Representatives, responded to a question asking if Russia 
        intends to return to compliance with the INF Treaty by stating, 
        ``I don't have any indication that they will at this time.''.
            (9) Rhetoric from Russian officials has demonstrated that 
        Moscow has sought to leverage its nuclear arsenal to threaten 
        and intimidate neighboring countries, including members of 
        NATO, as was the case when the Russian Ambassador to Denmark 
        stated, ``Danish warships will be targets for Russian nuclear 
        missiles'' in response to Denmark's potential cooperation in 
        the NATO missile defense system.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the nuclear and conventional deterrence capabilities of 
        NATO are of critical importance to the security of the United 
        States and of the NATO alliance, and must continue to adapt to 
        the changed security environment in Europe;
            (2) the ability of the United States to forward-deploy 
        dual-capable aircraft and nuclear weapons, and of select 
        members of NATO to participate in the nuclear deterrence 
        mission of NATO by hosting forward-deployed nuclear weapons of 
        the United States or operating dual-capable aircraft, is 
        central to the credibility of the nuclear deterrence and 
        defense posture of NATO;
            (3) the strategic forces of the United States, the 
        independent nuclear forces of the United Kingdom and the French 
        Republic, and the dual-capable aircraft operated by the United 
        States and other members of NATO constitute foundational 
        elements of the nuclear deterrence and defense posture of NATO;
            (4) NATO should modernize its nuclear-related 
        infrastructure to ensure the highest-level of safety and 
        security;
            (5) effective deterrence requires NATO to conduct nuclear 
        planning and exercises aligned with 21st century requirements 
        and modernize nuclear-related capabilities and infrastructure, 
        including dual-capable aircraft, command and control networks, 
        and facilities; and
            (6) to ensure the continued credibility of the deterrence 
        and defense posture of NATO, the planned completion of F-35A 
        aircraft development and testing, as well as the delivery of 
        such aircraft to members of NATO, must not be delayed.
    (c) INF Treaty Defined.--In this section, the term ``INF Treaty'' 
means the Treaty Between the United States of America and the Union of 
Soviet Socialist Republics on the Elimination of Their Intermediate-
Range and Shorter-Range Missiles, commonly referred to as the 
``Intermediate- Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty'', signed at 
Washington December 8, 1987, and entered into force June 1, 1988.

SEC. 1237. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON SUPPORT FOR GEORGIA.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) Georgia is a valued friend of the United States and has 
        repeatedly demonstrated its commitment to advancing the mutual 
        interests of both countries, including the deployment of 
        Georgian forces as part of the NATO-led International Security 
        Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan and the Multi-National 
        Force in Iraq.
            (2) The European Deterrence Initiative builds the 
        partnership capacity of Georgia so it can work more closely 
        with the United States and NATO, as well as provide for its own 
        defense.
            (3) In addition to the European Deterrence Initiative, 
        Georgia's participation in the NATO initiative Partnership for 
        Peace is paramount to interoperability with the United States 
        and NATO, and establishing a more peaceful environment in the 
        region.
            (4) Despite the losses suffered, as a NATO partner of ISAF, 
        Georgia is engaged in the Resolute Support Mission in 
        Afghanistan with the second largest contingent on the ground.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--Congress--
            (1) reaffirms United States support for Georgia's 
        sovereignty and territorial integrity within its 
        internationally-recognized borders, and does not recognize the 
        independence of the Abkhazia and South Ossetia regions 
        currently occupied by the Russian Federation; and
            (2) supports continued cooperation between the United 
        States and Georgia and the efforts of the Government of Georgia 
        to provide for the defense of its people and sovereign 
        territory.

SEC. 1238. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON SUPPORT FOR ESTONIA, LATVIA, AND 
              LITHUANIA.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) The Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania are 
        highly valued allies of the United States, and they have 
        repeatedly demonstrated their commitment to advancing our 
        mutual interests as well as those of the NATO Alliance.
            (2) Operation Atlantic Resolve is a series of exercises and 
        coordinating efforts demonstrating the United States' 
        commitment to its European partners and allies, including the 
        Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, with the 
        shared goal of peace and stability in the region. Operation 
        Atlantic Resolve strengthens communication and understanding, 
        and is an important effort to deter Russian aggression in the 
        region.
            (3) Through Operation Atlantic Resolve, the European 
        Deterrence Initiative undertakes exercises, training, and 
        rotational presence necessary to reassure and integrate our 
        allies, including the Baltic States, into a common defense 
        framework.
            (4) All three Baltic States contributed to the NATO-led 
        International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, sending 
        disproportionate numbers of troops and operating with few 
        caveats. The Baltic States continue to engage in Operation 
        Resolute Support in Afghanistan.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--Congress--
            (1) reaffirms its support for the principle of collective 
        defense in Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty for our NATO 
        allies, including Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania;
            (2) supports the sovereignty, independence, territorial 
        integrity, and inviolability of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania 
        as well as their internationally recognized borders, and 
        expresses concerns over increasingly aggressive military 
        maneuvering by the Russian Federation near their borders and 
        airspace;
            (3) expresses concern over and condemns subversive and 
        destabilizing activities by the Russian Federation within the 
        Baltic States; and
            (4) encourages the Administration to further enhance 
        defense cooperation efforts with Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania 
        and supports the efforts of their Governments to provide for 
        the defense of their people and sovereign territory.

SEC. 1239. REPORT ON DEFENSE COOPERATION BETWEEN SERBIA AND THE RUSSIAN 
              FEDERATION.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with 
the Secretary of State, shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees and the Committees on Foreign Relations of the Senate and 
the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives a 
report on the defense and security relationship between Serbia and the 
Russian Federation.
    (b) Matters to Be Included.--The report required under subsection 
(a) shall include the following:
            (1) A list of Russian weapons systems and other military 
        hardware and technology valued at $1,000,000 or more that have 
        been provided to Serbia since 2012.
            (2) A description of the participation by Serbian armed 
        forces in Russian military training or exercises since 2012.
            (3) A list of any defense and security cooperation 
        agreements between Serbia and Russia entered into since 2012.
            (4) An assessment of how the countries bordering Serbia 
        assess the risk the Serbian armed forces pose to their national 
        security.
            (5) An assessment of intelligence cooperation between 
        Serbia and Russia.
            (6) An assessment of defense and security cooperation 
        between Serbia and the United States.
            (7) An assessment of how military relations between Serbia 
        and Russia affect United States defense and security 
        cooperation with Serbia and cooperation between Serbia and the 
        North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
    (c) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1240. PLAN TO RESPOND IN CASE OF RUSSIAN NONCOMPLIANCE WITH THE 
              NEW START TREATY.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees, the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
Representatives, and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate a 
report--
            (1) describing the options available in response to a 
        failure by Russia to achieve the reductions required by the New 
        START Treaty before February 5, 2018; and
            (2) including the assessment of the Secretary of Defense 
        whether such a failure would constitute a material breach of 
        the New START Treaty, providing grounds for the United States 
        to withdraw from the treaty.
    (b) Options Described.--The report required under subsection (a) 
shall specifically describe options to respond to such a failure 
relating to the following:
            (1) Economic sanctions.
            (2) Diplomacy.
            (3) Additional deployment of ballistic or cruise missile 
        defense capabilities, or other United States capabilities that 
        would offset any potential Russian military advantage from such 
        a failure.
            (4) Redeployment of United States nuclear forces beyond the 
        levels required by the New START Treaty, and the associated 
        costs and impacts on United States operations.
            (5) Legal countermeasures available under other treaties 
        between the United States and Russia, including under the 
        Treaty on Open Skies, done at Helsinki March 24, 1992, and 
        entered into force January 1, 2002.
    (c) New START Treaty.--In this section, 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 at Prague April 8, 2010, and 
entered into force February 5, 2011.

Subtitle E--Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty Preservation 
                              Act of 2017

SEC. 1241. SHORT TITLE.

    This subtitle may be cited as the ``Intermediate-Range Nuclear 
Forces (INF) Treaty Preservation Act of 2017''.

SEC. 1242. FINDINGS.

    Congress makes the following findings:
            (1) The 2014, 2015, and 2016 Department of State reports 
        entitled, ``Adherence to and Compliance with Arms Control, 
        Nonproliferation, and Disarmament Agreements and Commitments'', 
        all stated that the United States has determined that ``the 
        Russian Federation is in violation of its obligations under the 
        INF Treaty not to possess, produce, or flight-test a ground-
        launched cruise missile (GLCM) with a range capability of 500 
        km to 5,500 km, or to possess or produce launchers of such 
        missiles''.
            (2) The 2016 report also noted that ``the cruise missile 
        developed by Russia meets the INF Treaty definition of a 
        ground-launched cruise missile with a range capability of 500 
        km to 5,500 km, and as such, all missiles of that type, and all 
        launchers of the type used or tested to launch such a missile, 
        are prohibited under the provisions of the INF Treaty''.
            (3) Potential consistency and compliance concerns regarding 
        the INF Treaty noncompliant GLCM have existed since 2008, were 
        not officially raised with the Russian Federation until 2013, 
        and were not briefed to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization 
        (NATO) until January 2014.
            (4) The United States Government is aware of other 
        consistency and compliance concerns regarding Russia actions 
        vis-a-vis its INF Treaty obligations.
            (5) Since 2013, senior United States officials, including 
        the President, the Secretary of State, and the Chairman of the 
        Joint Chiefs of Staff, have raised Russian noncompliance with 
        the INF Treaty to their counterparts, but no progress has been 
        made in bringing the Russian Federation back into compliance 
        with the INF Treaty.
            (6) In April 2014, General Breedlove, the Supreme Allied 
        Commander Europe, correctly stated, ``A weapon capability that 
        violates the INF, that is introduced into the greater European 
        land mass, is absolutely a tool that will have to be dealt with 
        . . . It can't go unanswered.''.
            (7) The Department of Defense in its September 2013 report, 
        Report on Conventional Prompt Global Strike Options if Exempt 
        from the Restrictions of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces 
        Treaty Between the United States of America and the Union of 
        Soviet Socialist Republics, stated that it has multiple 
        validated military requirement gaps due to the prohibitions 
        imposed on the United States as a result of its compliance with 
        the INF Treaty.
            (8) It is not in the national security interests of the 
        United States to be unilaterally legally prohibited from 
        developing dual-capable ground-launched cruise missiles with 
        ranges between 500 and 5,500 kilometers, while Russia makes 
        advances in developing and fielding this class of weapon 
        systems, and such unilateral limitation cannot be allowed to 
        continue indefinitely.
            (9) Admiral Harry Harris, Jr., Commander of the United 
        States Pacific Command, testified before the Senate Armed 
        Services Committee on April 27, 2017, that ``[W]e're in a 
        multi-polar world where we have a lot of countries who are 
        developing these weapons, including China, that I worry about. 
        And I worry about their DF-21 and DF-26 missile programs, their 
        anti-carrier ballistic missile programs, if you will. INF 
        doesn't address missiles launched from ships or airplanes, but 
        it focuses on those land-based systems. I think there's 
        goodness in the INF treaty, anything you can do to limit 
        nuclear weapons writ-large is generally good. But the aspects 
        of the INF Treaty that limit our ability to counter Chinese and 
        other countries' land-based missiles, I think, is 
        problematic.''.
            (10) A material breach of the INF Treaty by the Russian 
        Federation affords the United States the right to invoke legal 
        countermeasures which include suspension of the treaty in whole 
        or in part.
            (11) Article XV of the INF Treaty provides that ``Each 
        Party shall, in exercising its national sovereignty, have the 
        right to withdraw from this Treaty if it decides that 
        extraordinary events related to the subject matter of this 
        Treaty have jeopardized its supreme interests.''.

SEC. 1243. COMPLIANCE ENFORCEMENT REGARDING RUSSIAN VIOLATIONS OF THE 
              INF TREATY.

    (a) Statement of United States Policy.--It is the policy of the 
United States as follows:
            (1) The actions undertaken by the Russian Federation in 
        violation of the INF Treaty constitute a material breach of the 
        treaty.
            (2) In light of the Russian Federation's material breach of 
        the INF Treaty, the United States is legally entitled to 
        suspend the operation of the INF Treaty in whole or in part for 
        so long as the Russian Federation continues to be in material 
        breach.
            (3) For so long as the Russian Federation remains in 
        noncompliance with the INF Treaty, the United States should 
        take actions to encourage the Russian Federation return to 
        compliance, including by--
                    (A) providing additional funds for the capabilities 
                identified in section 1243(d) of the National Defense 
                Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-
                92; 129 Stat. 1062); and
                    (B) seeking additional missile defense assets in 
                the European theater to protect United States and NATO 
                forces from ground-launched missile systems of the 
                Russian Federation that are in noncompliance with the 
                INF Treaty.
    (b) Authorization of Additional Appropriations.--
            (1) In general.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated 
        by this Act for fiscal year 2018 for research, development, 
        test, and evaluation, as specified in the funding table in 
        division D, $50,000,000 shall be made available for--
                    (A) the development of active defenses to counter 
                ground-launched missile systems with ranges between 500 
                and 5,500 kilometers;
                    (B) counterforce capabilities to prevent attacks 
                from these missiles; and
                    (C) countervailing strike capabilities to enhance 
                the capabilities of the United States identified in 
                section 1243(d) of the National Defense Authorization 
                Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 
                1062).
            (2) Development.--Of the amount authorized to be 
        appropriated by paragraph (1), $25,000,000 is authorized to be 
        appropriated for activities undertaken to carry out section 
        1244(a), including with respect to research and development 
        activities.

SEC. 1244. DEVELOPMENT OF INF RANGE GROUND-LAUNCHED MISSILE SYSTEM.

    (a) Establishment of a Program of Record.--The Secretary of Defense 
shall establish a program of record to develop a conventional road-
mobile ground-launched cruise missile system with a range of between 
500 to 5,500 kilometers.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees, the Committee on Foreign Affairs of 
the House of Representatives, and the Committee on Foreign Relations of 
the Senate a report on the cost, schedule, and feasibility to modify 
existing and planned missile systems, including the tomahawk land 
attack cruise missile, the standard missile-3, the standard missile-6, 
and Army tactical missile system missiles for ground launch with a 
range of between 500 and 5,500 kilometers in order to provide any of 
the capabilities identified in section 1243(d) of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 
1062).

SEC. 1245. NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENT RELATED TO RUSSIAN FEDERATION 
              DEVELOPMENT OF NONCOMPLIANT SYSTEMS AND UNITED STATES 
              ACTIONS REGARDING MATERIAL BREACH OF INF TREATY BY THE 
              RUSSIAN FEDERATION.

    (a) Declaration of Policy.--Congress declares that because of the 
Russian Federation's violations of the INF Treaty, including the 
flight-test, production, and possession of prohibited systems, its 
actions have defeated the object and purpose of the INF Treaty, and 
thus constitute a material breach of the INF Treaty.
    (b) Notifiction by Director of National Intelligence.--
            (1) In general.--The Director of National Intelligence 
        shall notify the appropriate congressional committees of any 
        development, deployment, or test of a system by the Russian 
        Federation that the Director determines is inconsistent with 
        the INF Treaty.
            (2) Deadline.--A notification under this subsection shall 
        be made not later than 15 days after the date on which the 
        Director makes the determination under this subsection with 
        respect to which the notification is required.
    (c) Report by President.--Not later than 15 months after the date 
of the enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to the 
appropriate congressional committees a report that contains a 
determination of the President of whether the Russian Federation has 
flight-tested, produced, or is in possession of a ground-launched 
cruise missile or ground-launched ballistic missile with a range of 
between 500 and 5,500 kilometers during each of the three consecutive 
120-day periods beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (d) United States Actions.--If the determination of the President 
contained in the report required to be submitted under subsection (c) 
is that the Russian Federation has flight-tested, produced, or is in 
possession of any missile described in subsection (c) during each of 
the periods described in subsection (c), the prohibitions set forth in 
Article VI of the INF Treaty shall no longer be binding on the United 
States as a matter of United States law.

SEC. 1246. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS TO EXTEND THE 
              IMPLEMENTATION OF THE NEW START TREATY.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made 
available for fiscal year 2018 for the Department of Defense may be 
obligated or expended to extend the implementation of the New START 
Treaty unless the President certifies to the appropriate congressional 
committees that the Russian Federation has verifiably eliminated all 
missiles that are in violation of or may be inconsistent with the INF 
Treaty.

SEC. 1247. REVIEW OF RS-26 BALLISTIC MISSILE.

    (a) In General.--The President, in consultation with the Secretary 
of State, the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of 
Staff, and the Director of National Intelligence, shall conduct a 
review of the RS-26 ballistic missile of the Russian Federation.
    (b) Report Required.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the President, in consultation with the 
Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint 
Chiefs of Staff, and the Director of National Intelligence, shall 
submit to the appropriate congressional committees a report on the 
review conducted under subsection (a). The report shall include--
            (1) a determination whether the RS-26 ballistic missile is 
        covered under the New START Treaty or would be a violation of 
        the INF Treaty because Russia has flight-tested such missile to 
        ranges covered by the INF Treaty in more than one warhead 
        configuration; and
            (2) if the President determines that the RS-26 ballistic 
        missile is covered under the New START Treaty, a determination 
        whether the Russian Federation--
                    (A) has agreed through the Bilateral Consultative 
                Commission that such a system is limited under the New 
                START Treaty central limits; and
                    (B) has agreed to an exhibition of such a system.
    (c) Effect of Determination.--If the President, with the 
concurrence of the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, the 
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Director of National 
Intelligence, determines that the RS-26 ballistic missile is covered 
under the New START Treaty and that the Russian Federation has not 
taken the steps described under subsection (b)(2), the United States 
Government shall consider for purposes of all policies and decisions 
that the RS-26 ballistic missile of the Russian Federation is a 
violation of the INF Treaty.

SEC. 1248. DEFINITIONS.

    In this subtitle:
            (1) Appropriate congressional committees.--The term 
        ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
                    (A) the Select Committee on Intelligence, the 
                Committee on Foreign Relations, the Committee on Armed 
                Services, and the Committee on Appropriations of the 
                Senate; and
                    (B) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, 
                the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Committee on 
                Armed Services, and the Committee on Appropriations of 
                the House of Representatives.
            (2) INF treaty.--The term ``INF Treaty'' means the Treaty 
        between the United States of America and the Union of Soviet 
        Socialist Republics on the Elimination of Their Intermediate-
        Range and Shorter-Range Missiles, signed at Washington December 
        8, 1987, and entered into force June 1, 1988.
            (3) Intelligence community.--The term ``intelligence 
        community'' has the meaning given the term in section 3(4) of 
        the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3003(4)).
            (4) New start treaty.--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 at Prague April 8, 2010, 
        and entered into force February 5, 2011.
            (5) Open skies treaty.--The term ``Open Skies Treaty'' 
        means the Treaty on Open Skies, done at Helsinki March 24, 
        1992, and entered into force January 1, 2002.

   Subtitle F--Fostering Unity Against Russian Aggression Act of 2017

SEC. 1251. SHORT TITLE.

    This subtitle may be cited as the ``Fostering Unity Against Russian 
Aggression Act of 2017''.

SEC. 1252. FINDINGS AND SENSE OF CONGRESS.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) General Curtis M. Scaparrotti, Commander of the United 
        States European Command, testified before the House Armed 
        Services Committee on March 27, 2017, that ``Today we face the 
        most dynamic European security environment in history.'' and 
        that ``Russia's malign actions are supported by its diplomatic, 
        information, economic, and military initiatives.''.
            (2) The Russian Federation has shifted to a military 
        doctrine that envisions using nuclear weapons in an attempt to 
        end a failing regional conventional conflict. On June 25, 2015, 
        Deputy Secretary of Defense Robert Work and then-Vice-Chairman 
        of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral James Winnefeld testified 
        before the House Armed Services Committee that ``Russian 
        military doctrine includes what some have called an `escalate 
        to de-escalate' strategy--a strategy that purportedly seeks to 
        deescalate a conventional conflict through coercive threats, 
        including limited nuclear use. We think that this label is 
        dangerously misleading. Anyone who thinks they can control 
        escalation through the use of nuclear weapons is literally 
        playing with fire. Escalation is escalation, and nuclear use 
        would be the ultimate escalation.''.
            (3) General Scaparrotti noted in his March 27, 2017, 
        testimony before the House Armed Services Committee that 
        ``Moscow's provocative rhetoric and nuclear threats increase 
        the likelihood of misunderstanding and miscalculation.''.
            (4) The Russian Federation continues to conduct ongoing 
        influence campaigns aimed at undermining democracies around the 
        world. According to an assessment by the intelligence 
        community, ``Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an 
        influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the U.S. presidential 
        election'', which included the use of the Russian military 
        intelligence organization. The intelligence community also 
        assessed that Russia would apply lessons learned to future 
        influence efforts worldwide, including against United States 
        allies and their election systems.
            (5) The Russian Federation continues its aggression on its 
        periphery. In 2008, the Russian Federation fomented conflict in 
        Georgia. Further, the Russian Federation is directing combined 
        Russian-Separatist units in eastern Ukraine, actively inciting 
        violence and prolonging the most significant conflict in 
        Europe.
            (6) The investment of over $5 billion in the European 
        Reassurance Initiative (ERI), now the European Deterrence 
        Initiative (EDI), has proven successful in significantly 
        enhancing the ability of United States forces, NATO allies, and 
        regional partners to deter Russian aggression. EDI has not only 
        assured our European allies and partners but supported 
        essential investments in NATO's military capacity, 
        interoperability, and agility.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the risks of miscalculation in a crisis are exacerbated 
        by the Russian Federation's shift to a military doctrine of 
        ``escalate to de-escalate'', lowering the threshold for Russian 
        use of nuclear weapons and thereby increasing the risk of using 
        nuclear weapons, potentially escalating in to a massive nuclear 
        exchange;
            (2) subversive and destabilizing activities by the Russian 
        Federation targeting NATO allies and partners causes concern 
        and should be condemned;
            (3) European Deterrence Initiative (EDI) investments are 
        long-term and, as such, Congress expects future budgets to 
        reflect United States commitment by planning for funding in the 
        base budget, and further EDI should build on United States 
        presence by increasing the United States permanent force 
        posture; and
            (4) credible deterrence requires steadfast cooperation and 
        joint action with NATO allies and partners and other United 
        States allies and partners in Europe.

SEC. 1253. STRATEGY TO COUNTER THREATS BY THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION.

    (a) Strategy Required.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination 
with the Secretary of State and in consultation with each of the 
Secretaries of the military departments, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and 
the commanders of each of the regional and functional combatant 
commands, shall develop and implement a comprehensive strategy to 
counter threats by the Russian Federation.
    (b) Report 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 appropriate congressional committees a report on 
        the strategy required by subsection (a).
            (2) Elements.--The report required by this subsection shall 
        include the following elements:
                    (A) An evaluation of strategic objectives and 
                motivations of the Russian Federation.
                    (B) A detailed description of Russian threats to 
                the national security of the United States, including 
                threats that may pose challenges below the threshold of 
                armed conflict.
                    (C) A discussion of how the strategy complements 
                the National Defense Strategy and the National Military 
                Strategy.
                    (D) A discussion of the ends, ways, and means 
                inherent to the strategy.
                    (E) A discussion of the strategy's objectives with 
                respect to deterrence, escalation control, and conflict 
                resolution.
                    (F) A description of the military activities across 
                geographic regions and military functions and domains 
                that are inherent to the strategy.
                    (G) A description of the posture, forward presence, 
                and readiness requirements inherent to the strategy.
                    (H) A description of the roles of the United States 
                Armed Forces in implementing the strategy, including--
                            (i) the role of United States nuclear 
                        capabilities;
                            (ii) the role of United States space 
                        capabilities;
                            (iii) the role of United States cyber 
                        capabilities;
                            (iv) the role of United States conventional 
                        ground forces;
                            (v) the role of United States naval forces;
                            (vi) the role of United States air forces; 
                        and
                            (vii) the role of United States special 
                        operations forces.
                    (I) An assessment of the force requirements needed 
                to implement and sustain the strategy.
                    (J) A description of the logistical requirements 
                needed to implement and sustain the strategy.
                    (K) An assessment of the technological research and 
                development requirements needed to implement and 
                sustain the strategy.
                    (L) An assessment of the training and exercise 
                requirements needed to implement and sustain the 
                strategy.
                    (M) An assessment of the budgetary resource 
                requirements needed to implement and sustain the 
                strategy through December 31, 2030.
                    (N) A discussion of how the strategy provides a 
                framework for future planning and investments in 
                regional defense initiatives, including the European 
                Deterrence Initiative.
            (3) Form.--The report required by this subsection shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form but may contain a classified 
        annex.

SEC. 1254. STRATEGY TO INCREASE CONVENTIONAL PRECISION STRIKE WEAPON 
              STOCKPILES IN THE UNITED STATES EUROPEAN COMMAND'S AREAS 
              OF RESPONSIBILITY.

    (a) Strategy Required.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination 
        with the Secretary of State, shall develop and implement a 
        strategy to increase conventional precision strike weapon 
        stockpiles in the United States European Command's areas of 
        responsibility.
            (2) Elements.--The strategy required by this subsection 
        shall include necessary increases in the quantities of such 
        stockpiles that the Secretary determines will enhance 
        deterrence and warfighting capability of the North Atlantic 
        Treaty Organization forces.
    (b) Report Required.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than April 1, 2018, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall submit to the appropriate 
        congressional committees a report on the strategy required by 
        subsection (a).
            (2) Form.--The report required by this subsection shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form but may contain a classified 
        annex.

SEC. 1255. PLAN TO COUNTER THE MILITARY CAPABILITIES OF THE RUSSIAN 
              FEDERATION.

    (a) Plan Required.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall develop and 
        implement a plan to counter the military capabilities of the 
        Russian Federation.
            (2) Elements.--The plan required by this subsection shall 
        include the following:
                    (A) Accelerating programs to improve the capability 
                of United States military forces to operate in a Global 
                Positioning System (GPS)-denied or GPS-degraded 
                environment.
                    (B) Accelerating programs of the Department of the 
                Army to counter Russian unmanned aircraft systems, 
                electronic warfare, and long-range precision strike 
                capabilities.
                    (C) Countering unconventional capabilities and 
                hybrid threats from the Russian Federation.
                    (D) Any other elements that the Secretary 
                determines to be appropriate.
    (b) Report Required.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than April 1, 2018, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall submit to the appropriate 
        congressional committees a report on the plan required by 
        subsection (a).
            (2) Form.--The report required by this subsection shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form but may contain a classified 
        annex.
    (c) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that concerns 
persist over the growing sophistication of unconventional and hybrid 
state-sponsored threats by the Russian Federation as demonstrated 
through its advancement and integration of conventional warfare, 
economic warfare, cyber and information operations, intelligence 
operations, and other activities to undermine United States national 
security objectives.

SEC. 1256. PLAN TO INCREASE CYBER AND INFORMATION OPERATIONS, 
              DETERRENCE, AND DEFENSE.

    (a) Plan.--The Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State 
shall jointly develop a plan to--
            (1) increase inclusion of regional cyber planning within 
        larger United States joint planning exercises in the European 
        region;
            (2) enhance joint, regional, and combined information 
        operations and strategic communication strategies to counter 
        Russian Federation information warfare, malign influence, and 
        propaganda activities; and
            (3) identify potential areas of cybersecurity collaboration 
        and partnership capabilities with NATO and other European 
        allies and partners of the United States.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide to the 
appropriate congressional committees a briefing on the plan required 
under subsection (a).

SEC. 1257. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON ENHANCING MARITIME CAPABILITIES.

    Congress notes the 2016 Force Structure Assessment (FSA) that 
increased the requirement for fast attack submarine (SSN) from 48 to 66 
and supports an acquisition plan that enhances maritime capabilities 
that address this requirement.

SEC. 1258. PLAN TO REDUCE THE RISKS OF MISCALCULATION AND UNINTENDED 
              CONSEQUENCES THAT COULD PRECIPITATE A NUCLEAR WAR.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds that--
            (1) the Russian Federation has adopted a dangerous nuclear 
        doctrine that includes a strategy of ``escalate to de-
        escalate'', which could lower the threshold for Russian use of 
        nuclear weapons in a regional conflict; and
            (2) such nuclear doctrine exacerbates the risks of 
        miscalculation and unintended consequences that could 
        precipitate a nuclear war.
    (b) Plan Required.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the 
        Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Chairman of the 
        Joint Chief of Staff, the Commander of the United States 
        Strategic Command, and the Commander of the United States 
        European Command, shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a plan that includes options to reduce the risk of 
        miscalculation and unintended consequences that could 
        precipitate a nuclear war.
            (2) Elements.--The plan required under this subsection 
        shall include--
                    (A) an assessment of the value of military-to-
                military dialog to reduce such risk; and
                    (B) any other recommendations the Secretary 
                determines to be appropriate.

SEC. 1259. DEFINITIONS.

    In this subtitle:
            (1) Appropriate congressional committees.--The term 
        ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees; and
                    (B) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the 
                Senate and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the 
                House of Representatives.
            (2) NATO.--The term ``NATO'' means the North Atlantic 
        Treaty Organization.

      Subtitle G--Matters Relating to the Indo-Asia-Pacific Region

SEC. 1261. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON THE INDO-ASIA-PACIFIC REGION.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the security, stability, and prosperity of the Indo-
        Asia-Pacific region are vital to the national interests of the 
        United States;
            (2) the United States should maintain a military capability 
        in the region that is able to project power, deter acts of 
        aggression, and respond, if necessary, to regional threats;
            (3) continuing efforts by the Department of Defense to 
        realign forces, commit additional assets, and increase 
        investments to the Indo-Asia-Pacific region are necessary to 
        maintain a robust United States commitment to the region;
            (4) the Secretary of Defense should--
                    (A) assess the current United States force posture 
                in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region to ensure that the 
                United States maintains an appropriate forward presence 
                in the region;
                    (B) invest in critical munitions, undersea warfare 
                capabilities, amphibious capabilities, resilient space 
                architectures, missile defense, offensive and defensive 
                cyber capabilities, and other capabilities conducive to 
                operating effectively in contested environments; and
                    (C) enhance regional force readiness through joint 
                training and exercises, considering contingencies 
                ranging from grey zone to high-end near-peer conflict; 
                and
            (5) the United States should continue to engage in the 
        Indo-Asia-Pacific region by strengthening alliances and 
        partnerships, supporting regional institutions and bodies such 
        as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), building 
        cooperative security arrangements, addressing shared 
        challenges, and reinforcing the role of international law, 
        including respect for human rights.

SEC. 1262. REPORT ON STRATEGY TO PRIORITIZE UNITED STATES DEFENSE 
              INTERESTS IN THE INDO-ASIA-PACIFIC REGION.

    (a) Required Report.--Not later than February 1, 2018, the 
Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Secretary of State, 
shall submit to the congressional defense committees, the Committee on 
Foreign Relations of the Senate, and the Committee on Foreign Affairs 
of the House of Representatives a report that contains a strategy to 
prioritize United States defense interests in the Indo-Asia-Pacific 
region. The strategy shall address the following:
            (1) The security challenges, including threats, emanating 
        from the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
            (2) The primary objectives and priorities in the Indo-Asia-
        Pacific region, including--
                    (A) the military missions necessary to address 
                threats on the Korean Peninsula;
                    (B) the role of the Department of Defense in the 
                Indo-Asia-Pacific region regarding security challenges 
                posed by China;
                    (C) the primary objectives and priorities for 
                combating terrorism in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region;
            (3) Department of Defense plans, force posture, 
        capabilities, and resources to address any gaps.
            (4) The roles of allies, partners, and other countries in 
        achieving United States defense objectives and priorities.
            (5) Actions the Department of Defense could take, in 
        cooperation with other Federal departments or agencies, to 
        advance United Sates national security interests in the Indo-
        Asia-Pacific region.
            (6) Any other matters the Secretary of Defense determines 
        to be appropriate.
    (b) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted 
in unclassified form, but may contain a classified annex.
    (c) Annual Budget.--The President, acting through the Director of 
the Office of Management and Budget, shall ensure that the annual 
budget submitted to Congress under section 1105 of title 31, United 
States Code, clearly highlights programs and projects that are being 
funded in the annual budget of the United States Government that relate 
to the strategy referred to in subsection (a).
    (d) Repeal.--Section 1251 of the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' 
McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public 
Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3570) is hereby repealed.

SEC. 1263. ASSESSMENT OF UNITED STATES FORCE POSTURE AND BASING NEEDS 
              IN THE INDO-ASIA-PACIFIC REGION.

    (a) Assessment Required.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall conduct an 
        assessment of United States force posture and basing needs in 
        the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.
            (2) Elements.--The assessment required under paragraph (1) 
        shall include the following:
                    (A) A review of military requirements based on 
                operation and contingency plans, scenarios, 
                capabilities of potential adversaries, and any assessed 
                gaps or shortfalls of the Armed Forces.
                    (B) A review of current United States military 
                force posture and deployment plans of the United States 
                Pacific Command.
                    (C) An analysis of potential future realignments of 
                United States forces in the region, including options 
                for strengthening United States presence, access, 
                readiness, training, exercises, logistics, and pre-
                positioning.
                    (D) A discussion of any factors that may influence 
                the United States posture.
                    (E) Any recommended changes to the United States 
                posture in the region.
                    (F) Any other matters the Secretary of Defense 
                determines to be appropriate.
    (b) Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a report that includes the assessment required under 
        subsection (a).
            (2) Form.--The report required under paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form, but may contain a classified 
        annex.

SEC. 1264. EXTENDED DETERRENCE COMMITMENT TO THE ASIA-PACIFIC REGION.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) The 2010 Nuclear Posture Review reaffirmed the 
        commitment of the United States to extended deterrence and 
        continued protection of the treaty allies of the United States 
        under the United States nuclear umbrella.
            (2) The United States-Republic of Korea Deterrence Strategy 
        Committee and the United States-Japan Extended Deterrence 
        Dialogue provide valuable communication channels for ensuring 
        the commitment of the United States to the policy of extended 
        nuclear deterrence and allow for bilateral discussions on how 
        United States capabilities can be leveraged to credibly deter, 
        and if necessary, defeat, North Korean nuclear weapons, weapons 
        of mass destruction, and missile threats and aggression.
            (3) Statements by officials of the United States have 
        consistently emphasized the United States commitment to 
        providing extended deterrence and defense across the full 
        spectrum of military capabilities, including nuclear 
        capabilities.
            (4) On September 9, 2016, President Obama responded to a 
        North Korean nuclear test by issuing the following statement, 
        ``I restated to President Park and Prime Minister Abe the 
        unshakable U.S. commitment to take necessary steps to defend 
        our allies in the region, including through our deployment of a 
        Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) battery to the ROK, 
        and the commitment to extended deterrence, guaranteed by the 
        full spectrum of U.S. defense capabilities.''.
            (5) On October 14, 2016, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of 
        Staff, General Joseph Dunford, ``reaffirmed the ironclad 
        commitment of the U.S. to defend both the ROK and Japan and 
        provide extended deterrence guaranteed by the full spectrum of 
        U.S. military capabilities, including conventional, nuclear, 
        and missile defense capabilities''.
            (6) On October 19, 2016, Secretary of Defense Ashton 
        Carter, stated, ``the U.S. commitment to the defense of South 
        Korea is unwavering. This includes our commitment to provide 
        extended deterrence, guaranteed by the full spectrum of U.S. 
        defense capabilities. Make no mistake: Any attack on America or 
        our allies will not only be defeated, but any use of nuclear 
        weapons will be met with an overwhelming and effective 
        response.''.
            (7) On October 19, 2016, Secretary of State John Kerry, 
        during a joint press conference with the South Korean Foreign 
        Minister, confirmed the United States would ``defend South 
        Korea through a robust combined defense posture and through 
        extended deterrence, including the US nuclear umbrella, 
        conventional strike and missile defense capabilities.''.
            (8) On February 3, 2017, Secretary of Defense James Mattis, 
        during a visit to South Korea, stated, ``America's commitments 
        to defending our allies and to upholding our extended 
        deterrence guarantees remain ironclad: Any attack on the United 
        States, or our allies, will be defeated, and any use of nuclear 
        weapons would be met with a response that would be effective 
        and overwhelming.''.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the defense of the Republic of Korea and Japan must 
        remain a top priority for the administration;
            (2) the United States maintains an unwavering and steadfast 
        commitment to the policy of extended deterrence, especially 
        with respect to South Korea and Japan;
            (3) bilateral extended deterrence dialogues and discussions 
        with South Korea and Japan are of great value to the United 
        States and its partners and must remain a central component of 
        these relationships;
            (4) the United States must sustain and modernize current 
        United States nuclear capabilities to ensure the extended 
        deterrence commitments of the United States remain credible and 
        executable; and
            (5) the timely development, production, and deployment of 
        modern nuclear-capable aircraft are fundamental to ensure that 
        the United States remains able to meet extended deterrence 
        requirements in the Asia-Pacific region far into the future.
    (c) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section may be construed 
to alter the shared goal of the United States, South Korea, and Japan 
for a denuclearized Korean Peninsula or to change the United States 
nuclear posture in the Asia-Pacific region.

SEC. 1265. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS TO MEET UNITED STATES 
              FINANCIAL OBLIGATIONS UNDER COMPACT OF FREE ASSOCIATION 
              WITH PALAU.

    There is authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
$123,900,000 to the Secretary of the Interior, to remain available 
until expended, for use in meeting the financial obligations of the 
Government of the United States under the Agreement between the 
Government of the United States of America and the Government of the 
Republic of Palau under section 432 of the Compact of Free Association 
with Palau (48 U.S.C. 1931 note; Public Law 99-658).

SEC. 1266. SENSE OF CONGRESS REAFFIRMING SECURITY COMMITMENTS TO THE 
              GOVERNMENTS OF JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA AND TRILATERAL 
              COOPERATION BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES, JAPAN, AND SOUTH 
              KOREA.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the United States values its alliances with the 
        Governments of Japan and the Republic of Korea, based on shared 
        values of democracy, the rule of law, free and open markets, 
        and respect for human rights;
            (2) the United States reaffirms its commitment to these 
        alliances with Japan and South Korea, which are critical for 
        the preservation of peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific 
        region and throughout the world;
            (3) the United States recognizes the substantial financial 
        commitments of Japan and South Korea to the maintenance of 
        United States forces in these countries, making them among the 
        most significant burden-sharing partners of the United States;
            (4) the United States reaffirms its commitment to Article V 
        of the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the 
        United States of America and Japan, which applies to the 
        Japanese-administered Senkaku Islands;
            (5) the United States supports continued implementation and 
        expansion of defense cooperation with Japan in accordance with 
        the 2015 U.S.-Japan Defense Guidelines and additional measures 
        to strengthen this defense cooperation, including by expanding 
        foreign military sales, establishing new cooperative technology 
        development programs, increasing military exercises, or other 
        actions as appropriate;
            (6) the United States and South Korea share deep concerns 
        that the nuclear and ballistic missile programs of North Korea 
        and its repeated provocations pose great threats to peace and 
        stability on the Korean Peninsula, and the United States 
        recognizes that South Korea has made important commitments to 
        the bilateral security alliance, including by hosting a 
        Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system;
            (7) the United States and South Korea should continue 
        further defense cooperation, by enhancing mutual security based 
        on the Mutual Defense Treaty between the United States and the 
        Republic of Korea and investing in capabilities critical to the 
        combined defense;
            (8) the United States welcomes greater security cooperation 
        with, and among, Japan and South Korea to promote mutual 
        interests and address shared concerns, including the bilateral 
        military intelligence-sharing pact between Japan and South 
        Korea, signed on November 23, 2016, and the trilateral 
        intelligence sharing agreement between the United States, 
        Japan, and South Korea, signed on December 29, 2015; and
            (9) recognizing that North Korea poses a threat to the 
        United States, Japan, and South Korea, and that the security of 
        the three countries is intertwined, the United States welcomes 
        and encourages deeper trilateral defense cooperation, including 
        through expanded exercises, training, and information sharing 
        that strengthens integration.

SEC. 1267. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON FREEDOM OF NAVIGATION OPERATIONS IN THE 
              SOUTH CHINA SEA.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the United States has a national interest in 
        maintaining freedom of navigation, respect for international 
        law, and unimpeded lawful commerce in the South China Sea;
            (2) the United States should condemn any assertion that 
        limits the right to freedom of navigation and overflight; and
            (3) the United States should keep to a regular and routine 
        schedule for freedom of navigation operations in the sea and 
        air.

SEC. 1268. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON STRENGTHENING THE DEFENSE OF TAIWAN.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the Taiwan Relations Act (Public Law 96-8; 22 U.S.C. 
        3301 et seq.) codified the basis for commercial, cultural, and 
        other relations between the United States and Taiwan, and the 
        Six Assurances are an important aspect in guiding bilateral 
        relations;
            (2) Section 3(a) of that Act states that ``the United 
        States will make available to Taiwan such defense articles and 
        defense services in such quantity as may be necessary to enable 
        Taiwan to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability'';
            (3) the United States, in accordance with such section, 
        should make available and provide timely review of requests for 
        defense articles and defense services that may be necessary for 
        Taiwan to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability;
            (4) Taiwan should significantly increase its defense budget 
        to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability;
            (5) the United States should support expanded exchanges 
        focused on practical training for Taiwan personnel by and with 
        United States military units, including exchanges between 
        services, to empower senior military officers to identify and 
        develop asymmetric and innovative capabilities that strengthen 
        Taiwan's ability to deter aggression;
            (6) the United States should seek opportunities for 
        expanded training and exercises with Taiwan;
            (7) the United States should encourage Taiwan's continued 
        investments in asymmetric self-defense capabilities that are 
        mobile, survivable against threatening forces, and able to take 
        full advantage of Taiwan's geography; and
            (8) the United States should continue to--
                    (A) support humanitarian assistance and disaster 
                relief exercises that increase Taiwan's resiliency and 
                ability to respond to and recover from natural 
                disasters; and
                    (B) recognize Taiwan's already valuable military 
                contributions to such efforts.

SEC. 1269. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON THE ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN 
              NATIONS.

    (a) Finding.--Congress finds that 2017 is the 50th anniversary of 
the formation of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), 
which includes Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, 
Thailand, Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, Burma, and Cambodia.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the United States supports the development of regional 
        institutions and bodies, including the ASEAN Regional Forum, 
        the ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting Plus, the East Asia Summit, 
        and the expanded ASEAN Maritime Forum, to increase regional 
        cooperation and ensure that disputes are managed without 
        intimidation, coercion, or force;
            (2) the United States recognizes ASEAN efforts to promote 
        peace, stability, and prosperity in the region, including the 
        steps taken to highlight the importance of peaceful dispute 
        resolution and the need for adherence to international rules 
        and standards.
            (3) United States defense engagement with ASEAN and the 
        ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting Plus should continue to be 
        forums to discuss shared challenges in the maritime domain and 
        the need for greater information sharing among ASEAN nations; 
        and
            (4) the United States welcomes continued work with ASEAN 
        and other regional partners to establish more reliable and 
        routine crisis communication mechanisms.

SEC. 1270. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON REAFFIRMING THE IMPORTANCE OF THE 
              UNITED STATES-AUSTRALIA DEFENSE ALLIANCE.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the United States values its alliance with the 
        Government of Australia, and the shared values and interests 
        between both countries are essential to promoting peace, 
        security, stability, and economic prosperity in the Indo-Asia-
        Pacific region;
            (2) the annual rotations of United States Marine Corps 
        forces to Darwin, Australia and enhanced rotations of United 
        States Air Force aircraft to Australia pave the way for even 
        closer defense and security cooperation;
            (3) the Treaty Between the Government of the United States 
        of America and the Government of Australia Concerning Defense 
        Trade Cooperation, done at Sydney, September 5, 2007, should 
        continue to facilitate industry collaboration and innovation to 
        meet shared security challenges and reinforce military ties;
            (4) as described by Australian Prime Minister Malcolm 
        Turnbull, North Korea is ``a threat to the peace of the 
        region'' and the United States and Australia should continue to 
        cooperate to defend against the threat of North Korea's nuclear 
        and missile capabilities; and
            (5) the United States and Australia also should continue to 
        address the threat of terrorism and strengthen information 
        sharing.

SEC. 1270A. RESTRICTION ON FUNDING FOR THE PREPARATORY COMMISSION FOR 
              THE COMPREHENSIVE NUCLEAR-TEST-BAN TREATY ORGANIZATION.

    (a) Statement of Policy.--Congress declares that United Nations 
Security Council Resolution 2310 (September 23, 2016) does not obligate 
the United States nor does it impose an obligation on the United States 
to refrain from actions that would run counter to the object and 
purpose of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty.
    (b) Restriction on Funding.--
            (1) In general.--No United States funds may be made 
        available to the Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive 
        Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization.
            (2) Exception.--The restriction under paragraph (1) shall 
        not apply with respect to the availability of United States 
        funds for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty 
        Organization's International Monitoring System.

SEC. 1270B. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON NORTH KOREA.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) The Democratic People's Republic of Korea, also known 
        as North Korea, continues to develop a ballistic and nuclear 
        weapons development program that poses a grave threat to the 
        United States, United States allies the Republic of Korea, 
        Japan, and Australia, and to regional and global security.
            (2) North Korea continues to escalate the pace and number 
        of its ballistic missile launches, and to date has conducted 
        five nuclear tests.
            (3) On July 4, 2017, North Korea conducted the first test 
        of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) it claims is 
        capable of reaching United States territory, which, if reliable 
        and effective, constitutes a new threat to America's security.
            (4) On June 3, 2017, Secretary of Defense James Mattis 
        stated, during remarks at the Shangri-La Dialogue, that ``the 
        current North Korea program signals a clear intent to acquire 
        nuclear armed ballistic missiles, including those of 
        intercontinental range that pose direct and immediate threats 
        to our allies, our partners and all the world''.
            (5) On April 27, 2017, Admiral Harry Harris, Jr., Commander 
        of the United States Pacific Command, testified that ``North 
        Korea continues to disregard United Nations sanctions by 
        developing, and threatening to use intercontinental ballistic 
        missiles and nuclear weapons that will threaten the U.S. 
        Homeland.''.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the United States should act to counter North Korea's 
        continued development and testing of nuclear weapons and 
        intercontinental ballistic missiles;
            (2) the development of a functional and operational North 
        Korean nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missile program 
        constitutes a threat to the security of the United States and 
        to our allies and partners in the region;
            (3) the defense of the United States and our allies against 
        North Korean aggression remains a top priority, and the United 
        States maintains an unwavering and steadfast commitment to the 
        policy of extended deterrence, especially with respect to South 
        Korea and Japan;
            (4) the United States supports the deployment of the 
        Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system in South 
        Korea to counter North Korea's missile threat and the 
        deployment of ballistic missile defense systems to allies in 
        the Indo-Asia-Pacific region to protect from the growing threat 
        of North Korea's nuclear weapons and ballistic missile 
        programs;
            (5) the United States should encourage further multilateral 
        security cooperation and dialogue among South Korea, Japan, and 
        Australia to address the North Korea threat;
            (6) the United States calls upon the People's Republic of 
        China to use its leverage to pressure North Korea to cease its 
        provocative behavior and abandon and dismantle its nuclear and 
        ballistic missile programs, and comply with all relevant United 
        Nations Security Council resolutions;
            (7) the United States should fully enforce all existing 
        sanctions on North Korea and undertake a comprehensive 
        diplomatic effort to urge allies and other countries to fully 
        enforce, and build upon, existing international sanctions; and
            (8) the United States should retain diplomatic, economic, 
        and military options to defend against and pressure North Korea 
        to abandon its illicit weapons program.

SEC. 1270C. STRATEGY TO FURTHER UNITED STATES-INDIA DEFENSE 
              COOPERATION.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with 
the Secretary of State, shall develop a strategy for advancing defense 
cooperation between the United States and India.
    (b) Elements.--The strategy shall address the following:
            (1) Common security challenges.
            (2) The role of United States partners and allies in the 
        United States-India defense relationship.
            (3) The role of the Defense Technology and Trade 
        Initiative.
            (4) How to advance the Communications Interoperability and 
        Security Memorandum of Agreement and the Basic Exchange and 
        Cooperation Agreement for Geospatial Cooperation.
            (5) Any other matters the Secretary of Defense or the 
        Secretary of State determines to be appropriate.

SEC. 1270D. PLAN TO ENHANCE THE EXTENDED DETERRENCE AND ASSURANCE 
              CAPABILITIES OF THE UNITED STATES IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC 
              REGION.

    (a) Finding.--Congress recognizes that North Korea's first 
successful test of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) 
constitutes a grave and imminent threat to United States security and 
to the security of United States allies and partners in the Asia-
Pacific region.
    (b) Plan.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the 
Commander of the United States Pacific Command and the Commander of the 
United States Strategic Command, shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a plan to enhance the extended deterrence and 
assurance capabilities of the United States in the Asia-Pacific region.
    (c) Matters to Be Included.--Such plan shall include consideration 
of actions that will enhance United States security by strengthening 
deterrence of North Korean aggression and providing increased assurance 
to United States allies in the Asia-Pacific region, including the 
following:
            (1) Increased visible presence of key United States 
        military assets, such as missile defenses, long-range strike 
        assets, and intermediate-range strike assets to the region.
            (2) Increased military cooperation, exercises, and 
        integration of defenses with allies in the region.
            (3) Development and deployment of ground-based 
        intermediate-range missiles, whether by allies or by the United 
        States, if the United States were no longer bound by the 
        limitations of the INF Treaty.
            (4) Increased foreign military sales to allies in the 
        region.
            (5) Planning for, exercising, or deploying dual-capable 
        aircraft to the region.
            (6) Any necessary modifications to the United States 
        nuclear force posture, including re-deployment of submarine-
        launched nuclear cruise missiles to the region.
            (7) Such other actions the Secretary considers appropriate 
        to strengthen extended deterrence and assurance in the region.
    (d) Form.--Such plan shall be submitted in unclassified form, but 
may contain a classified annex.
    (e) INF Treaty Defined.--In this section, the term ``INF Treaty'' 
means the Treaty between the United States of America and the Union of 
Soviet Socialist Republics on the Elimination of Their Intermediate-
Range and Shorter-Range Missiles, signed at Washington December 8, 
1987, and entered into force June 1, 1988.

SEC. 1270E. REPORT ON NAVAL PORT OF CALL EXCHANGES BETWEEN THE UNITED 
              STATES AND TAIWAN.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than September 1, 2018, the 
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the appropriate committees of 
Congress a report on the following:
            (1) An assessment of the feasibility and advisability 
        regarding ports of call by the United States Navy at ports on 
        the island of Taiwan.
            (2) An assessment of the feasibility and advisability of 
        the United States to receiving ports of call by the Republic of 
        China navy in Hawaii, Guam, and other appropriate locations.
    (b) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted 
in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
    (c) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
            (2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.

SEC. 1270F. ASSESSMENT ON UNITED STATES DEFENSE IMPLICATIONS OF CHINA'S 
              EXPANDING GLOBAL ACCESS.

    (a) Assessment.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation 
        with the Secretary of State, shall assess the foreign military 
        and non-military activities of the People's Republic of China 
        which could affect the regional and global national security 
        and defense interests of the United States.
            (2) Elements.--The assessment required by paragraph (1) 
        shall evaluate the following:
                    (A) China's use of military and non-military means 
                in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region and globally, including 
                tourism, media, influence campaigns, investment 
                projects, infrastructure, and access to foreign ports 
                and military bases, and whether such means could affect 
                United States national security or defense interests, 
                including operational access.
                    (B) The implications, if any, of such means for the 
                military force posture, access, training, and logistics 
                of both the United States and China.
                    (C) The United States strategy and policy for 
                mitigating any harmful effects resulting from such 
                means.
                    (D) The resources required to implement such 
                strategy and policy, and the mitigation plan to address 
                any gaps in capabilities or resources necessary for 
                such implementation.
                    (E) Measures to bolster the roles of allies, 
                partners, and other countries to implement such 
                strategy and policy.
                    (F) Any other matters the Secretary of Defense or 
                the Secretary of State determines to be appropriate.
            (3) Report required.--
                    (A) In general.--Not later than 120 days after the 
                date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of 
                Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of State, 
                shall submit to the congressional defense committees, 
                the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate, and 
                the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
                Representatives a report on the assessment required 
                under subsection (b).
                    (B) Form.--The report required by this paragraph 
                may be submitted unclassified or classified form.

SEC. 1270G. NORMALIZING THE TRANSFER OF DEFENSE ARTICLES AND DEFENSE 
              SERVICES TO TAIWAN.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that any 
requests from the Government of Taiwan for defense articles and defense 
services should receive a case-by-case review by the Secretary of 
Defense, in consultation with the Secretary of State, that is 
consistent with the standard processes and procedures in an effort to 
normalize the arms sales process with Taiwan.
    (b) Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 120 days after the date on 
        which the Secretary of Defense receives a Letter of Request 
        from Taiwan with respect to the transfer of a defense article 
        or defense service to Taiwan, the Secretary, in consultation 
        with the Secretary of State, shall submit to the appropriate 
        congressional committees a report that includes--
                    (A) the status of such request;
                    (B) if the transfer of such article or service 
                would require a certification or report to Congress 
                pursuant to any applicable provision of section 36 of 
                the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2776), the 
                status of any Letter of Offer and Acceptance the 
                Secretary of Defense intends to issue with respect to 
                such request; and
                    (C) an assessment of whether the transfer of such 
                article or service would be consistent with United 
                States obligations under the Taiwan Relations Act 
                (Public Law 96-8; 22 U.S.C. 3301 et seq.).
            (2) Elements.--Each report required under paragraph (1) 
        shall specify the following:
                    (A) The date the Secretary of Defense received the 
                Letter of Request.
                    (B) The value of the sale proposed by such Letter 
                of Request.
                    (C) A description of the defense article or defense 
                service proposed to be transferred.
                    (D) The view of the Secretary of Defense with 
                respect to such proposed sale and whether such sale 
                would be consistent with defense plans.
            (3) Form.--Each report required under paragraph (1) shall 
        be submitted in unclassified form but may contain a classified 
        annex.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and every 180 days thereafter, the Secretary of 
Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of State, shall provide a 
briefing to the appropriate congressional committees with respect to 
the security challenges faced by Taiwan and the military cooperation 
between the United States and Taiwan, including a description of any 
requests from Taiwan for the transfer of defense articles or defense 
services and the status, whether signed or unsigned, of any Letters of 
Offer and Acceptance with respect to such requests.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) Appropriate congressional committees.--The term 
        ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
                    (A) the Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
                Representatives; and
                    (B) the Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate.
            (2) Defense article; defense service.--The terms ``defense 
        article'' and ``defense service'' have the meanings given such 
        terms in section 47 of the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 
        2794).
            (3) Letter of request; letter of offer and acceptance.--The 
        terms ``Letter of Request'' and ``Letter of Offer and 
        Acceptance'' have the meanings given such terms for purposes of 
        Chapter 5 of the Security Assistance Management Manual of the 
        Defense Security Cooperation Agency, as in effect on the date 
        of the enactment of this Act.

                       Subtitle H--Other Matters

SEC. 1271. NATO COOPERATIVE CYBER DEFENSE CENTER OF EXCELLENCE.

    (a) Authorization.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act for fiscal year 2018 for support of North Atlantic Treaty 
Organization (in this section referred to as ``NATO'') operations, as 
specified in the funding tables in division D, not more than $5,000,000 
may be obligated or expended for the purposes described in subsection 
(b).
    (b) Purposes.--The Secretary of Defense shall provide funds for the 
NATO Cooperative Cyber Defense Center of Excellence (in this section 
referred to as the ``Center'') to--
            (1) enhance the capability, cooperation, and information 
        sharing among NATO, NATO member nations, and partners, with 
        respect to cyber defense and warfare; and
            (2) facilitate education, research and development, lessons 
        learned and consultation in cyber defense and warfare.
    (c) Certification.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall certify to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate that the Secretary has assigned executive agent responsibility 
for the Center to an appropriate organization within the Department of 
Defense, and detail the steps being undertaken to strengthen the role 
of the Center in fostering cyber defense and warfare capabilities 
within NATO.
    (d) Briefing Requirement.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
periodically brief the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Senate on the efforts of the Department of 
Defense to strengthen the role of the Center in fostering cyber defense 
and warfare capabilities within NATO.

SEC. 1272. NATO STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS CENTER OF EXCELLENCE.

    (a) Authorization.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act for fiscal year 2018 for support of North Atlantic Treaty 
Organization (in this section referred to as ``NATO'') operations, as 
specified in the funding tables in division D, not more than $5,000,000 
may be obligated or expended for the purposes described in subsection 
(b).
    (b) Purposes.--The Secretary of Defense shall provide funds for the 
NATO Strategic Communications Center of Excellence (in this section 
referred to as the ``Center'') to--
            (1) enhance the capability, cooperation, and information 
        sharing among NATO, NATO member nations, and partners, with 
        respect to strategic communications and information operations; 
        and
            (2) facilitate education, research and development, lessons 
        learned, and consultation in strategic communications and 
        information operations.
    (c) Certification.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall certify to the 
Committees on Armed Services of the House of Representatives and the 
Senate that the Secretary has assigned executive agent responsibility 
for the Center to an appropriate organization within the Department of 
Defense, and detail the steps being undertaken to strengthen the role 
of Center in fostering strategic communications and information 
operations within NATO.
    (d) Briefing Requirement.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
        periodically brief the committees listed in paragraph (2) on 
        the efforts of the Department of Defense to strengthen the role 
        of the Center in fostering strategic communications and 
        information operations within NATO.
            (2) Committees.--The committees listed in this paragraph 
        are the following:
                    (A) The Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
                Representatives.
                    (B) The Committee on Armed Services and the 
                Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate.

SEC. 1273. SECURITY AND STABILITY STRATEGY FOR SOMALIA.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to the appropriate 
congressional committees a report that contains a comprehensive United 
States strategy to achieve long-term security and stability in Somalia 
and includes each of the following elements:
            (1) A description of United States strategic objectives in 
        Somalia and the benchmarks for assessing progress toward such 
        objectives.
            (2) An assessment of the threats posed to Somalia, the 
        broader region, the United States, and partners of the United 
        States, by al-Shabaab and organizations affiliated with the 
        Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in Somalia, including the 
        origins, strategic aims, tactical methods, funding sources, and 
        leadership of each organization.
            (3) A description of the key international and United 
        States governance, diplomatic, development, military, and 
        intelligence resources available to address instability in 
        Somalia.
            (4) A plan to improve coordination among, and effectiveness 
        of, United States governance, diplomatic, development, 
        military, and intelligence resources to counter the threat of 
        al-Shabaab and organizations affiliated with the Islamic State 
        of Iraq and the Levant in Somalia.
            (5) A description of the role the United States is playing 
        or will play to address political instability and support long-
        term security and stability in Somalia.
            (6) A description of the contributions made by the African 
        Union Mission in Somalia (in this section referred to as 
        ``AMISOM'') to security in Somalia and an assessment of the 
        anticipated duration of support provided to AMISOM by troop 
        contributing countries.
            (7) A plan to train the Somali National Army and other 
        Somali security forces, that also includes--
                    (A) a description of the assistance provided by 
                other countries for such training; and
                    (B) a description of the efforts to integrate 
                regional militias into the uniformed Somali security 
                forces; and
                    (C) a description of the security assistance 
                authorities under which any such training would be 
                provided by the United States and the recommendations 
                of the Secretary to address any gaps under such 
                authorities to advise, assist, or accompany the Somali 
                National Army or other Somali security forces within 
                appropriate roles and responsibilities that are not 
                fulfilled by other countries or by international 
                organizations.
            (8) A description of the steps the United States, AMISOM, 
        and any forces trained by the United States are taking in 
        Somalia to minimize civilian casualties and other harm to 
        civilians.
            (9) Any other matters the President considers appropriate.
    (b) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form but may include a classified annex.
    (c) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
        Foreign Affairs, the Committee on Appropriations, and the 
        Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
        Representatives; and
            (2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
        Foreign Relations, the Committee on Appropriations, and the 
        Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate.

SEC. 1274. ASSESSMENT OF GLOBAL THEATER SECURITY COOPERATION MANAGEMENT 
              INFORMATION SYSTEM.

    (a) Report.--Not later than 6 months after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report setting forth an assessment, 
obtained by the Secretary for purposes of the report, of the 
effectiveness of measures taken to improve the functionality of the 
Global Theater Security Cooperation Management Information System (in 
this section referred to as the ``G-TSCMIS'').
    (b) Independent Assessment.--
            (1) In general.--The assessment obtained for purposes of 
        subsection (a) shall be conducted by a federally funded 
        research and development center (FFRDC), or another appropriate 
        independent entity with expertise in security cooperation 
        programs and activities of the Department of Defense, selected 
        by the Secretary for purposes of the assessment.
            (2) Use of previous studies.--The entity conducting the 
        assessment may use and incorporate information from previous 
        studies on matters appropriate to the assessment.
    (c) Elements.--The assessment obtained for purposes of subsection 
(a) shall include the following:
            (1) An assessment of the extent to which security 
        cooperation organizations are entering consistent, full, and 
        accurate information into G-TSCMIS in a timely manner, and the 
        impacts of inconsistent, incomplete, inaccurate, and tardy data 
        entry on the functionality of the G-TSCMIS as a tool for 
        security cooperation planning, resource allocation, and program 
        adjustment.
            (2) An assessment of any measures taken by the Department 
        of Defense to ensure the full scope of security cooperation 
        activities are entered into the G-TSCMIS in a timely manner, 
        including any guidance issued or resource allocation 
        determinations.
            (3) An assessment of the effectiveness of oversight 
        measures to ensure the full scope of security cooperation 
        activities are entered into the G-TSCMIS in a timely manner.
            (4) An assessment of utilization by and functionality for 
        users of the G-TSCMIS across the Department of Defense, 
        including the extent of G-TSCMIS business process reengineering 
        that was conducted to best align needs from the functional 
        community with the capabilities of the information management 
        tool.
            (5) Such other matters as the Secretary considers 
        appropriate.
    (d) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1275. FUTURE YEARS PLAN FOR THE EUROPEAN DETERRENCE INITIATIVE.

    (a) Plan Required.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 120 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in 
        consultation with the Commander of the United States European 
        Command, shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        future years plan on activities and resources of the European 
        Deterrence Initiative (in this section referred to as the 
        ``EDI'').
            (2) Applicability.--The plan shall apply with respect 
        fiscal year 2018 and at least the four succeeding fiscal years.
    (b) Matters to Be Included.--The plan required under subsection (a) 
shall include the following:
            (1) A description of the objectives of the EDI.
            (2) An assessment of resource requirements to achieve the 
        objectives of the EDI.
            (3) An assessment of capabilities requirements to achieve 
        the objectives of the EDI.
            (4) An assessment of logistics requirements, including 
        force enablers, equipment, supplies, storage, and maintenance 
        requirements, to achieve the objectives of the EDI.
            (5) An identification and assessment of required 
        infrastructure investments to achieve the objectives of the 
        EDI, including potential infrastructure investments by host 
        nations and new construction or modernization of existing sites 
        that would be funded by the United States.
            (6) An assessment of security cooperation investments 
        required to achieve the objectives of the EDI.
            (7) A plan to fully resource United States force posture 
        and capabilities, including--
                    (A) details regarding the strategy to balance the 
                force structure of the United States forces to source 
                additional permanently stationed United States forces 
                in Europe as a part of any planned growth in end 
                strength and force posture;
                    (B) the infrastructure capacity of existing 
                locations and their ability to accommodate additional 
                permanently stationed United States forces in Europe;
                    (C) the potential new locations for additional 
                permanently stationed United States forces in Europe, 
                including an assessment of infrastructure and military 
                construction resources necessary to accommodate 
                additional United States forces in Europe;
                    (D) a detailed timeline to achieve desired 
                permanent posture requirements;
                    (E) a reevaluation of sites identified for 
                divestiture but not yet divested under the European 
                Infrastructure Consolidation initiative, accounting for 
                updated military requirements; and
                    (F) any changes and associated costs incurred with 
                retaining each site identified for divestiture but not 
                yet divested under the European Infrastructure 
                Consolidation initiative, including possible leasing 
                agreements, sustainment, and maintenance.
    (c) Form.--The plan required under subsection (a) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
    (d) Limitations.--
            (1) General limitation.--The Secretary of Defense may not 
        take any action to divest any site identified for divestiture 
        but not yet divested under the European Infrastructure 
        Consolidation initiative until the Secretary submits to the 
        congressional defense committees the plan required under 
        subsection (a).
            (2) Site-specific limitation.--In the case of a proposed 
        divestiture of a site under the European Infrastructure 
        Consolidation initiative, the Secretary of Defense may not take 
        any action to divest the site unless prior to taking such 
        action, the Secretary certifies to the congressional defense 
        committees that no military requirement for future use of the 
        site is foreseeable.

SEC. 1276. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO ENTER INTO AGREEMENTS WITH 
              PARTICIPATING COUNTRIES IN THE AMERICAN, BRITISH, 
              CANADIAN, AND AUSTRALIAN ARMIES' PROGRAM.

    Section 1274(g) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 2026; 10 U.S.C. 2350a 
note) is amended by striking ``five years'' and inserting ``ten 
years''.

SEC. 1277. SECURITY STRATEGY FOR YEMEN.

    (a) Report Required.--Not later than 120 days after the date of 
enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to the appropriate 
congressional committees a report that contains a security strategy for 
Yemen.
    (b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include 
the following elements:
            (1) A discussion of the strategy's compliance with 
        applicable legal authorities.
            (2) A detailed description of the security environment.
            (3) A detailed description of the threats posed by Al Qaeda 
        in the Arabian Peninsula and the Islamic State in Iraq and the 
        Levant-Yemen Province, including the origins, leadership, 
        strategic aims, tactical methods, and resources attributable to 
        each organization.
            (4) A detailed description of the threats posed to freedom 
        of navigation through the Bab al Mandab Strait and waters in 
        proximity to Yemen as well as any United States efforts to 
        mitigate those threats.
            (5) A discussion of the ends, ways, and means inherent to 
        the strategy.
            (6) A discussion of the strategy's objectives regarding 
        counterterrorism and long-term stability in Yemen.
            (7) A plan to coordinate the United States diplomatic, 
        development, military, and intelligence resources necessary to 
        implement the strategy.
            (8) A detailed description of the roles of the United 
        States Armed Forces in implementing the strategy.
    (c) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted 
in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
    (d) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
        Foreign Relations, the Committee on Appropriations, and the 
        Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate; and
            (2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
        Foreign Affairs, the Committee on Appropriations, and the 
        Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
        Representatives.
    (e) No Authorization for Deployment of Armed Forces.--None of the 
funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act are authorized to be 
made available to deploy members of the Armed Forces to participate in 
the ongoing civil war in Yemen.

SEC. 1278. LIMITATION ON TRANSFER OF EXCESS DEFENSE ARTICLES THAT ARE 
              HIGH MOBILITY MULTI-PURPOSE WHEELED VEHICLES.

    (a) Limitation.--The President may not transfer excess defense 
articles that are high mobility multi-purpose wheeled vehicles under 
the authority of section 516 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 
U.S.C. 2321j) to foreign countries until 30 days after the date on 
which the Comptroller General of the United States has submitted the 
report required under subsection (b) to the appropriate congressional 
committees.
    (b) Report Required.--The Comptroller General of the United States 
shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees a report on 
all proposed and completed transfers of excess defense articles that 
are high mobility multi-purpose wheeled vehicles under the authority of 
section 516 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 2321j) 
during fiscal years 2012 through 2016. Such report shall include the 
following:
            (1) An assessment of the timing, rigorousness, and 
        procedures used in conducting the analysis of the impact of 
        each such transfer on the national technology and industrial 
        base and, particularly, the impact on opportunities of entities 
        in the national technology and industrial base to sell new or 
        used equipment to the countries to which such articles were to 
        be or were transferred in accordance with section 516(b)(1)(E) 
        of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 U.S.C. 
        2321j(b)(1)(E)).
            (2) Any other related matters the Comptroller General 
        determines to be appropriate.
    (c) Waiver.--The President may waive the limitation in subsection 
(a) with respect to a proposed transfer of excess defense articles if 
the President--
            (1) determines that such transfer is in the national 
        interest of the United States; and
            (2) notifies the appropriate congressional committees of 
        such waiver in writing not less than 30 days prior to such 
        transfer.
    (d) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the congressional defense committees; and
            (2) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and 
        the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives.
    (e) Effective Date.--This section shall take effect on the date of 
the enactment of this Act and shall apply with respect to letters of 
offer to transfer excess defense articles that are high mobility multi-
purpose wheeled vehicles issued on or after such date of enactment.

SEC. 1279. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PROGRAM TO PROTECT UNITED STATES 
              STUDENTS AGAINST FOREIGN AGENTS.

    (a) Program.--The Secretary of Defense shall develop and implement 
a program to prepare United States students studying abroad through 
Department of Defense National Security Education Programs to recognize 
and protect themselves against recruitment efforts by intelligence 
agents.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide to the 
Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and the Committee on Armed 
Services of the House of Representatives a briefing on the program 
required under subsection (a).

SEC. 1280. EXTENSION OF UNITED STATES-ISRAEL ANTI-TUNNEL COOPERATION 
              AUTHORITY.

    Section 1279(f) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1079; 22 U.S.C. 8606 
note) is amended by striking ``December 31, 2018'' and inserting 
``December 31, 2020''.

SEC. 1281. ANTICORRUPTION STRATEGY.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 120 days after the United States 
engages in a contingency operation, the Secretary of Defense, the 
Secretary of State, and the Administrator of the United States Agency 
for International Development, in consultation with the heads of other 
relevant Federal agencies, shall jointly develop a strategy to prevent 
corruption in any reconstruction efforts associated with such operation 
and submit such strategy to--
            (1) the congressional defense committees;
            (2) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
            (3) the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives.
    (b) Benchmarks.--The strategy described in subsection (a) shall 
include measurable benchmarks to be met as a condition for disbursement 
of any funds for reconstruction efforts associated with such operation.
    (c) Report.--For the duration of a contingency operation for which 
the Secretary of Defense has submitted a strategy pursuant to 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to Congress an annual report 
evaluating the implementation and effectiveness of such strategy and 
describing any necessary adjustments to the strategy.

SEC. 1282. REPORT BY DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY ON CERTAIN MILITARY 
              CAPABILITIES OF CHINA AND RUSSIA.

    (a) Report.--The Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency shall 
submit to the Secretary of Defense and the appropriate congressional 
committees a report on the military capabilities of the People's 
Republic of China and the Russian Federation.
    (b) Matters Included.--The report under subsection (a) shall 
include, with respect to the military of China and the military of 
Russia, the following:
            (1) An update on the presence, status, and capability of 
        the military with respect to any national training centers 
        similar to the Combat Training Center Program of the United 
        States.
            (2) An analysis of a readiness deployment cycle of the 
        military, including--
                    (A) as compared to such a cycle of the United 
                States; and
                    (B) an identification of metrics used in the 
                national training centers of that military.
            (3) A comprehensive investigation into the capability and 
        readiness of the mechanized logistics of the army of the 
        military, including--
                    (A) an analysis of field maintenance, sustainment 
                maintenance, movement control, intermodal operations, 
                and supply; and
                    (B) how such functions under subparagraph (A) 
                interact with specific echelons of that military.
            (4) An assessment of the future of mechanized army 
        logistics of that military.
    (c) Nonduplication of Efforts.--The Defense Intelligence Agency may 
make use of or add to any existing reports completed by the Agency in 
order to respond to the reporting requirement.
    (d) Form.--The report under subsection (a) may be submitted in 
classified form.
    (e) Briefing.--The Director shall provide a briefing to the 
Secretary and the committees specified in subsection (a) on the report 
under such subsection.
    (f) Appropriate Congressional Committees.--In this section, the 
term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives and the Senate; and
            (2) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
        House of Representatives and the Select Committee on 
        Intelligence of the Senate.

SEC. 1283. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON THE NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has been 
        the cornerstone of transatlantic security cooperation and an 
        enduring instrument for promoting stability in Europe and 
        around the world for over 65 years.
            (2) NATO currently faces a range of security challenges, 
        including Russian aggression in Eastern Europe and instability 
        and conflict in the Middle East and North Africa.
            (3) In light of these and other threats, NATO must have a 
        credible deterrence to defend NATO members, if necessary, 
        against adversaries or threats.
            (4) Since the 2014 NATO summit in Wales and the 2016 summit 
        in Warsaw, NATO has made progress in implementing a Readiness 
        Action Plan to enhance allied readiness and collective defense 
        in response to Russian aggression. However, much work remains 
        to be done.
            (5) NATO's solidarity is strengthened by bolstering its 
        conventional and nuclear deterrence, increasing defense 
        spending by NATO members, and continuing the enlargement of 
        NATO.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) NATO members should--
                    (A) continue to advance the NATO Open-Door Policy 
                and build on the successes of previous enlargement 
                initiatives;
                    (B) continue to work with countries that are 
                seeking to join NATO to prepare for entry;
                    (C) commend Montenegro's final accession to NATO;
                    (D) seek a Dayton II agreement to resolve the 
                constitutional issues faced by Bosnia and Herzegovina;
                    (E) work with the Republic of Kosovo to prepare the 
                country for entrance into the NATO Partnership for 
                Peace program;
                    (F) continue support for the NATO Membership Action 
                Plan for Georgia;
                    (G) implement specific plans to ensure that 
                sufficient investments are made to meet NATO 
                responsibilities, including by allocating at least 2 
                percent of each member's gross domestic product to 
                defense spending, 20 percent of which should be 
                dedicated to major equipment procurement, as agreed at 
                the 2014 Wales Summit and reaffirmed at the 2016 Warsaw 
                Summit;
                    (H) continue to build on efforts to identify and 
                address, through consensus, the security threats facing 
                the alliance, such as by enhancing counterterrorism 
                activities;
                    (I) continue to bolster deterrence efforts and 
                promote the Enhanced Forward Presence in Eastern 
                Europe;
                    (J) as decided at the 2016 Warsaw Summit, use the 
                new rotational deployments of four multinational combat 
                battalions in Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia to 
                promote stability in that region as well as to deter 
                Russian aggression; and
                    (K) invest in infrastructure projects necessary to 
                guarantee free and efficient movement throughout the 
                territories of NATO members; and
            (2) the United States should commit to maintaining a robust 
        military presence in Europe as a means of promoting allied 
        interoperability, providing visible assurance to NATO allies, 
        and deterring Russian aggression in the region.

SEC. 1284. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON THE EXPORT OF DEFENSE ARTICLES TO 
              TURKEY.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds that--
            (1) on June 6, 2017, the House of Representatives voted 
        unanimously to pass H. Res. 354, condemning the violence that 
        took place outside the Turkish Ambassador's residence on May 
        16, 2017, and calling on the perpetrators to be brought to 
        justice under United States law; and
            (2) the security force that participated in this violence 
        may be the recipient of arms exported from the United States 
        under a proposed deal.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
proposed sale of semiautomatic handguns for export to Turkey should 
remain under scrutiny until a satisfactory and appropriate resolution 
is reached to the violence described in subsection (a)(1).

SEC. 1285. STRATEGY TO IMPROVE DEFENSE INSTITUTIONS AND SECURITY SECTOR 
              FORCES IN NIGERIA.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to the appropriate 
congressional committees a report that contains a comprehensive 
strategy to support improvements in defense institutions and security 
sector forces in Nigeria.
    (b) Matters to Be Included.--The report required by subsection (a) 
shall include the following:
            (1) An assessment of the threats posed by terrorist and 
        other militant groups operating in Nigeria, including Boko 
        Haram, ISIS-WA, and Niger Delta militants, as well as a 
        description of the origins, strategic aims, tactical methods, 
        funding sources, and leadership structures of each such 
        organization.
            (2) An assessment of efforts by the Government of Nigeria 
        to improve civilian protection, accountability for human rights 
        violations, and transparency in the defense institutions and 
        security sector forces.
            (3) A description of the key international and United 
        States diplomatic, development, intelligence, military, and 
        economic resources available to address instability across 
        Nigeria, and a plan to maximize the coordination and 
        effectiveness of these resources to counter the threats posed 
        by Boko Haram, ISIS-WA, and Niger Delta militants.
            (4) An assessment of efforts undertaken by the security 
        forces of the Government of Nigeria to improve the protection 
        of civilians in the context of--
                    (A) ongoing military operations against Boko Haram 
                in the northeast region;
                    (B) addressing farmer-herder land disputes in the 
                Middle Belt;
                    (C) renewed militant attacks on oil and gas 
                infrastructure in the Delta; and
                    (D) addressing pro-Biafra protests in the southeast 
                region.
            (5) An assessment of the effectiveness of the Civilian 
        Joint Task Force that has been operating in parts of 
        northeastern Nigeria in order to ensure that underage youth are 
        not participating in government-sponsored vigilante activity in 
        violation of the Child Soldiers Prevention Act of 2008 (Public 
        Law 110-340).
            (6) An assessment of the options for the Government of 
        Nigeria to eventually incorporate the Civilian Joint Task Force 
        into Nigeria's military or law enforcement agencies or 
        reintegrate its members into civilian life.
            (7) A plan for the United States to work with the Nigerian 
        security forces and judiciary to transparently investigate 
        allegations of human rights violations committed by the 
        security forces of the Government of Nigeria that have involved 
        civilian casualties, including a plan to undertake tangible 
        measures of accountability following such investigations in 
        order to break the cycle of conflict.
            (8) A plan for the United States to work with the Nigerian 
        defense institutions and security sector forces to improve 
        detainee conditions.
            (9) A plan to work with the Nigerian military, 
        international organizations, and nongovernmental organizations 
        to demilitarize the humanitarian response to the food 
        insecurity and population displacement in northeastern Nigeria.
            (10) Any other matters the President considers appropriate.
    (c) Updates.--Not later than 1 year after the date on which the 
report required under subsection (a) is submitted to the appropriate 
congressional committees, and annually thereafter for 5 years, the 
President shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees an 
update of the report containing updated assessments and evaluations on 
progress made on the plans described in the report, including--
            (1) updated assessments on the information described in 
        paragraphs (2), (4), and (6) of subsection (a); and
            (2) descriptions of the steps taken and outcomes achieved 
        under each of the plans described in paragraphs (7), (8), (9), 
        and (10) of subsection (a), as well as assessments of the 
        effectiveness and descriptions of the metrics used to evaluate 
        effectiveness for each such plan.
    (d) Form.--The report required under subsection (a) and the updates 
required under (c) shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may 
include a classified annex.
    (e) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
        Foreign Relations, the Committee on Appropriations, and the 
        Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate; and
            (2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on 
        Foreign Affairs, the Committee on Appropriations, and the 
        Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 1286. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING THE CHIBOK SCHOOLGIRLS AND BOKO 
              HARAM.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) . The members of Jama'atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda'awati wal-
        Jihad, commonly known as Boko Haram, have terrorized the people 
        of Nigeria with increasing violence since 2009, targeting 
        military, government, and civilian sites in Nigeria, including 
        schools, mosques, churches, markets, villages, and agricultural 
        centers, and killing thousands and abducting hundreds of 
        civilians in Nigeria and the surrounding countries.
            (2) On the night of April 14, 2014, 276 female students, 
        most of them between 15 and 18 years old, were abducted by Boko 
        Haram from the Chibok Government Girls Secondary School, a 
        boarding school located in Borno state in the Federal Republic 
        of Nigeria.
            (3) While some Chibok girls have fled their captors and 
        others have been released through negotiations, more than 100 
        Chibok girls remain in captivity.
            (4) In addition to kidnapping the Chibok schoolgirls, Boko 
        Haram has killed more than 20,000 people, coerced women and 
        girls into carrying out suicide missions, displaced more than 
        3,000,000 Nigerians, tens of thousands of whom are at risk of 
        starving to death, and caused thousand of school closures.
            (5) In supporting efforts to reunite the Chibok schoolgirls 
        with their families, the United States has authorized the 
        deployment of military personnel to assist with intelligence, 
        surveillance, and reconnaissance, and provided training, 
        equipment, and humanitarian services to the populations 
        affected by and vulnerable to Boko Haram violence.
            (6) The Secretary of State designated several individuals 
        linked to Boko Haram, including its leader, Abubakar Shekau, as 
        Specially Designated Global Terrorists in 2012, and designated 
        Boko Haram as a Foreign Terrorist Organization in November 
        2013.
            (7) The Senate and the House of Representatives have both 
        passed legislation and undertaken other initiatives to condemn 
        Boko Haram and support the Chibok schoolgirls.
            (8) In addition to legislation, members of Congress have 
        traveled to Nigeria to meet with freed Chibok schoolgirls and 
        their families, held briefings, press conferences, and 
        hearings, and, every week that Congress is in session, 
        participated in Wear Something Red Wednesday, a bipartisan 
        campaign led by Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, Republican 
        Conference Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers, and Congresswoman 
        Frederica Wilson, during which lawmakers wear a red outfit or 
        accessory and take group photos to share on social media to 
        raise awareness about the kidnapped Chibok schoolgirls.
            (9) The 114th Congress unanimously passed S. 1632, which 
        President Barack Obama signed into law on December 14, 2016, to 
        direct the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense to 
        jointly develop a five-year strategy to aid Nigeria and the 
        Multinational Joint Task Force, composed of troops from Benin, 
        Cameroon, Chad, Niger, and Nigeria, to combat Boko Haram.
            (10) On June 27, 2017, President Donald Trump met with two 
        freed Chibok schoolgirls at the White House.
    (b) Sense of Congress.--Congress--
            (1) commends the Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense, 
        and Director of National Intelligence for delivering a report 
        to Congress on a five-year strategy for the United States to 
        employ diplomatic, development, defense, and other tools to 
        assist and enable our African partners to lead the effort to 
        degrade and ultimately defeat Boko Haram, the Islamic State in 
        Iraq and ash Sham - West Africa (ISIS-WA), and any potential 
        splinter or successor groups;
            (2) affirms United States support for the international 
        effort to degrade Boko Haram and ISIS-WA and to assist the 
        Multinational Joint Task Force to address the underlying 
        drivers of violent extremism; and
            (3) supports the efforts of the Department of Defense to 
        implement a United States strategy for countering Boko Haram 
        and ISIS-WA.

SEC. 1287. MODIFICATION OF ANNUAL REPORT ON MILITARY AND SECURITY 
              DEVELOPMENTS INVOLVING THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA.

    Subsection (b) of section 1202 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 (Public Law 106-65; 10 U.S.C. 
113 note), as most recently amended by section 1271 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 
Stat. 2538), is further amended by adding at the end the following:
            ``(23) Any Chinese laws, regulations, or policies that 
        could jeopardize the economic security of the United States.''.

SEC. 1288. REPORT ON IRAN AND NORTH KOREA NUCLEAR AND BALLISTIC MISSILE 
              COOPERATION.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the ballistic missile programs of Iran and North Korea 
        represent a serious threat to allies of the United States in 
        the Middle East, Europe, and Asia, members of the Armed Forces 
        deployed in those regions, and ultimately the United States; 
        and
            (2) further cooperation between Iran and North Korea on 
        nuclear weapons or ballistic missile technology is not in the 
        security interests of the United States or our allies.
    (b) Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the President, in coordination with 
        the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of State, and the heads 
        of other relevant agencies, shall submit to the appropriate 
        committees of Congress a report that includes--
                    (A) an assessment of the extent of cooperation on 
                nuclear programs, ballistic missile development, 
                chemical and biological weapons development, or 
                conventional weapons programs between the Government of 
                Iran and the Government of the Democratic People's 
                Republic of Korea, including the identity of Iranian 
                and North Korean persons that have knowingly engaged in 
                or directed the provision of material support or the 
                exchange of information (including through the transfer 
                of goods, services, technology, or intellectual 
                property) between the Government of Iran and the 
                Government of the Democratic People's Republic of 
                Korea; and
                    (B) a determination whether any of the activities 
                described in subparagraph (A) violate United Nations 
                Security Council Resolutions 1695 (2006), 1718 (2006), 
                1874 (2009), 2087 (2013), 2094 (2013), 2231 (2015), 
                2270 (2016) and 2321 (2016).
            (2) Form.--The report required under paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form, but may contain a classified 
        annex.
            (3) Appropriate committees of congress defined.--In this 
        subsection, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' 
        means--
                    (A) the Committee on Foreign Relations, the 
                Committee on Armed Services, and the Select Committee 
                on Intelligence of the Senate; and
                    (B) the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Committee 
                on Armed Services, and the Permanent Select Committee 
                on Intelligence of the House of Representatives.

SEC. 1289. MODIFICATION OF ANNUAL UPDATE OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              FREEDOM OF NAVIGATION OPERATIONS REPORT.

    (a) In General.--Subsection (b) of section 1275 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 
Stat. 2540) is amended by adding at the end the following:
            ``(4) For each country identified under paragraph (1) as 
        making an excessive maritime claim challenged by the United 
        States under the program referred to in subsection (a), the 
        types and locations of excessive maritime claims by such 
        country that have not been challenged by the United States, if 
        any, under the program referred to in subsection (a).''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made subsection (a) takes effect 
of the date of the enactment of this Act and applies with respect to 
each report required to be submitted under section 1275 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 on or after such date of 
enactment.

SEC. 1290. CONTINGENCY PLANS RELATING TO SOUTH SUDAN.

    The Secretary of Defense shall prepare contingency plans--
            (1) to assist relief organizations in delivery of 
        humanitarian assistance in South Sudan; and
            (2) to engage South Sudan's military to promote efforts to 
        reduce conflicts.

SEC. 1291. REPORT ON STRATEGY TO DEFEAT AL-QAEDA, THE TALIBAN, THE 
              ISLAMIC STATE OF IRAQ AND SYRIA (ISIS), AND THEIR 
              ASSOCIATED FORCES AND CO-BELLIGERENTS.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the President shall submit to Congress a report 
on the United States strategy to defeat Al-Qaeda, the Taliban, the 
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), and their associated forces and 
co-belligerents.
    (b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a) shall 
include the following:
            (1) An analysis of the adequacy of the existing legal 
        framework to accomplish the strategy described in subsection 
        (a), particularly with respect to the Authorization for Use of 
        Military Force (Public Law 107-40; 50 U.S.C. 1541 note) and the 
        Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution 
        of 2002 (Public Law 107-243; 50 U.S.C. 1541 note).
            (2) An analysis of the budgetary resources necessary to 
        accomplish the strategy described in subsection (a).
    (c) Congressional Testimony.--Not later than 30 days after the date 
on which the President submits to the appropriate congressional 
committees the report required by subsection (a), the Secretary of 
State and the Secretary of Defense shall testify at any hearing held by 
any of the appropriate congressional committees on the report and to 
which the Secretary is invited.
    (d) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Foreign Relations and the Committee on 
        Armed Services of the Senate; and
            (2) the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Committee on 
        Armed Services of the House of Representatives.

SEC. 1292. NOTICE OF CHANGES TO THE LEGAL AND POLICY FRAMEWORKS GUIDING 
              THE UNITED STATES' USE OF MILITARY FORCE AND RELATED 
              NATIONAL SECURITY OPERATIONS.

    (a) Notice Required.--Not later than 30 days after the date on 
which a change is made to any of the legal or policy frameworks 
described in the report entitled ``Report on the Legal and Policy 
Frameworks Guiding the United States Use of Military Force and Related 
National Security Operations'' prepared by the national security 
departments and agencies and published on December 5, 2016, the 
President shall notify the appropriate congressional committees of such 
change, including the legal, factual, and policy justification for such 
change.
    (b) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and the 
        Committee on Armed Services of the House of Representatives;
            (2) the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate and the 
        Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives;
            (3) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and 
        the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives; and
            (4) the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate and 
        the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 1293. REPORT ON MILITARY ACTION OF SAUDI ARABIA AND ITS COALITIONS 
              PARTNERS IN YEMEN.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, and every 180 days thereafter, the Secretary of 
Defense and the Secretary of State shall jointly submit the appropriate 
congressional committees a report on military action of Saudi Arabia 
and its coalitions partners in Yemen.
    (b) Matters to Be Included.--The report required by subsection (a) 
shall include a description of the following:
            (1) The extent to which the Government of Saudi Arabia and 
        its coalition partners in Yemen are abiding by their ``No 
        Strike List and Restricted Target List''.
            (2) Roles played by United States military personnel with 
        respect to operations of such coalition partners in Yemen.
            (3) Progress made by the Government of Saudi Arabia in 
        improving its targeting capabilities.
            (4) Progress made by such coalition partners to implement 
        the recommendations of the Joint Incident Assessment Team and 
        participation if any by the United States in the implementation 
        of such recommendations.
            (5) Progress made toward implementation of United Nations 
        Security Council Resolution 2216 (2015) or any successor United 
        Nations Security Council resolution relating to the conflict in 
        Yemen.
    (c) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted 
in unclassified form, but may contain a classified annex.
    (d) Termination.--This section shall terminate on--
            (1) the date that is 2 years after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, or
            (2) the date on which the Secretary of Defense and 
        Secretary of State jointly certify to the appropriate 
        congressional committees that the conflict in Yemen has come to 
        a conclusion,
whichever occurs earlier.
    (e) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the congressional defense committees; and
            (2) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and 
        the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 1294. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE REGION.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the security, stability, and prosperity of the Western 
        Hemisphere region are vital to the national interests of the 
        United States;
            (2) the United States should maintain a military capability 
        in the Western Hemisphere region that is able to project power, 
        build partner capacity, deter acts of aggression, and respond, 
        if necessary, to regional threats or to threats to the national 
        security of the United States by the activities of Iran, China, 
        Russia, North Korea, transnational criminal organizations, or 
        terrorist organizations in the region;
            (3) continuing efforts by the Department of Defense to 
        commit additional assets and increase investments to the 
        Western Hemisphere are necessary to maintain a robust United 
        States commitment to the region;
            (4) the Secretary of Defense should--
                    (A) assess the current United States force posture 
                in the Western Hemisphere to ensure that the United 
                States maintains an appropriate forward presence in the 
                region;
                    (B) prioritize--
                            (i) intelligence, surveillance, and 
                        reconnaissance;
                            (ii) maritime patrol aircraft to support 
                        detection and monitoring missions;
                            (iii) efforts to disrupt and degrade 
                        transregional and transnational threat 
                        networks; and
                            (iv) when possible, efforts to support the 
                        mission of the Department of Homeland Security, 
                        as requested, in monitoring individuals 
                        identified by the Secretary of Homeland 
                        Security as ``special interest aliens'' or as 
                        ``foreign terrorist fighters''; and
                    (C) enhance regional force readiness through joint 
                training and exercises; and
            (5) the United States should continue to engage in the 
        Western Hemisphere by strengthening alliances and partnerships, 
        working with regional institutions, addressing the shared 
        challenges of illicit trafficking of humans, drugs, and other 
        contraband, transnational criminal organizations, and foreign 
        terrorist fighters, and supporting the rule of law and 
        democracy in the region.

SEC. 1295. SENSE OF CONGRESS RELATING TO INCREASES IN DEFENSE 
              CAPABILITIES OF UNITED STATES ALLIES.

    It is the sense of Congress that the President, in furtherance of 
increased unity, equitable sharing of the common defense burden, and 
international stability, should--
            (1) encourage all member countries of the North Atlantic 
        Treaty Organization (``NATO allies'') to fulfill their 
        commitments to levels and composition of defense expenditures 
        as agreed upon at the NATO 2014 Wales Summit and NATO 2016 
        Warsaw Summit;
            (2) call on NATO allies to finance, equip, and train their 
        armed forces to fulfill their national and regional security 
        interests; and
            (3) recognize NATO allies that are meeting their defense 
        spending commitments or otherwise providing adequately for 
        their national and regional security interests.

SEC. 1296. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS TO IMPLEMENT THE ARMS 
              TRADE TREATY.

    (a) In General.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the 
Department of Defense may be obligated or expended to fund a 
Secretariat or any other international organization established to 
support the implementation of the Arms Trade Treaty, to sustain 
domestic prosecutions based on any charge related to the Treaty, or to 
implement the Treaty until the Senate approves a resolution of 
ratification for the Treaty and implementing legislation for the Treaty 
has been enacted into law.
    (b) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to preclude the Department of Defense from assisting foreign 
countries in bringing their laws, regulations, and practices related to 
export control up to United States standards.

SEC. 1297. CULTURAL HERITAGE PROTECTION COORDINATOR.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall designate an 
employee of the Department of Defense to serve concurrently as the 
Coordinator for Cultural Heritage Protection (in this section referred 
to as the ``Coordinator'').
    (b) Duties.--The Coordinator shall have the following duties:
            (1) The Coordinator shall be responsible for coordinating 
        existing obligations of the Department of Defense for the 
        protection of cultural heritage, including the 1954 Hague 
        Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event 
        of Armed Conflict, and other obligations for the protection of 
        cultural heritage.
            (2) The Coordinator shall convene a coordinating committee 
        of entities within the Department of Defense that have the 
        responsibility or capacity for protecting cultural heritage.
    (c) Coordinating Committee.--The coordinating committee convened 
pursuant to subsection (b)(2) shall--
            (1) meet not less than annually;
            (2) coordinate with the Cultural Heritage Coordinating 
        Committee convened by the Department of State; and
            (3) solicit consultation and coordination with other 
        Federal agencies and nongovernmental organizations, including 
        the U.S. Committee of the Blue Shield, as well as other expert 
        and stakeholder organizations, as appropriate for the national 
        security interests of the United States.

SEC. 1298. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO CONDUCT MILITARY OPERATIONS 
              IN YEMEN.

    (a) Prohibition.--No amounts authorized to be appropriated by this 
Act or otherwise made available to the Department of Defense for fiscal 
year 2018 may be made available to conduct military operations in 
Yemen.
    (b) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to prohibit the following:
            (1) Activities carried out in full compliance with the 
        Authorization for Use of Military Force (Public Law 107-40; 50 
        U.S.C. 1541 note).
            (2) The provision of humanitarian assistance.
            (3) The defense of United States Armed Forces.
            (4) Support for freedom of navigation operations.

                TITLE XIII--COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION

SEC. 1301. SPECIFICATION OF COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION FUNDS.

    (a) Fiscal Year 2018 Cooperative Threat Reduction Funds Defined.--
In this title, the term ``fiscal year 2018 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 division D for the Department of Defense Cooperative Threat 
Reduction Program established under section 1321 of the Department of 
Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Act (50 U.S.C. 3711).
    (b) Availability of Funds.--Funds appropriated pursuant to the 
authorization of appropriations in section 301 and made available by 
the funding table in division D for the Department of Defense 
Cooperative Threat Reduction Program shall be available for obligation 
for fiscal years 2018, 2019, and 2020.

SEC. 1302. FUNDING ALLOCATIONS.

    (a) In General.--Of the $324,600,000 authorized to be appropriated 
to the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2018 in section 301 and 
made available by the funding table in division D for the Department of 
Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Program established under section 
1321 of the Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Act (50 
U.S.C. 3711), the following amounts may be obligated for the purposes 
specified:
            (1) For strategic offensive arms elimination, $12,100,000.
            (2) For chemical weapons destruction, $5,000,000.
            (3) For global nuclear security, $17,900,000.
            (4) For cooperative biological engagement, $172,800,000.
            (5) For proliferation prevention, $89,800,000.
            (6) For activities designated as Other Assessments/
        Administrative Costs, $27,000,000.
    (b) Modification to Certain Requirements.--The Department of 
Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Act (50 U.S.C. 3701 et seq.) is 
amended as follows:
            (1) Section 1321(g)(1) (50 U.S.C. 3711(g)(1)) is amended by 
        striking ``45 days'' and inserting ``15 days''.
            (2) Section 1324 (50 U.S.C. 3714) is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a)(1)(C), by striking ``45 
                days'' and inserting ``15 days''; and
                    (B) in subsection (b)(3), by striking ``45 days'' 
                and inserting ``15 days''.
            (3) Section 1335(a) (50 U.S.C. 3735(a)) is amended by 
        striking ``or expended''.

                    TITLE XIV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS

                     Subtitle A--Military Programs

SEC. 1401. WORKING CAPITAL FUNDS.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
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. 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 2018 
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. 1403. DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES DEFENSE-WIDE.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department 
of Defense for fiscal year 2018 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. 1404. DEFENSE INSPECTOR GENERAL.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department 
of Defense for fiscal year 2018 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.

SEC. 1405. DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
for the Defense Health Program, as specified in the funding table in 
section 4501, for use of the Armed Forces and other activities and 
agencies of the Department of Defense in providing for the health of 
eligible beneficiaries.

SEC. 1406. NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
for the National Defense Sealift Fund, as specified in the funding 
table in section 4501.

                       Subtitle B--Other Matters

SEC. 1411. AUTHORITY FOR TRANSFER OF FUNDS TO JOINT DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE-DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS MEDICAL FACILITY 
              DEMONSTRATION FUND FOR CAPTAIN JAMES A. LOVELL HEALTH 
              CARE CENTER, ILLINOIS.

    (a) Authority for Transfer of Funds.--Of the funds authorized to be 
appropriated by section 1405 and available for the Defense Health 
Program for operation and maintenance, $115,500,000 may be transferred 
by the Secretary of Defense to the Joint Department of Defense-
Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Facility Demonstration Fund 
established by subsection (a)(1) of section 1704 of the National 
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 
Stat. 2571). For purposes of subsection (a)(2) of such section 1704, 
any funds so transferred shall be treated as amounts authorized and 
appropriated specifically for the purpose of such a transfer.
    (b) Use of Transferred Funds.--For the purposes of subsection (b) 
of such section 1704, facility operations for which funds transferred 
under subsection (a) may be used are operations of the Captain James A. 
Lovell Federal Health Care Center, consisting of the North Chicago 
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, the Navy Ambulatory Care Center, and 
supporting facilities designated as a combined Federal medical facility 
under an operational agreement covered by section 706 of the Duncan 
Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (Public 
Law 110-417; 122 Stat. 4500).

SEC. 1412. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT 
              HOME.

    There is hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
from the Armed Forces Retirement Home Trust Fund the sum of $64,300,000 
for the operation of the Armed Forces Retirement Home.

   TITLE XV--AUTHORIZATION OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR OVERSEAS 
                         CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS

              Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations

SEC. 1501. PURPOSE AND TREATMENT OF CERTAIN AUTHORIZATIONS OF 
              APPROPRIATIONS.

    (a) Purpose.--The purpose of this subtitle is to authorize 
appropriations for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2018 to 
provide additional funds--
            (1) for overseas contingency operations being carried out 
        by the Armed Forces; and
            (2) pursuant to sections 1502, 1503, 1504, and 1505 for 
        expenses, not otherwise provided for, for procurement, 
        research, development, test, and evaluation, operation and 
        maintenance, and military personnel, as specified in the 
        funding tables in sections 4103, 4203, 4303, and 4403.
    (b) Treatment of Funds.--The Director of the Office of Management 
and Budget shall apportion the funds identified in subsection (a)(2) to 
the Department of Defense without restriction, limitation, or 
constraint on the execution of such funds in support of base 
requirements, including any restriction, limitation, or constraint 
imposed by, or described in, the document entitled ``Criteria for War/
Overseas Contingency Operations Funding Requests'' transmitted by the 
Director to the Department of Defense on September 9, 2010, or any 
successor or related guidance.

SEC. 1502. PROCUREMENT.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
for procurement accounts for the Army, the Navy and the Marine Corps, 
the Air Force, and Defense-wide activities, as specified in--
            (1) the funding table in section 4102; or
            (2) the funding table in section 4103.

SEC. 1503. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
for the use of the Department of Defense for research, development, 
test, and evaluation, as specified in--
            (1) the funding table in section 4202; or
            (2) the funding table in section 4203.

SEC. 1504. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
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--
            (1) the funding table in section 4302, or
            (2) the funding table in section 4303.

SEC. 1505. MILITARY PERSONNEL.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
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--
            (1) the funding table in section 4402; or
            (2) the funding table in section 4403.

SEC. 1506. WORKING CAPITAL FUNDS.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 
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. DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE-WIDE.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department 
of Defense for fiscal year 2018 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. 1508. DEFENSE INSPECTOR GENERAL.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department 
of Defense for fiscal year 2018 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.

SEC. 1509. DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department 
of Defense for fiscal year 2018 for expenses, not otherwise provided 
for, for the Defense Health Program, as specified in the funding table 
in section 4502.

                     Subtitle B--Financial Matters

SEC. 1511. 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. 1512. 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 2018 between any such authorizations for that fiscal year 
        (or any subdivisions thereof).
            (2) Effect of transfer.--Amounts of authorizations 
        transferred under this subsection shall be merged with and be 
        available for the same purposes as the authorization to which 
        transferred.
            (3) Limitations.--The total amount of authorizations that 
        the Secretary may transfer under the authority of this 
        subsection may not exceed $2,500,000,000.
            (4) Exception.--In the case of the authorizations of 
        appropriations contained in sections 1502, 1503, 1504, and 1505 
        that are provided for the purpose specified in section 
        1501(a)(2), the transfer authority provided under section 1001, 
        rather than the transfer authority provided by this subsection, 
        shall apply to any transfer of amounts of such authorizations.
    (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, Reports, and Other Matters

SEC. 1521. AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES FUND.

    (a) Continuation Of Prior Authorities And Notice And Reporting 
Requirements.--Funds available to the Department of Defense for the 
Afghanistan Security Forces Fund for fiscal year 2018 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) Equipment Disposition.--
            (1) Acceptance of certain equipment.--Subject to paragraph 
        (2), the Secretary of Defense may accept equipment that is 
        procured using amounts in the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund 
        authorized under this Act and is intended for transfer to the 
        security forces of Afghanistan, but is not accepted by such 
        security forces.
            (2) Conditions on acceptance of equipment.--Before 
        accepting any equipment under the authority provided by 
        paragraph (1), the Commander of United States forces in 
        Afghanistan shall make a determination that the equipment was 
        procured for the purpose of meeting requirements of the 
        security forces of Afghanistan, as agreed to by both the 
        Government of Afghanistan and the United States, but is no 
        longer required by such security forces or was damaged before 
        transfer to such security forces.
            (3) Elements of determination.--In making a determination 
        under paragraph (2) regarding equipment, the Commander of 
        United States forces in Afghanistan shall consider alternatives 
        to Secretary of Defense acceptance of the equipment. An 
        explanation of each determination, including the basis for the 
        determination and the alternatives considered, shall be 
        included in the relevant quarterly report required under 
        paragraph (5).
            (4) Treatment as department of defense stocks.--Equipment 
        accepted under the authority provided by paragraph (1) may be 
        treated as stocks of the Department of Defense upon 
        notification to the congressional defense committees of such 
        treatment.
            (5) Quarterly reports on equipment disposition.--Not later 
        than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act and 
        every 90-day period thereafter during which the authority 
        provided by paragraph (1) is exercised, the Secretary of 
        Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        report describing the equipment accepted under this subsection, 
        section 1531(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 113-66; 127 Stat. 938; 10 U.S.C. 
        2302 note), section 1532(b) of the Carl Levin and Howard P. 
        ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
        Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3612), section 1531(b) 
        of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 
        (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1088), and section 1521(b) of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public 
        Law 114-328) during the period covered by the report. Each 
        report shall include a list of all equipment that was accepted 
        during the period covered by the report and treated as stocks 
        of the Department and copies of the determinations made under 
        paragraph (2), as required by paragraph (3).
    (c) Allocation of Funds.--
            (1) In general.--Of the funds available to the Department 
        of Defense for the Afghan Security Forces Fund for fiscal year 
        2018, it is the goal that $41,000,000 shall be used for--
                    (A) the recruitment, integration, retention, 
                training, and treatment of women in the Afghan National 
                Security Forces; and
                    (B) the recruitment, training, and contracting of 
                female security personnel for future elections.
            (2) Types of programs and activities.--Such programs and 
        activities may include--
                    (A) efforts to recruit women into the Afghan 
                National Security Forces, including the special 
                operations forces;
                    (B) programs and activities of the Afghan Ministry 
                of Defense Directorate of Human Rights and Gender 
                Integration and the Afghan Ministry of Interior Office 
                of Human Rights, Gender and Child Rights;
                    (C) development and dissemination of gender and 
                human rights educational and training materials and 
                programs within the Afghan Ministry of Defense and the 
                Afghan Ministry of Interior;
                    (D) efforts to address harassment and violence 
                against women within the Afghan National Security 
                Forces;
                    (E) improvements to infrastructure that address the 
                requirements of women serving in the Afghan National 
                Security Forces, including appropriate equipment for 
                female security and police forces, and transportation 
                for policewomen to their station;
                    (F) support for Afghanistan National Police Family 
                Response Units; and
                    (G) security provisions for high-profile female 
                police and army officers.
    (d) Assessment of Afghanistan Progress on Security Objectives.--
            (1) Assessment required.--Not later than June 1, 2018, the 
        Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Secretary of 
        State, shall submit to the Committee on Armed Services and the 
        Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives 
        and the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on 
        Foreign Relations of the Senate an assessment describing the 
        progress of the government of the Islamic Republic of 
        Afghanistan toward meeting shared security objectives. In 
        conducting such assessment the Secretary shall consider each of 
        the following:
                    (A) The extent to which the government of 
                Afghanistan has taken steps toward increased 
                accountability and reducing corruption within the 
                Ministries of Defense and Interior.
                    (B) The extent to which the capability and capacity 
                of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces have 
                improved as a result of Afghan Security Forces Fund 
                investment, including through training.
                    (C) The extent to which the Afghan National Defense 
                and Security Forces have been able to increase pressure 
                on the Taliban, al-Qaeda, the Haqqani network, and 
                other terrorist organizations, including by re-taking 
                territory, defending territory, and disrupting attacks.
                    (D) Whether or not the government of Afghanistan is 
                ensuring that supplies, equipment, and weaponry 
                supplied by the United States are appropriately 
                distributed to security forces charged with fighting 
                the Taliban and other terrorist organizations.
                    (E) Such other factors as the Secretaries consider 
                appropriate.
            (2) Withholding of assistance for insufficient progress.--
                    (A) In general.--If the Secretary of Defense, in 
                consultation with the Secretary of State, determines 
                pursuant to the assessment under paragraph (1) that the 
                government of Afghanistan has made insufficient 
                progress, the Secretary of Defense may withhold 
                assistance for the Afghan National Defense and Security 
                Forces until such time as the Secretary determines 
                sufficient progress has been made.
                    (B) Notice to congress.--If the Secretary of 
                Defense withholds assistance under subparagraph (A), 
                the Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of 
                State, shall provide notice to Congress not later than 
                30 days after making the decision to withhold such 
                assistance.

SEC. 1522. JOINT IMPROVISED-THREAT 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 for fiscal year 2018 to 
the Department of Defense for the Joint Improvised-Threat Defeat Fund.
    (b) Interdiction of Improvised Explosive Device Precursor 
Chemicals.--
            (1) Availability of funds.--Of the funds made available to 
        the Department of Defense for the Joint Improvised-Threat 
        Defeat Fund for fiscal year 2018, $15,000,000 may be available 
        to the Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of the 
        Secretary of State, to provide training, equipment, supplies, 
        and services to ministries and other entities of foreign 
        governments that the Secretary has identified as critical for 
        countering the flow of improvised explosive device precursor 
        chemicals.
            (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 by 
        such department or agency of training, equipment, supplies, and 
        services to ministries and other entities of foreign 
        governments as described in that paragraph.
            (3) Notice to congress.--None of the funds made available 
        pursuant to paragraph (1) may be obligated or expended to 
        supply training, equipment, supplies, or services to a foreign 
        country before the date that is 15 days after the date on which 
        the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of 
        State, submits to the Committee on Armed Services and the 
        Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and the Committee 
        on Armed Services and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the 
        House of Representatives a notice that contains--
                    (A) the foreign country for which training, 
                equipment, supplies, or services are proposed to be 
                supplied;
                    (B) a description of the training, equipment, 
                supplies, and services to be provided using such funds;
                    (C) a detailed description of the amount of funds 
                proposed to be obligated or expended to supply such 
                training, equipment, supplies or services, including 
                any funds proposed to be obligated or expended to 
                support the participation of another department or 
                agency of the United States and a description of the 
                training, equipment, supplies, or services proposed to 
                be supplied;
                    (D) an evaluation of the effectiveness of the 
                efforts of the foreign country identified under 
                subparagraph (A) to counter the flow of improvised 
                explosive device precursor chemicals; and
                    (E) an overall plan for countering the flow of 
                precursor chemicals in the foreign country identified 
                under subparagraph (A).
            (4) Expiration.--The authority provided by this subsection 
        expires on December 31, 2018.

SEC. 1523. SEPARATE ACCOUNT LINES FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS 
              FUNDS.

    For accountability and transparency purposes, the Director of the 
Office of Management and Budget and the Secretary of Defense shall 
establish separate accounts to ensure that amounts authorized to be 
appropriated pursuant to this title are administered separately from 
amounts otherwise authorized to be appropriated or made available for 
the Department of Defense.

SEC. 1524. GUIDELINES FOR BUDGET ITEMS TO BE COVERED BY OVERSEAS 
              CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS ACCOUNTS.

    Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Director of 
Management and Budget, shall update the guidelines regarding the budget 
items that may be covered by overseas contingency operations accounts. 
Such revised guidelines shall be consistent with the recommendations 
included in Government Accountability Report GAO-17-68 entitled 
``Overseas Contingency Operations: OMB and DOD Should Revise the 
Criteria for Determining Eligible Costs and Identify the Costs Likely 
to Endure Long Term'' published January 18, 2017.

     TITLE XVI--STRATEGIC PROGRAMS, CYBER, AND INTELLIGENCE MATTERS

       Subtitle A--Management and Organization of Space Programs

SEC. 1601. ESTABLISHMENT OF SPACE CORPS IN THE DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR 
              FORCE.

    (a) Certification.--Not later than January 1, 2019, the Secretary 
of the Air Force shall certify to the congressional defense committees 
that the Space Corps under chapter 809 of title 10, United States Code, 
as added by subsection (b), is established.
    (b) Establishment.--
            (1) In general.--Part I of subtitle D of title 10, United 
        States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
        chapter:

                       ``CHAPTER 809--SPACE CORPS

``Subchapter                                                       Sec.
``I. General Matters........................................       8091
``II. Organization..........................................       8096

                    ``SUBCHAPTER I--GENERAL MATTERS

``Sec.
``8091. Establishment.
``8092. Authorities and Responsibilities.
``8093. Research and development and procurement of satellites and 
                            terminals.
``8094. Space functions of other elements of Department of Defense.
``Sec. 8091. Establishment
    ``(a) Establishment.--Not later than January 1, 2019, the Secretary 
of Defense shall establish in the executive part of the Department of 
the Air Force a Space Corps. The function of the Space Corps shall be 
to assist the Secretary of the Air Force in carrying out the duties 
described in subsection (c).
    ``(b) Composition.--The Space Corps shall be composed of the 
following:
            ``(1) The Chief of Staff of the Space Corps.
            ``(2) Such other offices and officials as may be 
        established by law or as the Secretary of the Air Force, in 
        consultation with the Chief of Staff of the Space Corps, may 
        establish or designate.
    ``(c) Duties.--Except as otherwise specifically prescribed by law, 
the Space Corps shall be organized in such manner, and the members of 
the Space Corps shall perform, such duties and have such titles, as the 
Secretary may prescribe. Such duties shall include--
            ``(1) protecting the interests of the United States in 
        space;
            ``(2) deterring aggression in, from, and through space;
            ``(3) providing combat-ready space forces that enable the 
        commanders of the combatant commands to fight and win wars;
            ``(4) organizing, training, and equipping space forces; and
            ``(5) conducting space operations of the Space Corps under 
        the command of the Commander of the United States Space 
        Command.
``Sec. 8092. Authorities and responsibilities
    ``(a) Professional Assistance.--The Chief of Staff of the Space 
Corps shall furnish professional assistance to the Secretary, the Under 
Secretary, and the Assistant Secretaries of the Air Force.
    ``(b) Authorities.--Under the authority, direction, and control of 
the Secretary of the Air Force, the Chief of Staff of the Space Corps, 
shall--
            ``(1) subject to subsections (c) and (d) of section 8014 of 
        this title, prepare for such employment of the Space Corps, and 
        for such recruiting, organizing, supplying, equipping 
        (including research and development), training, servicing, 
        mobilizing, demobilizing, administering, and maintaining of the 
        Space Corps, as will assist in the execution of any power, 
        duty, or function of the Secretary or the Chief of Staff;
            ``(2) investigate and report upon the efficiency of the 
        Space Corps and its preparation to support military operations 
        by commanders of the combatant commands;
            ``(3) prepare detailed instructions for the execution of 
        approved plans and supervise the execution of those plans and 
        instructions;
            ``(4) as directed by the Secretary, coordinate the action 
        of organizations of the Space Corps; and
            ``(5) perform such other duties, not otherwise assigned by 
        law, as may be prescribed by the Secretary.
    ``(c) Functions.--To the extent practicable, the Secretary shall 
provide to the Space Corps the functions of the Department of the Air 
Force that may be feasibly shared with the Space Corps, including with 
respect to the United States Air Force Academy, recruitment, and basic 
training.
``Sec. 8093. Research and development and procurement of satellites and 
              terminals
    ``(a) Research and Development.--The Secretary of the Air Force 
shall serve as the primary agent of the Department of Defense with 
respect to the research, development, test, and evaluation of 
satellites and user satellite terminals used by the Air Force, the 
Space Corps, and the Defense Agencies (except as otherwise provided by 
section 8094 of this title).
    ``(b) Procurement.--The Secretary shall serve as the primary agent 
of the Department of Defense with respect to the procurement of 
satellites and user satellite terminals used by the military 
departments and the Defense Agencies (except as otherwise provided by 
section 8094 of this title).
    ``(c) Milestone Decision Authority.--(1) Notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, and except as provided in paragraph (2), the 
Secretary shall serve as the milestone decision authority (as defined 
in section 2366a of this title) for major defense acquisition programs 
or major subprograms relating to space.
    ``(2) The Secretary may not serve as the milestone decision 
authority for the user satellite terminal programs of--
            ``(A) the military departments other than the Air Force and 
        the Space Corps; and
            ``(B) the Defense Agencies specified in section 8094(c)(1) 
        of this title.
    ``(d) Requirements.--The Chief of Staff of the Space Corps shall 
develop the requirements for the satellites and user satellite 
terminals for which the Secretary has the authority for research, 
development, test, and evaluation, procurement, and milestone decisions 
pursuant to this section.
``Sec. 8094. Space functions of other elements of Department of Defense
    ``(a) Military Departments.--Nothing in this chapter shall affect 
the authority of each Secretary concerned to--
            ``(1) carry out the research, development, test, and 
        evaluation of satellites and user satellite terminals of the 
        military department of the Secretary concerned;
            ``(2) operate such terminals; and
            ``(3) develop requirements to ensure that the space 
        programs of the Department of Defense support the mission of 
        the Secretary concerned.
    ``(b) Certain Defense Agencies.--Nothing in this chapter shall 
affect the authority of each Director concerned to--
            ``(1) carry out the research, development, test, and 
        evaluation and procurement of satellites and user satellite 
        terminals of the Defense Agency of the Director concerned;
            ``(2) operate such terminals; and
            ``(3) develop requirements to ensure that the space 
        programs of the Department of Defense support the mission of 
        the Director concerned.
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `Director concerned' means--
                    ``(A) the Director of the National Reconnaissance 
                Office, with respect to matters concerning the National 
                Reconnaissance Office; and
                    ``(B) the Director of the National Geospatial-
                Intelligence Agency, with respect to matters concerning 
                the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency.
            ``(2) The term `Secretary concerned' means--
                    ``(A) the Secretary of the Army, with respect to 
                matters concerning the Army; and
                    ``(B) the Secretary of the Navy, with respect to 
                matters concerning the Navy, the Marine Corps, and the 
                Coast Guard when it is operating as a service in the 
                Department of the Navy.

                     ``SUBCHAPTER II--ORGANIZATION

``Sec.
``8096. Chief of Staff of the Space Corps.
``Sec. 8096. Chief of Staff of the Space Corps
    ``(a) Appointment.--(1) There shall be a Chief of Staff of the 
Space Corps, appointed by the President, by and with the advice and 
consent of the Senate. The Chief of Staff shall serve at the pleasure 
of the President.
    ``(2) The Chief of Staff shall be appointed for a term of six 
years. In time of war or during a national emergency declared by 
Congress, the Chief of Staff may be reappointed for a term of not more 
than six years.
    ``(3)(A) The first Chief of Staff appointed after the date of the 
enactment of this section shall be appointed from the general officers 
of the Air Force. The President may appoint the incumbent Commander of 
the Air Force Space Command as the first such Chief of Staff without 
regard to the requirement in paragraph (1) for the advice and consent 
of the Senate.
    ``(B) Each subsequent Chief of Staff shall be appointed from the 
general officers of the Space Corps.
    ``(4) The President may appoint an officer as Chief of Staff only 
if--
            ``(A) the officer has had significant experience in joint 
        duty assignments; and
            ``(B) such experience includes at least one full tour of 
        duty in a joint duty assignment (as defined in section 664(d) 
        of this title) as a general officer.
    ``(5) The President may waive paragraph (4) in the case of an 
officer if the President determines such action is necessary in the 
national interest.
    ``(b) Grade.--The Chief of Staff of the Space Corps, while so 
serving, has the grade of general without vacating the permanent grade 
of the officer.
    ``(c) Reporting.--Except as otherwise prescribed by law and subject 
to section 8013(f) of this title, the Chief of Staff of the Space Corps 
performs the duties of such position under the authority, direction, 
and control of the Secretary of the Air Force and is directly 
responsible to the Secretary.
    ``(d) Duties.--Subject to the authority, direction, and control of 
the Secretary of the Air Force, the Chief of Staff of the Space Corps 
shall--
            ``(1) preside over the Space Corps;
            ``(2) transmit the plans and recommendations of the Space 
        Corps to the Secretary and advise the Secretary with regard to 
        such plans and recommendations;
            ``(3) after approval of the plans or recommendations of the 
        Space Corps by the Secretary, act as the agent of the Secretary 
        in carrying them into effect;
            ``(4) exercise supervision, consistent with the authority 
        assigned to commanders of unified or specified combatant 
        commands under chapter 6 of this title, over such of the 
        members and organizations of the Space Corps and the Air Force 
        as the Secretary determines;
            ``(5) perform the duties prescribed for the Chief of Staff 
        by sections 171 and 2547 of this title and other provisions of 
        law; and
            ``(6) perform such other military duties, not otherwise 
        assigned by law, as are assigned to the Chief of Staff by the 
        President, the Secretary of Defense, or the Secretary of the 
        Air Force.
    ``(e) Joint Chiefs of Staff.--(1) The Chief of Staff of the Space 
Corps shall also perform the duties prescribed for the Chief of Staff 
as a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under section 151 of this 
title.
    ``(2) To the extent that such action does not impair the 
independence of the Chief of Staff in the performance of the duties of 
the Chief of Staff as a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Chief 
of Staff shall inform the Secretary regarding military advice rendered 
by members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on matters affecting the 
Department of the Air Force.
    ``(3) Subject to the authority, direction, and control of the 
Secretary of Defense, the Chief of Staff shall keep the Secretary of 
the Air Force fully informed of significant military operations 
affecting the duties and responsibilities of the Secretary.''.
            (2) Clerical amendments.--The table of chapters at the 
        beginning of subtitle D of title 10, United States Code, and at 
        the beginning of part I of such subtitle, are each amended by 
        inserting after the item relating to chapter 807 the following 
        new item:

``809. Space Corps..........................................   8091.''.
    (c) Joint Chiefs of Staff.--Chapter 5 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended as follows:
            (1) In section 151(a), by adding at the end the following 
        new paragraph:
            ``(8) The Chief of Staff of the Space Corps.''.
            (2) In section 152(b)(1)(B), by striking ``or the 
        Commandant of the Marine Corps'' and inserting ``the Commandant 
        of the Marine Corps, or the Chief of Staff of the Space 
        Corps''.
    (d) Armed Forces Policy Council.--Section 171 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (12), by striking ``; and'';
            (2) in paragraph (13), by striking the period at the end 
        and inserting ``; and''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(14) the Chief of Staff of the Space Corps.''.
    (e) Chief of Service.--Section 1406(i)(3)(A) of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new clause:
                            ``(vi) Chief of Staff of the Space 
                        Corps.''.
    (f) Acquisition-related Functions of Chiefs of the Armed Forces.--
Section 2547(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking 
``and the Commandant of the Marine Corps'' and inserting ``the 
Commandant of the Marine Corps, and the Chief of Staff of the Space 
Corps''.
    (g) Successors to Duties.--Section 8017 of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended by striking paragraph (4) and inserting the following:
            ``(4) The Chief of Staff of the Air Force.
            ``(5) The Chief of Staff of the Space Corps.''.
    (h) Termination of Principal Department of Defense Space Advisor 
and Defense Space Council.--Effective on the date on which the Space 
Corps is established under section 8091 of title 10, United States 
Code, as added by subsection (a)(1)--
            (1) the position, and the office of, the Principal 
        Department of Defense Space Advisor (previously known as the 
        Department of Defense Executive Agent for Space) shall be 
        terminated;
            (2) the personnel of such office shall be transferred to 
        the Air Force and to the Space Corps, as determined appropriate 
        by the Secretary of Defense;
            (3) any reference in Federal law, regulations, guidance, 
        instructions, or other documents of the Federal Government to 
        the Principal Department of Defense Space Advisor or the 
        Department of Defense Executive Agent for Space shall be deemed 
        to be a reference to the Secretary of the Air Force or the 
        Chief of Staff of the Space Corps, as appropriate; and
            (4) the Defense Space Council shall be terminated.
    (i) Military Installations.--Nothing in this section, or the 
amendments made by this section, shall be construed to authorize or 
require the relocation of any facility, infrastructure, or military 
installation of the Air Force.
    (j) Reports.--
            (1) Interim report.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees an interim report on the Space Corps established 
        under chapter 809 of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
        subsection (a)(1), that includes--
                    (A) a review of the organizational and management 
                structure of the Space Corps; and
                    (B) recommendations for the modification and 
                improvement of such organizational and management 
                structure.
            (2) Final report.--Not later than August 1, 2018, the 
        Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a final report on the Space Corps that includes--
                    (A) an update of the review and recommendations 
                described in paragraph (1), including recommendations 
                for any necessary revisions to appointments and 
                qualifications, duties and powers, and precedent in the 
                Department of Defense;
                    (B) recommendations for the appropriate sharing of 
                functions between the Air Force and the Space Corps, 
                including functions with respect to personnel matters 
                and uniforms;
                    (C) a plan for implementing the recommendations 
                described in subparagraphs (A) and (B), which shall 
                include proposed legislative and administrative 
                actions, including conforming and other amendments to 
                law, that the Secretary determines to be appropriate 
                for carrying out such plan;
                    (D) the estimated number of general officers of the 
                Space Corps, including an identification of the current 
                positions of such general officers that will be 
                transferred to the Space Corps and whether the 
                Secretary determines it necessary for the number of 
                general officers authorized in chapter 32 of title 10, 
                United States Code, to be increased; and
                    (E) any other matters that the Secretary determines 
                to be appropriate.

SEC. 1602. ESTABLISHMENT OF SUBORDINATE UNIFIED COMMAND OF THE UNITED 
              STATES STRATEGIC COMMAND.

    (a) Subordinate Unified Command.--Not later than January 1, 2019, 
the Secretary of Defense shall establish a subordinate unified command 
to be known as the United States Space Command under the United States 
Strategic Command.
    (b) Commander.--The Commander of the United States Space Command 
shall hold the grade of general or, in the case of an officer of the 
Navy, admiral while serving in that position, without vacating the 
permanent grade of the officer. The Commander shall be appointed to 
that grade by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the 
Senate, for service in that position.
    (c) Command of Joint Space Activity or Missions.--Unless otherwise 
directed by the President or the Secretary of Defense, the Commander of 
the United States Space Command shall exercise command of joint space 
activities or missions.
    (d) Jointly Staffed.--The United States Space Command shall be 
jointly staffed.

                      Subtitle B--Space Activities

SEC. 1611. CODIFICATION, EXTENSION, AND MODIFICATION OF LIMITATION ON 
              CONSTRUCTION ON UNITED STATES TERRITORY OF SATELLITE 
              POSITIONING GROUND MONITORING STATIONS OF FOREIGN 
              GOVERNMENTS.

    (a) Codification, Extension, and Modification.--Chapter 135 of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the 
following new section:
``Sec. 2279c. Limitation on construction on United States territory of 
              satellite positioning ground monitoring stations of 
              certain foreign governments.
    ``(b) Exception.--The limitation in subsection (a) shall not apply 
to foreign governments that are allies of the United States.
    ``(c) Sunset.--The limitation in subsection (a) shall terminate on 
December 31, 2023.''.
    (b) Transfer of Provision.--Subsection (b) of section 1602 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 
113-66; 10 U.S.C. 2281 note) is--
            (1) transferred to section 2279c of title 10, United States 
        Code, as added by subsection (a);
            (2) inserted as the first subsection of such section;
            (3) redesignated as subsection (a); and
            (4) amended--
                    (A) by amending the subsection heading to read as 
                follows: ``Limitation''; and
                    (B) by striking paragraph (6).

SEC. 1612. FOREIGN COMMERCIAL SATELLITE SERVICES: CYBERSECURITY THREATS 
              AND LAUNCHES.

    (a) Cybersecurity Risks.--Subsection (a) of section 2279 of title 
10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``; or'' and inserting a 
        semicolon;
            (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) entering into such contract would create a 
        cybersecurity risk for the Department of Defense.''.
    (b) Launches.--
            (1) In general.--Such section is amended--
                    (A) by redesignating subsections (b) through (e) as 
                subsections (c) through (f), respectively; and
                    (B) by inserting after subsection (a) the following 
                new subsection (b):
    ``(b) Launches and Manufacturers.--
            ``(1) Limitation.--In addition to the prohibition in 
        subsection (a), and except as provided in subsection (c), the 
        Secretary may not enter into a contract for satellite services 
        with any entity if the Secretary reasonably believes that such 
        satellite services will be provided using satellites that will 
        be--
                    ``(A) designed or manufactured in a covered foreign 
                country, or by an entity controlled in whole or in part 
                by, or acting on behalf of, the government of a covered 
                foreign country; or
                    ``(B) launched using a launch vehicle that is 
                designed or manufactured in a covered foreign country, 
                or that is provided by the government of a covered 
                foreign country or by an entity controlled in whole or 
                in part by, or acting on behalf of, the government of a 
                covered foreign country, regardless of the location of 
                the launch (unless such location is in the United 
                States).
            ``(2) United states launches.--The limitation in paragraph 
        (1) shall not--
                    ``(A) apply to launches in the United States using 
                launch vehicles with engines designed or manufactured 
                in or provided by any entity of the Russian Federation; 
                or
                    ``(B) affect any other provision of law authorizing 
                the use of Russian rocket engines within a United 
                States launch vehicle.
            ``(3) Launch vehicle defined.--In this subsection, the term 
        `launch vehicle' means a fully integrated space launch 
        vehicle.''.
            (2) Exception.--The prohibition in subsection (b) of 
        section 2279 of title 10, United States Code, as added by 
        paragraph (1), shall not apply with respect to--
                    (A) a launch that occurred prior to the date that 
                is six months after the date of the enactment of this 
                Act; or
                    (B) a contract or other agreement relating to 
                launch services that, prior to the date that is six 
                months after the date of the enactment of this Act, was 
                either fully paid for by the contractor or covered by a 
                legally binding commitment of the contractor to pay for 
                such services.
    (c) Definitions.--Subsection (f) of section 2279 of title 10, 
United States Code, as redesignated by subsection (b)(1)(A), is amended 
to read as follows:
    ``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `covered foreign country' means any of the 
        following:
                    ``(A) A country described in section 1261(c)(2) of 
                the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
                2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 2019).
                    ``(B) The Russian Federation.
            ``(2) The term `cybersecurity risk' means threats to and 
        vulnerabilities of information or information systems and any 
        related consequences caused by or resulting from unauthorized 
        access, use, disclosure, degradation, disruption, modification, 
        or destruction of such information or information systems, 
        including such related consequences caused by an act of 
        terrorism.''.
    (d) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
            (1) Conforming amendments.--Such section 2279 is further 
        amended--
                    (A) in the section heading, by striking 
                ``services'' and inserting ``services and foreign 
                launches'';
                    (B) by striking ``subsection (b)'' each place it 
                appears and inserting ``subsection (c)'';
                    (C) in subsection (a)(2), by striking ``launch or 
                other'';
                    (D) in subsection (c), as redesignated by 
                subsection (b)(1), by striking ``prohibition in 
                subsection (a)'' and inserting ``prohibitions in 
                subsection (a) and (b)''; and
                    (E) in subsection (d), as so redesignated, by 
                striking ``prohibition under subsection (a)'' and 
                inserting ``prohibition under subsection (a) or (b)''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of chapter 135 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended by striking the item relating to section 2279 and 
        inserting the following:

``2279. Foreign commercial satellite services and foreign launches.''.
    (e) Application.--Except as provided by subsection (b)(2), the 
amendments made by this section shall apply with respect to contracts 
for satellite services awarded by the Secretary of Defense on or after 
the date of the enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1613. EXTENSION OF PILOT PROGRAM ON COMMERCIAL WEATHER DATA.

    Section 1613 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by striking ``one year'' and 
        inserting ``two years'';
            (2) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) by striking ``Committees on Armed Services of 
                the House of Representatives and the Senate'' each 
                place it appears and inserting ``appropriate 
                congressional committees''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                paragraph:
            ``(3) Appropriate congressional committees defined.--In 
        this subsection, the term `appropriate congressional 
        committees' means--
                    ``(A) the Committees on Armed Services of the 
                Senate and the House of Representatives; and
                    ``(B) the Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
                Senate and the Permanent Select Committee on 
                Intelligence of the House of Representatives.''.

SEC. 1614. CONDITIONAL TRANSFER OF ACQUISITION AND FUNDING AUTHORITY OF 
              CERTAIN WEATHER MISSIONS TO NATIONAL RECONNAISSANCE 
              OFFICE.

    Section 1614 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (e); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new 
        subsection (d):
    ``(d) Implementation of Plans.--The Secretary of the Air Force 
shall implement the plan developed under paragraph (1) of subsection 
(b), and the Director of the National Reconnaissance Office shall 
implement the plan developed under paragraph (2) of such subsection, 
unless the Secretary and the Director each make a waiver under 
subsection (c).''.

SEC. 1615. EVOLVED EXPENDABLE LAUNCH VEHICLE MODERNIZATION AND 
              SUSTAINMENT OF ASSURED ACCESS TO SPACE.

    (a) Development.--
            (1) Evolved expendable launch vehicle.--Using funds 
        described in paragraph (3), the Secretary of Defense may only 
        obligate or expend funds to carry out the evolved expendable 
        launch vehicle program to--
                    (A) develop a domestic rocket propulsion system to 
                replace non-allied space launch engines;
                    (B) develop the necessary interfaces to, or 
                integration of, such domestic rocket propulsion system 
                with an existing or new launch vehicle;
                    (C) develop capabilities necessary to enable 
                commercially available space launch vehicles or 
                infrastructure to meet any requirements that are unique 
                to national security space missions to meet the assured 
                access to space requirements pursuant to section 2273 
                of title 10, United States Code, with respect to only--
                            (i) modifications to such vehicles required 
                        for national security space missions, 
                        including--
                                    (I) certification and compliance of 
                                such vehicles for use in national 
                                security space missions;
                                    (II) fairings necessary for the 
                                launch of national security space 
                                payloads to orbit; and
                                    (III) other upgrades to meet 
                                performance, reliability, and orbital 
                                requirements that cannot otherwise be 
                                met through the use of commercially 
                                available launch vehicles; and
                            (ii) the development of infrastructure 
                        unique to national security space missions, 
                        such as infrastructure for the use of heavy 
                        launch vehicles, including--
                                    (I) facilities and equipment for 
                                the vertical integration of payloads;
                                    (II) secure facilities for the 
                                processing of classified payloads; and
                                    (III) other facilities and 
                                equipment, including ground systems and 
                                expanded capabilities, unique to 
                                national security space launches and 
                                the launch of national security 
                                payloads;
                    (D) conduct activities to modernize and improve 
                existing certified launch vehicles, or existing launch 
                vehicles previously contracted for use by the Air 
                Force, including restarting a dormant supply chain, and 
                infrastructure to increase the cost effectiveness of 
                the launch system;
                    (E) certify new, modified, or existing launch 
                vehicle systems; or
                    (F) develop, design, and integrate parts for new 
                launch vehicle systems to the extent such parts are 
                developed primarily for national security use.
            (2) Prohibition.--Except as provided in this section, none 
        of the funds described in paragraph (3) shall be obligated or 
        expended for the evolved expendable launch vehicle program, 
        including the development of new launch vehicles under such 
        program.
            (3) Funds described.--The funds described in this paragraph 
        are the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
        otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for research, 
        development, test, and evaluation, Air Force, for the evolved 
        expendable launch vehicle program.
    (b) Other Authorities.--Nothing in this section shall affect or 
prohibit the Secretary from procuring launch services of evolved 
expendable launch vehicle launch systems, including with respect to any 
associated operation and maintenance of capabilities and infrastructure 
relating to such systems.
    (c) Notification.--Not later than 30 days before any date on which 
the Secretary publishes a draft or final request for proposals, or 
obligates funds, for the development under subsection (a)(1), the 
Secretary shall notify the congressional defense committees of such 
proposed draft or final request for proposals or proposed obligation, 
as the case may be. If such proposed draft or final request for 
proposals or proposed obligation relates to intelligence requirements, 
the Secretary shall also notify the Permanent Select Committee on 
Intelligence of the House of Representatives and the Select Committee 
on Intelligence of the Senate.
    (d) Assessment.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary, in coordination with the Director 
of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation, shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees, the Permanent Select Committee on 
Intelligence of the House of Representatives, and the Select Committee 
on Intelligence of the Senate a report containing an assessment of the 
most cost-effective method to meet the assured access to space 
requirements pursuant to section 2273 of title 10, United States Code, 
with respect to each of the following periods:
            (1) The five-year period beginning on the date of the 
        report.
            (2) The 10-year period beginning on the date of the report.
            (3) The period consisting of the full lifecycle of the 
        evolved expendable launch vehicle program.
    (e) Rocket Propulsion System Defined.--In this section, the term 
``rocket propulsion system'' means, with respect to the development 
authorized by subsection (a)(1), a main booster, first-stage rocket 
engine (including such an engine using kerosene or methane-based or 
other propellant) or motor. The term does not include a launch vehicle, 
an upper stage, a strap-on motor, or related infrastructure.

SEC. 1616. COMMERCIAL SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS PATHFINDER PROGRAM.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the Sense of Congress that the 
Secretary of the Air Force should--
            (1) use the acquisition authority under the pathfinder 
        program to acquire, from commercial providers, satellite 
        bandwidth, ground services, and advanced services; and
            (2) use the transaction authority provided by section 2371 
        of title 10, United States Code, to make a portion of such 
        acquisitions.
    (b) Report.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the Secretary of the Air 
Force shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate 
and the House of Representatives a report that includes the views and 
plans of the Secretary with respect to making a portion of the 
acquisitions described in subsection (a)(1) using the transaction 
authority provided by section 2371 of title 10, United States Code.
    (c) Definition.--In this section, the term ``pathfinder program'' 
means the commercial satellite communications programs of the Air Force 
designed to demonstrate the feasibility of new, alternative acquisition 
and procurement models for commercial satellite communications.

SEC. 1617. DEMONSTRATION OF BACKUP AND COMPLEMENTARY POSITIONING, 
              NAVIGATION, AND TIMING CAPABILITIES OF GLOBAL POSITIONING 
              SYSTEM.

    (a) Plan.--During fiscal year 2018, the Secretary of Defense, the 
Secretary of Transportation, and the Secretary of Homeland Security 
(referred to in this section as the ``Secretaries'') shall jointly 
develop a plan for carrying out a backup GPS capability demonstration. 
The plan shall--
            (1) be based on the results of the study conducted under 
        section 1618 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
        Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2595); and
            (2) include the activities that the Secretaries determine 
        necessary to carry out such demonstration.
    (b) Briefing.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretaries shall provide to the appropriate 
congressional committees a briefing on the plan developed under 
subsection (a). The briefing shall include--
            (1) identification of the sectors that would be expected to 
        participate in the backup GPS capability demonstration 
        described in the plan;
            (2) an estimate of the costs of implementing the 
        demonstration in each sector identified in paragraph (1); and
            (3) an explanation of the extent to which the demonstration 
        may be carried out with the funds appropriated for such 
        purpose.
    (c) Implementation.--
            (1) In general.--Subject to the availability of 
        appropriations and beginning not earlier than the day after the 
        date on which the briefing is provided under subsection (b), 
        the Secretaries shall jointly initiate the backup GPS 
        capability demonstration to the extent described under 
        subsection (b)(3).
            (2) Termination.--The authority to carry out the backup GPS 
        capability demonstration under paragraph (1) shall terminate on 
        the date that is 18 months after the date of the enactment of 
        this Act.
    (d) Report.--Not later than 18 months after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretaries shall submit to the appropriate 
congressional committees a report on the backup GPS capability 
demonstration carried out under subsection (c) that includes--
            (1) a description of the opportunities and challenges 
        learned from such demonstration; and
            (2) a description of the next actions the Secretaries 
        determine appropriate to backup and complement the positioning, 
        navigation, and timing capabilities of the Global Positioning 
        System for national security and critical infrastructure, 
        including, at a minimum, the timeline and funding required to 
        issue a request for proposals for such capabilities.
    (e) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be 
appropriated to carry out this section for fiscal year 2018 not more 
than $10,000,000 for the Department of Defense, as specified in the 
funding tables in division D.
    (f) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees;
                    (B) the Committee on Science, Space, and 
                Technology, the Committee on Transportation and 
                Infrastructure, and the Committee on Homeland Security 
                of the House of Representatives; and
                    (C) the Committee on Commerce, Science, and 
                Transportation and the Committee on Homeland Security 
                and Governmental Affairs of the Senate.
            (2) The term ``backup GPS capability demonstration'' means 
        a proof-of-concept demonstration of capabilities to backup and 
        complement the positioning, navigation, and timing capabilities 
        of the Global Positioning System for national security and 
        critical infrastructure.

SEC. 1618. ENHANCEMENT OF POSITIONING, NAVIGATION, AND TIMING CAPACITY.

    (a) Plan.--The Secretary of Defense shall develop and implement a 
plan to increase the positioning, navigation, and timing capacity of 
the Department of Defense to provide resilience to the positioning, 
navigation, and timing capabilities of the Department. Such plan 
shall--
            (1) ensure that military Global Positioning System user 
        equipment terminals have the capability to receive signals from 
        the Galileo satellites of the European Union and the QZSS 
        satellites of Japan, beginning with increment 2 of the 
        acquisition of such terminals;
            (2) include an assessment of the feasibility, benefits, and 
        risks of military Global Positioning System user equipment 
        terminals having the capability to receive foreign positioning, 
        navigation, and timing signals (with respect to such signals 
        described in the classified annex accompanying this Act), 
        beginning with increment 2 of the acquisition of such 
        terminals;
            (3) include an assessment of options to use hosted payloads 
        to provide redundancy for the Global Positioning System signal;
            (4) ensure that the Secretary, with the concurrence of the 
        Secretary of State, engages with relevant allies of the United 
        States to--
                    (A) enable military Global Positioning System user 
                equipment terminals to receive the positioning, 
                navigation, and timing signals of such allies; and
                    (B) negotiate other potential agreements relating 
                to the enhancement of positioning, navigation, and 
                timing;
            (5) include any other options the Secretary of Defense 
        determines appropriate; and
            (6) include an evaluation by the Director of National 
        Intelligence of the benefits and risks, if any, of using 
        foreign positioning, navigation, and timing signals.
    (b) Submission.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall--
            (1) submit to the congressional defense committees, the 
        Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives, 
        and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate the plan 
        under subsection (a); and
            (2) submit to the Permanent Select Committee on 
        Intelligence of the House of Representatives and the Select 
        Committee on Intelligence of the Senate the evaluation 
        described in paragraph (6) of such subsection.

SEC. 1619. ESTABLISHMENT OF SPACE FLAG TRAINING EVENT.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than December 31, 2020, the Secretary 
of Defense shall establish an annual capstone training event titled 
``Space Flag'' for space professionals to--
            (1) develop and test doctrine, concepts of operation, and 
        tactics, techniques, and procedures, for--
                    (A) protecting and defending assets and interests 
                of the United States through the spectrum of space 
                control activities;
                    (B) operating in the event of degradation or loss 
                of space capabilities;
                    (C) conducting space operations in a conflict that 
                extends to space;
                    (D) deterring conflict in space; and
                    (E) other areas the Secretary determines necessary; 
                and
            (2) inform and develop the appropriate design of the 
        operational training infrastructure of the space domain, 
        including with respect to appropriate and dedicated ranges, 
        threat replication, test community support, advanced space 
        training requirements, training simulators, and multi-domain 
        force packaging.
    (b) Training.--In establishing the Space Flag training event under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall--
            (1) model the training event on the Red Flag and Cyber Flag 
        exercises; and
            (2) ensure that Space Flag includes live, virtual, and 
        constructive training and on-orbit threat replication, as 
        appropriate.
    (c) Plan.--Not later than one year after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary, in coordination with the Commander of the 
Air Force Space Command, the Commander of the Army Space and Missile 
Defense Command, and the Commander of the Navy Space and Naval Warfare 
Systems Command, shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
plan to establish the Space Flag training under subsection (a), 
including a description of each objective of the training.

SEC. 1620. REPORT ON OPERATIONAL AND CONTINGENCY PLANS FOR LOSS OR 
              DEGRADATION OF SPACE CAPABILITIES.

    (a) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the 
Joint Chiefs of Staff, in coordination with each commander of a 
combatant command, shall jointly submit to the appropriate 
congressional committees a report evaluating all operational and 
contingency plans to assess the implications for mission performance in 
the event of a loss or degradation of space capabilities of the United 
States (including with respect to space control) either through the 
loss or degradation of on-orbit assets or through the disabling of 
ground components.
    (b) Matters Included.--The report under subsection (a) shall 
address and describe the extent to which the operational and 
contingency plans described in such subsection--
            (1) depend upon space capabilities to achieve successful 
        execution;
            (2) account for the loss or degradation of space 
        capabilities;
            (3) appropriately reflect intelligence concerning current 
        and projected adversary counter-space capabilities and 
        vulnerabilities of the space systems of the United States;
            (4) include measures to mitigate any loss or degradation of 
        space capabilities;
            (5) include specific guidance for the short- and long-term 
        loss or disruption of space capabilities;
            (6) include specific guidance for the period in which there 
        is a total loss of space capabilities before replacement assets 
        are able to be brought online and operational; and
            (7) assess the extent to which adversaries rely on space, 
        including the potential effects of a short or long term loss 
        of, or disruption to, the space capabilities of such 
        adversaries.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means 
        the following:
                    (A) With respect to the full report under 
                subsection (a), the Committees on Armed Services of the 
                House of Representatives and the Senate.
                    (B) With respect to the matters in the report 
                described in subsection (b)(3), and for any other 
                matters in the report relating to the limitations, 
                impacts, and vulnerabilities of the capabilities and 
                systems of the intelligence community, the Permanent 
                Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
                Representatives and the Select Committee on 
                Intelligence of the Senate.
            (2) The term ``intelligence community'' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 3(4) of the National Security Act of 
        1947 (50 U.S.C. 3003(4)).

SEC. 1621. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDING FOR JOINT SPACE 
              OPERATIONS CENTER MISSION SYSTEM.

    (a) Limitation.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this 
Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the Joint 
Space Operations Center mission system, not more than 75 percent may be 
obligated or expended until the date on which the Secretary of the Air 
Force certifies to the congressional defense committees that the 
Secretary has developed the plan under subsection (b).
    (b) Plan.--The Secretary shall develop and implement a plan to 
operationalize existing commercial space situational awareness 
capabilities to address warfighter requirements, consistent with the 
best-in-breed concept. The Secretary shall commence such implementation 
by not later than March 30, 2018.

SEC. 1622. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS RELATING TO ADVANCED 
              EXTREMELY HIGH FREQUENCY PROGRAM.

    (a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for research, 
development, test, and evaluation, Air Force, for protected tactical 
enterprise (PE 1206760F), protected tactical service (PE 1206761F), or 
protected satellite communication services (PE 1206855F) for the 
Evolved Strategic SATCOM (EES) system, may be obligated or expended on 
a final request for proposals, other than evolution of the AEHF program 
of record until the date on which the reports required under subsection 
(b) are submitted to the congressional defense committees.
    (b) Assessments and Certifications.--
            (1) The Commanders of STRATCOM and NORTHCOM jointly 
        certifies a protected satcom system other than the AEHF program 
        of record or an evolution of the same will meet all applicable 
        requirements for Nuclear Command and Control and continuity of 
        government, and all other functions related to protected 
        communications of the National Command Authority and the 
        Combatant Commands, to include operational forces in a peer-
        near-peer jamming environment;
            (2) The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff submits the 
        validated military requirement for resilience and mission 
        assurance, and the criteria to measure and evaluate the same, 
        of each and any alternative to an evolved advanced extremely 
        high frequency program; how each alternative affects deterrence 
        and full spectrum warfighting, warfighter requirements and 
        relative costs, including with respect to ground station and 
        user terminals; the assessed order of battle of adversaries; 
        and the required capabilities of the broader space security and 
        defense enterprise;
            (3) The Secretary of the Air Force submits a detailed plan 
        for the ground control system and all user terminals developed 
        and acquired by the Air Force will be synchronized through 
        development and deployment to meet all applicable requirements 
        for Nuclear Command and Control and continuity of government, 
        and other functions related to protected communications of the 
        National Command Authority and the Combatant Commands; and
            (4) The Chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff completes an 
        assessment concerning the impact of developing and fielding all 
        the waveforms and terminals required to utilize the proposed 
        alternative systems to the AEHF program of record or an 
        evolution of the same.
    (c) Exception.--The limitation in paragraph (a) shall not apply to 
efforts to examine and develop technology insertion opportunities for 
the satellite communications programs of record.
    (d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section may be construed 
as delaying the request for proposals for the Enhanced Advanced 
Extremely High Frequency (E-AEHF) program.

SEC. 1623. COORDINATING EFFORTS TO PREPARE FOR SPACE WEATHER EVENTS.

    The Secretary of Defense shall ensure the timely provision of 
operational space weather observations, analyses, forecasts, and other 
products to support the mission of the Department of Defense and 
coalition partners, including the provision of alerts and warnings for 
space weather phenomena that may affect weapons systems, military 
operations, or the defense of the United States.

SEC. 1624. REPORT ON SPACE-BASED NUCLEAR DETECTION.

    (a) Report.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs 
of Staff, the Secretary of Energy, and the Secretary of State shall 
jointly submit to the congressional defense committees, the Permanent 
Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of Representatives, and 
the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate a report on space-
based nuclear detection.
    (b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall include, at a 
minimum, the following:
            (1) A description of the space-based nuclear detection 
        program (including the space-based atmospheric burst reporting 
        system).
            (2) The strategic plan, including with respect to current 
        and planned space platforms, to host the relevant payloads for 
        such program.
            (3) The current and planned national security requirements 
        for space-based nuclear detection, including--
                    (A) an attribution of such requirements to specific 
                missions of the departments and agencies of the Federal 
                Government; and
                    (B) how such requirements compare to past 
                requirements.
            (4) How current and future funding for the space-based 
        nuclear detection program is being provided by each such 
        department or agency to meet each mission requirement.
    (c) Form.--The report under subsection (a) shall be submitted in 
unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1625. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON NEW COMMERCIAL SATELLITE SERVICING 
              ACTIVITIES.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) Government funding and support is an important element 
        in fostering the development of a robust marketplace of new 
        commercial satellite servicing activities; and
            (2) the Federal Government should ensure that in its 
        actions it does not unduly or artificially distort competition 
        in the market for new commercial satellite servicing 
        activities.

  Subtitle C--Defense Intelligence and Intelligence-Related Activities

SEC. 1631. SECURITY CLEARANCES FOR FACILITIES OF CERTAIN CONTRACTORS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 141 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2410s. Security clearances for facilities of certain 
              contractors.
    ``If the senior management official of a contractor of the 
Department of Defense does not have a security clearance, the Secretary 
of Defense may grant a security clearance to a facility of such 
contractor only if the following criteria are met:
            ``(1) The contractor has appointed a senior officer, 
        director, or employee of the contractor who has a security 
        clearance at the level of the security clearance of the 
        facility to act as the senior management official of the 
        contractor with respect to such facility.
            ``(2) Any senior management official, senior officer, or 
        director of the contractor who does not have such a security 
        clearance will not have access to any classified information, 
        including with respect to such facility.
            ``(3) The contractor has certified to the Secretary that 
        the senior officer, director, or employee appointed under 
        paragraph (1) has the authority to act on behalf of the 
        contractor with respect to such facility independent of any 
        senior management official, senior officer, or director 
        described in paragraph (2).
            ``(4) The facility meets all of the requirements to be 
        granted a security clearance other than any requirement 
        relating to the senior management official of the contractor 
        having an appropriate security clearance.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
such chapter is amended by adding at the end the following new item:

``2410s. Security clearances for facilities of certain contractors''.

SEC. 1632. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO ENGAGE IN CERTAIN COMMERCIAL 
              ACTIVITIES.

    Section 431(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``December 31, 2017'' and inserting ``December 31, 2023''.

SEC. 1633. SUBMISSION OF AUDITS OF COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY FUNDS.

    Section 432(b)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``promptly''; and
            (2) by inserting before the period at the end the 
        following: ``by not later than December 31 of each year''.

SEC. 1634. CLARIFICATION OF ANNUAL BRIEFING ON THE INTELLIGENCE, 
              SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE REQUIREMENTS OF THE 
              COMBATANT COMMANDS.

    Section 1626 of the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 
113-291; 128 Stat. 3635) is amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(including with respect to space-based 
        intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance)'' after 
        ``intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance requirements'' 
        both places it appears; and
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``critical intelligence, 
        surveillance and reconnaissance requirements'' and inserting 
        ``critical intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance 
        requirements (including with respect to space-based 
        intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance)''.

SEC. 1635. REVIEW OF SUPPORT PROVIDED BY DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE ELEMENTS 
              TO ACQUISITION ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT.

    (a) Review.--The Secretary of Defense shall review the support 
provided by Defense intelligence elements to the acquisition activities 
conducted by the Secretary, with a specific focus on such support--
            (1) consisting of planning, prioritizing, and resourcing 
        relating to developmental weapon systems; and
            (2) for existing weapon systems throughout the program 
        lifecycle of such systems.
    (b) Budget Structure.--The Secretary shall develop a specific 
budget structure for a sustainable funding profile to ensure the 
support provided by Defense intelligence elements described in 
subsection (a). The Secretary shall implement such structure beginning 
with the defense budget materials for fiscal year 2020.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than May 1, 2018, the Secretary of Defense 
shall provide to the appropriate congressional committees a briefing on 
the results of the review under subsection (a) and a plan to carry out 
subsection (b).
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees; and
                    (B) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence 
                of the House of Representatives and the Select 
                Committee on Intelligence of the Senate.
            (2) The term ``defense budget materials'' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 231(f) of title 10, United States 
        Code.
            (3) The term ``Defense intelligence element'' means any of 
        the agencies, offices, and elements of the Department of 
        Defense included within the definition of ``intelligence 
        community'' under section 3(4) of the National Security Act of 
        1947 (50 U.S.C. 3003(4)).

SEC. 1636. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR CERTAIN OFFENSIVE 
              COUNTERINTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES.

    (a) Limitation on Offensive Counterintelligence Activities.--
            (1) In general.--Of the funds described in paragraph (2), 
        not more than 75 percent may be obligated or expended until--
                    (A) the Secretary of Defense submits to the 
                appropriate congressional committees the report under 
                subsection (b);
                    (B) the Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency 
                submits to such committees the report under subsection 
                (c); and
                    (C) the Director and the Under Secretary of Defense 
                for Intelligence jointly provide to such committees the 
                briefing under subsection (d).
            (2) Funds described.--The funds described in this paragraph 
        are the following:
                    (A) Funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act 
                or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 under 
                the General Defense Intelligence Program for any 
                operations and maintenance account for offensive 
                counterintelligence activities.
                    (B) Funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act 
                or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 under 
                the Military Intelligence Program for any operations 
                and maintenance account for offensive 
                counterintelligence activities.
    (b) Report on Oversight Processes.--Not later than March 1, 2018, 
the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the appropriate congressional 
committees a report certifying that each Defense intelligence element 
with offensive counterintelligence authorities has the appropriate 
oversight processes necessary to ensure compliance with the regulations 
of the Department of Defense.
    (c) Report on Certain Resources.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the 
Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency shall submit to the 
appropriate congressional committees a report that includes an 
accounting of the counterintelligence enterprise management resources 
transferred from the Counterintelligence Field Activity to the Defense 
Intelligence Agency that identifies such resources that are no longer 
dedicated to counterintelligence activities, as of the date of the 
report.
    (d) Briefing on Functional Management.--Not later than March 1, 
2018, the Director and the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence 
shall jointly provide to the appropriate congressional committees a 
briefing on how the Director and the Under Secretary plan to improve 
the functional management of offensive counterintelligence activities.
    (e) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees; and
                    (B) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence 
                of the House of Representatives and the Select 
                Committee on Intelligence of the Senate.
            (2) The term ``Defense intelligence element'' means any of 
        the Department of Defense agencies, offices, and elements 
        included within the definition of ``intelligence community'' 
        under section 3(4) of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 
        U.S.C. 3003(4)).

SEC. 1637. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR CERTAIN RELOCATION 
              ACTIVITIES FOR NATO INTELLIGENCE FUSION CENTER.

    None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for operation and 
maintenance may be obligated or expended for the procurement of fit-out 
supplies and equipment to support the relocation of the NATO 
Intelligence Fusion Center from Royal Air Force Molesworth, United 
Kingdom, to Royal Air Force Croughton, United Kingdom.

SEC. 1638. ESTABLISHMENT OF CHAIRMAN'S CONTROLLED ACTIVITY WITHIN JOINT 
              STAFF FOR INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE.

    (a) Chairman's Controlled Activity.--The Chairman of the Joint 
Chiefs of Staff shall--
            (1) undertake the roles, missions, and responsibilities of, 
        and an equal or greater number of personnel billets than the 
        amount of such billets previously prescribed for the Joint 
        Functional Component Command for Intelligence, Surveillance, 
        and Reconnaissance of United States Strategic Command; and
            (2) not later than 30 days after the date of the enactment 
        of this Act, establish an organization within the Joint Staff--
                    (A) that is designated as a chairman's controlled 
                activity;
                    (B) for which the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of 
                Staff shall serve as the joint functional manager; and
                    (C) which shall synchronize cross-combatant command 
                intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance plans 
                and develop strategies integrating all joint service-
                provided and allied intelligence, surveillance, and 
                reconnaissance capabilities to satisfy combatant 
                command intelligence needs for the Department of 
                Defense.
    (b) Executive Agent.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate the 
Secretary of the Air Force as the executive agent and sponsor for 
funding for the organization established under subsection (a)(2).

SEC. 1639. SENSE OF CONGRESS AND REPORT ON GEOSPATIAL COMMERCIAL 
              ACTIVITIES FOR BASIC AND APPLIED RESEARCH AND 
              DEVELOPMENT.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) rapid technology change and a significant increase in 
        data collection by the intelligence community has outpaced the 
        ability of the intelligence community to exploit vast 
        quantities of intelligence data;
            (2) the data collection capabilities of the intelligence 
        community and the Department of Defense have outpaced to 
        exploit vast quantities of data;
            (3) furthermore, international competitors may be catching 
        up, and in some cases leading, in key technology areas;
            (4) many U.S. companies have talent and technological 
        capability that the Federal Government could harness; and
            (5) these companies would be able to more effectively 
        develop automation, artificial intelligence, and associated 
        algorithms if given access to data of the National Geospatial-
        Intelligence Agency, consistent with the protection of sources 
        and methods.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Director of the National Geospatial-Intelligence 
Agency shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees a 
report on the authorities necessary to conduct commercial activities 
relating to geospatial intelligence that the Director determines 
necessary to engage in basic research, applied research, data 
transfers, and development projects, with respect to automation, 
artificial intelligence, and associated algorithms, including how the 
Director would use such authorities, consistent with applicable laws 
and procedures relating to the protection of sources and methods.
    (c) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives and the Senate; and
            (2) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
        House of Representatives and the Select Committee on 
        Intelligence of the Senate.

SEC. 1640. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COUNTERINTELLIGENCE POLYGRAPH PROGRAM.

    Section 1564a(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by 
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
            ``(5) Any person who is a United States national who also 
        has the nationality of a foreign state.''.

SEC. 1641. SECURITY CLEARANCE FOR DUAL-NATIONALS.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 80 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 1564a the following new section:
``Sec. 1564b. Security clearance for dual nationals
    ``(a) In General.--In the case of an individual who is a United 
States national who also has the nationality of a foreign state who is 
appointed to or hired for a position designated by the Office of 
Personnel Management as critical sensitive or special sensitive, the 
Secretary shall provide additional review before approving a security 
clearance for such individual.
    ``(b) Waiver.--
            ``(1) Waiver authority.--In the case of a person who is a 
        United States national who also has the nationality of a 
        foreign state identified under paragraph (2), the Secretary may 
        waive the requirement under subsection (a).
            ``(2) Foreign states.--The Director of National 
        Intelligence shall identify foreign states that permit citizens 
        or nationals of the United States to serve in positions of 
        trust equivalent to positions identified by the Office of 
        Personnel Management as critical sensitive or special 
        sensitive.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
such chapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to section 
1564a the following new item:

``1564b. Security clearance for dual nationals of high threat foreign 
                            states.''.

SEC. 1642. SUSPENSION OR REVOCATION OF SECURITY CLEARANCES BASED ON 
              UNLAWFUL OR INAPPROPRIATE CONTACTS WITH REPRESENTATIVES 
              OF A FOREIGN GOVERNMENT.

    The Secretary of Defense may suspend or revoke any security 
clearance granted by the Department of Defense if the holder of that 
security clearance has engaged in unlawful or inappropriate contacts 
with representatives of the government of a foreign country.

                 Subtitle D--Cyberspace-Related Matters

SEC. 1651. NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS FOR SENSITIVE MILITARY CYBER 
              OPERATIONS AND CYBER WEAPONS.

    (a) Notification.--Chapter 3 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following new sections:
``Sec. 130j. Notification requirements for sensitive military cyber 
              operations
    ``(a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (d), the 
Secretary of Defense shall promptly submit to the congressional defense 
committees notice in writing of any sensitive military cyber operation 
conducted under this title no later than 48 hours following such 
operation.
    ``(b) Procedures.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall establish and 
submit to the congressional defense committees procedures for complying 
with the requirements of subsection (a) consistent with the national 
security of the United States and the protection of operational 
integrity. The Secretary shall promptly notify the congressional 
defense committees in writing of any changes to such procedures at 
least 14 days prior to the adoption of any such changes.
    ``(2) The congressional defense committees shall ensure that 
committee procedures designed to protect from unauthorized disclosure 
classified information relating to national security of the United 
States are sufficient to protect the information that is submitted to 
the committees pursuant to this section.
    ``(3) In the event of an unauthorized disclosure of a sensitive 
military cyber operation covered by this section, the Secretary shall 
ensure, to the maximum extent practicable, that the congressional 
defense committees are notified immediately of the sensitive military 
cyber operation concerned. The notification under this paragraph may be 
verbal or written, but in the event of a verbal notification a written 
notification shall be provided by not later than 48 hours after the 
provision of the verbal notification.
    ``(c) Sensitive Military Cyber Operation Defined.--(1) In this 
section, the term `sensitive military cyber operation' means an action 
described in paragraph (2) that--
            ``(A) is carried out by the armed forces or by a foreign 
        partner in coordination with the armed forces; and
            ``(B) is intended to cause effects outside a geographic 
        location where United States armed forces are involved in 
        hostilities (as that term is used in section 1543 of title 50, 
        United States Code).
    ``(2) The actions described in this paragraph are the following:
            ``(A) An offensive cyber operation.
            ``(B) A defensive cyber operation outside the Department of 
        Defense Information Networks to defeat an ongoing or imminent 
        threat.
    ``(d) Exceptions.--The notification requirement under subsection 
(a) does not apply--
            ``(1) to a training exercise conducted with the consent of 
        all nations where the intended effects of the exercise will 
        occur; or
            ``(2) to a covert action (as that term is defined in 
        section 3093 of title 50, United States Code).
    ``(e) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to provide any new authority or to alter or otherwise affect 
the War Powers Resolution (50 U.S.C. 1541 et seq.), the Authorization 
for Use of Military Force (Public Law 107-40; 50 U.S.C. 1541 note), or 
any requirement under the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3001 
et seq.).
``Sec. 130k. Notification requirements for cyber weapons
    ``(a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (c), the 
Secretary of Defense shall promptly submit to the congressional defense 
committees notice in writing of the following:
            ``(1) With respect to a cyber capability that is intended 
        for use as a weapon, the results of any review of the 
        capability for legality under international law pursuant to 
        Department of Defense Directive 5000.01 no later than 48 hours 
        after any military department concerned has completed such 
        review.
            ``(2) The use as a weapon of any cyber capability that has 
        been approved for such use under international law by a 
        military department no later than 48 hours following such use.
    ``(b) Procedures.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall establish and 
submit to the congressional defense committees procedures for complying 
with the requirements of subsection (a) consistent with the national 
security of the United States and the protection of operational 
integrity. The Secretary shall promptly notify the congressional 
defense committees in writing of any changes to such procedures at 
least 14 days prior to the adoption of any such changes.
    ``(2) The congressional defense committees shall ensure that 
committee procedures designed to protect from unauthorized disclosure 
classified information relating to national security of the United 
States are sufficient to protect the information that is submitted to 
the committees pursuant to this section.
    ``(3) In the event of an unauthorized disclosure of a cyber 
capability covered by this section, the Secretary shall ensure, to the 
maximum extent practicable, that the congressional defense committees 
are notified immediately of the cyber capability concerned. The 
notification under this paragraph may be verbal or written, but in the 
event of a verbal notification a written notification shall be provided 
by not later than 48 hours after the provision of the verbal 
notification.
    ``(c) Exceptions.--The notification requirement under subsection 
(a) does not apply--
            ``(1) to a training exercise conducted with the consent of 
        all nations where the intended effects of the exercise will 
        occur; or
            ``(2) to a covert action (as that term is defined in 
        section 3093 of title 50, United States Code).
    ``(d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
construed to provide any new authority or to alter or otherwise affect 
the War Powers Resolution (50 U.S.C. 1541 et seq.), the Authorization 
for Use of Military Force (Public Law 107-40; 50 U.S.C. 1541 note), or 
any requirement under the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3001 
et seq.).''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of 
such chapter is amended by adding at the end the following new items:

``130j. Notification requirements for sensitive military cyber 
                            operations.
``130k. Notification requirements for cyber weapons.''.

SEC. 1652. MODIFICATION TO QUARTERLY CYBER OPERATIONS BRIEFINGS.

    (a) In General.--Section 484 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``The Secretary of Defense shall provide to 
        the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives and the Senate'' and inserting the following:
    ``(a) Briefings Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall provide 
to the congressional defense committees''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(b) Elements.--Each briefing under subsection (a) shall include, 
with respect to the military operations in cyberspace described in such 
subsection, the following:
            ``(1) An update, set forth separately for each geographic 
        and functional command, that describes the operations carried 
        out by the command and any hostile cyber activity directed at 
        the command.
            ``(2) An overview of authorities and legal issues 
        applicable to the operations, including any relevant legal 
        limitations.
            ``(3) An outline of any interagency activities and 
        initiatives relating to the operations.
            ``(4) Any other matters the Secretary determines to be 
        appropriate.''.
    (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 briefings required be provided under section 484 of 
title 10, United States Code, on or after that date.
    (c) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
quarterly cyber operations briefings required under section 484 of 
title 10, United States Code, as amended by subsection (a), should 
include an update on the progress of the Secretary of Defense in 
carrying out the cooperative program described in section 924.

SEC. 1653. CYBER SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM.

    (a) Name of Program.--Section 2200 of title 10, Unites States Code, 
is amended by adding at the end the following:
    ``(c) Name of Program.--The programs authorized under this chapter 
shall be known as the `Cyber Scholarship Program'.''.
    (b) Modification to Allocation of Funding for Cyber Scholarship 
Program.--Section 2200a(f) of title 10, Unites States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by inserting ``(1)'' before ``Not less''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(2) Not less than five percent of the amount available for 
financial assistance under this section for a fiscal year shall be 
available for providing financial assistance for the pursuit of an 
associate degree at an institution described in paragraph (1).''.
    (c) Cyber Definition.--Section 2200e of title 10, Unites States 
Code, is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 2200e. Definitions
    ``In this chapter:
            ``(1) The term `cyber' includes the following:
                    ``(A) Offensive cyber operations.
                    ``(B) Defensive cyber operations.
                    ``(C) Department of Defense information network 
                operations and defense.
                    ``(D) Any other information technology that the 
                Secretary of Defense considers to be related to the 
                cyber activities of the Department of Defense.
            ``(2) The term `institution of higher education' has the 
        meaning given the term in section 101 of the Higher Education 
        Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1001).
            ``(3) The term `Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber 
        Education' means an institution of higher education that is 
        designated by the Director of the National Security Agency as a 
        Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Education.''.
    (d) Conforming Amendments.--
            (1) Chapter 112 of title 10, United States Code, is further 
        amended--
                    (A) in the chapter heading, by striking 
                ``INFORMATION SECURITY'' and inserting ``CYBER'';
                    (B) in section 2200 (as amended by subsection 
                (a))--
                            (i) in subsection (a), by striking 
                        ``Department of Defense information assurance 
                        requirements'' and inserting ``the cyber 
                        requirements of the Department of Defense''; 
                        and
                            (ii) in subsection (b)(1), by striking 
                        ``information assurance'' and inserting ``cyber 
                        disciplines'';
                    (C) in section 2200a (as amended by subsection 
                (b))--
                            (i) in subsection (a)(1), by striking ``an 
                        information assurance discipline'' and 
                        inserting ``a cyber discipline'';
                            (ii) in subsection (f)(1), by striking 
                        ``information assurance'' and inserting ``cyber 
                        disciplines''; and
                            (iii) in subsection (g)(1), by striking 
                        ``an information technology position'' and 
                        inserting ``a cyber position'';
                    (D) in section 2200b, by striking ``information 
                assurance disciplines'' and inserting ``cyber 
                disciplines''; and
                    (E) in section 2200c, by striking ``Information 
                Assurance'' each place it appears and inserting 
                ``Cyber''.
            (2) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 112 
        of title 10, Unites States Code, is amended by striking the 
        item relating to section 2200c and inserting the following:

``2200c. Centers of Academic Excellence in Cyber Education.''.
            (3) Section 7045 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking ``Information Security Scholarship 
                program'' each place it appears and inserting ``Cyber 
                Scholarship program''; and
                    (B) in subsection (a)(2)(B), by striking 
                ``information assurance'' and inserting ``a cyber 
                discipline''.
            (4) Section 7904(4) of title 38, United States Code, is 
        amended by striking ``Information Assurance'' and inserting 
        ``Cyber''.
    (e) Redesignations.--
            (1) Scholarship program.--The Information Security 
        Scholarship program under chapter 112 of title 10, United 
        States Code, is redesignated as the ``Cyber Scholarship 
        program''. Any reference in a law (other than this section), 
        map, regulation, document, paper, or other record of the United 
        States to the Information Security Scholarship program shall be 
        deemed to be a reference to the Cyber Scholarship Program.
            (2) Centers of academic excellence.--Any institution of 
        higher education designated by the Director of the National 
        Security Agency as a Center of Academic Excellence in 
        Information Assurance Education is redesignated as a Center of 
        Academic Excellence in Cyber Education. Any reference in a law 
        (other than this section), map, regulation, document, paper, or 
        other record of the United States to a Center of Academic 
        Excellence in Information Assurance Education shall be deemed 
        to be a reference to a Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber 
        Education.
    (f) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be 
appropriated to the Secretary of Defense to provide financial 
assistance under section 2200a of title 10, United States Code (as 
amended by this section), and grants under section 2200b of such title 
(as so amended), $10,000,000 for fiscal year 2018.

SEC. 1654. PLAN TO INCREASE CYBER AND INFORMATION OPERATIONS, 
              DETERRENCE, AND DEFENSE.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds following:
            (1) Cyber threats originating from the Asia-Pacific region 
        targeting the United States and the allies of the United States 
        have grown through the use of cyber intrusions, exfiltration, 
        and espionage by China and North Korea.
            (2) In February 2016, Admiral Harry Harris Jr., Commander 
        of the United States Pacific Command, in his testimony noted 
        ``increased cyber capacity and nefarious activity, especially 
        by China, North Korea, and Russia underscore the growing 
        requirement to evolve command, control, and operational 
        authorities''.
            (3) Admiral Harris stated ``that in order to fully leverage 
        the cyber domain, PACOM requires an enduring theater cyber 
        capability able to provide cyber planning, integration, 
        synchronization, and direction of cyber forces.''.
    (b) Plan.--The Secretary of Defense shall develop a plan to--
            (1) increase inclusion of regional cyber planning within 
        larger United States joint planning exercises in the Indo-Asia-
        Pacific region;
            (2) enhance joint, regional, and combined information 
        operations and strategic communication strategies to counter 
        Chinese and North Korean information warfare, malign influence, 
        and propaganda activities; and
            (3) identify potential areas of cybersecurity collaboration 
        and partnership capabilities with Asian allies and partners of 
        the United States.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide to the 
congressional defense committees a briefing on the plan required under 
subsection (b).

SEC. 1655. REPORT ON TERMINATION OF DUAL-HAT ARRANGEMENT FOR COMMANDER 
              OF THE UNITED STATES CYBER COMMAND.

    (a) Report.--Not later than December 1, 2017, the Secretary of 
Defense shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees a 
report on the progress of the Department of Defense in meeting the 
requirements of section 1642 of the National Defense Authorization Act 
for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2601).
    (b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall include, with 
respect to any decision to terminate the dual-hat arrangement as 
described in section 1642 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2601), the following:
            (1) Metrics and milestones for meeting the conditions 
        described in subsection (b)(2)(C) of such section 1642.
            (2) Identification of any challenges to meeting such 
        conditions.
            (3) Identification of entities or persons requiring 
        additional resources as a result of any decision to terminate 
        the dual-hat arrangement.
            (4) Identification of any updates to statutory authorities 
        needed as a result of any decision to terminate the dual-hat 
        arrangement.
    (c) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the congressional defense committees;
            (2) the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate; and
            (3) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
        House of Representatives.

SEC. 1656. STRATEGY FOR THE OFFENSIVE USE OF CYBER CAPABILITIES.

    (a) Findings.--
            (1) The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (commonly known 
        as ``NATO'') remains a critical alliance for the United States 
        and a cost-effective, flexible means of providing security to 
        the most important allies of the United States.
            (2) The regime of Russian President Vladimir Putin is 
        actively working to erode democratic systems of NATO member 
        states, including the United States.
            (3) According to the report of the Office of the Director 
        of National Intelligence dated January 6, 2017, on the Russian 
        Federation's hack of the United States presidential election: 
        ``Russian efforts to influence the 2016 presidential election 
        represent the most recent expression of Moscow's longstanding 
        desire to undermine the US-led liberal democratic order.''.
            (4) As recently as May 4, 2017, the press reported a 
        massive cyber hack of French President Emmanuel Macron's 
        campaign, likely attributable to Russian actors.
            (5) It is in the core interests of the United States to 
        enhance the offensive and defensive cyber capabilities of NATO 
        member states to deter and defend against Russian cyber and 
        influence operations.
            (6) Enhanced offensive cyber capabilities would enable the 
        United States to demonstrate strength and deter the Russian 
        Federation from threatening NATO, while reassuring allies, 
        without a provocative buildup of conventional military forces.
    (b) Sense of Congress on Cyber Strategy of the Department of 
Defense.--It is the sense of Congress that --
            (1) the Secretary of Defense should update the cyber 
        strategy of the Department of Defense (as that strategy is 
        described in the Department of Defense document titled ``The 
        Department of Defense Cyber Strategy'' dated April 15, 2015); 
        and
            (2) in updating the cyber strategy of the Department, the 
        Secretary should--
                    (A) specifically develop an offensive cyber 
                strategy that includes plans for the offensive use of 
                cyber capabilities, including computer network 
                exploitation and computer network attacks, to thwart 
                air, land, or sea attacks by the regime of Russian 
                President Vladimir Putin and other adversaries;
                    (B) provide guidance on integrating offensive tools 
                into the cyber arsenal of the Department; and
                    (C) assist NATO partners, through the NATO 
                Cooperative Cyber Center of Excellence and other 
                entities, in developing offensive cyber capabilities.
    (c) Strategy for Offensive Use of Cyber Capabilities.--
            (1) Strategy required.--The President shall develop a 
        written strategy for the offensive use of cyber capabilites by 
        departments and agencies of the Federal Government.
            (2) Elements.--The strategy developed under paragraph (1) 
        shall include, at minimum--
                    (A) a description of enhancements that are needed 
                to improve the offensive cyber capabilities of the 
                United States and partner nations, including NATO 
                member states; and
                    (B) a statement of principles concerning the 
                appropriate deployment of offensive cyber capabilities.
            (3) Submission to congress.--
                    (A) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the 
                date of the enactment of this Act, the President shall 
                submit to the congressional defense committees (as that 
                term is defined in section 101(a)(16) of title 10, 
                United States Code) the strategy developed under 
                paragraph (1).
                    (B) Form of submission.--The strategy submitted 
                under subparagraph (A) may be submitted in classified 
                form.
    (d) International Cooperation.--
            (1) Authority to provide technical assistance.--The 
        President, acting through the Secretary of Defense and with the 
        concurrence of the Secretary of State, is authorized to provide 
        technical assistance to NATO member states to assist such 
        states in developing and enhancing offensive cyber 
        capabilities.
            (2) Technical experts.--In providing technical assistance 
        under paragraph (1), the President, acting through the NATO 
        Cooperative Cyber Center of Excellence, may detail technical 
        experts in the field of cyber operations to NATO member states.
            (3) Rule of construction.--Nothing in this section shall be 
        construed to preclude or limit the authorities of the President 
        or the Secretary of Defense to provide cyber-related assistance 
        to foreign countries, including the authority of the Secretary 
        to provide such assistance under section 333 of title 10, 
        United States Code.

SEC. 1657. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CYBER WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT PILOT 
              PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out a pilot 
program to be known as the ``Cyber Workforce Development Pilot 
Program'' (in this section referred to as the ``Pilot Program'') under 
which the Secretary shall provide funds, in addition to other funds 
that may be available, for the recruitment, training, 
professionalization, and retention of personnel in the cyber workforce 
of the Department of Defense.
    (b) Purpose.--The purpose of the Pilot Program shall be to assess 
the effectiveness of carrying out a full-scale talent management 
program to ensure that the cyber workforce of the Department of Defense 
has the capacity, in both personnel and skills, needed to effectively 
perform its cyber missions and the kinetic missions impacted by cyber 
activities.
    (c) Management.--The Pilot Program shall be managed by the Chief 
Information Officer of the Department of Defense, in consultation with 
the Principal Cyber Advisor to the Secretary of Defense.
    (d) Guidance.--The Chief Information Officer of the Department of 
Defense, in consultation with the Principal Cyber Advisor to the 
Secretary of Defense, shall issue guidance for the administration of 
the Pilot Program. Such guidance shall include provisions that--
            (1) identify areas of need in the cyber workforce that 
        funds under the Pilot Program may be used to address, 
        including--
                    (A) changes to the types of skills needed in the 
                cyber workforce;
                    (B) capabilities to develop the cyber workforce and 
                assist members of the cyber workforce in achieving 
                qualifications and professionalization through 
                activities such as training, education, and exchange 
                programs;
                    (C) incentives to retain qualified, experienced 
                cyber workforce personnel; and
                    (D) incentives for attracting new, high-quality 
                personnel to the cyber workforce;
            (2) describe the process under which entities may submit an 
        application to receive funds under the Pilot Program;
            (3) describe the evaluation criteria to be used for 
        approving or prioritizing applications for funds under the 
        Pilot Program in any fiscal year; and
            (4) describe measurable objectives of performance for 
        determining whether funds under the Pilot Program are being 
        used in compliance with this section.
    (e) Considerations.--When selecting entities to provide training 
and education services under the Pilot Program, consideration shall be 
given to whether the entity providing such services is a Center of 
Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Education (as that term is 
defined in section 2200e of title 10, United States Code).
    (f) Annual Report.--Not later than 120 days after the end of each 
of fiscal year for which funds are appropriated for the Pilot Program, 
the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report on the operation of the Pilot Program during such 
fiscal year. Each report shall include, for the fiscal year covered by 
such report, the following:
            (1) A description of the expenditures made under the Pilot 
        Program (including expenditures following a transfer of funds 
        under the Pilot Program to a military department or Defense 
        Agency) in such fiscal year, including the purpose of such 
        expenditures.
            (2) A description and assessment of improvements in the 
        Department of Defense cyber workforce resulting from such 
        expenditures.
            (3) Recommendations for additional authorities to fulfill 
        the purpose of the Pilot Program.
            (4) A statement of the funds that remain available under 
        the Pilot Program at the end of such fiscal year.
    (g) Termination.--The Pilot Program and the annual reporting 
requirement under subsection (f) shall each terminate on the date that 
is five years after the date on which funds are first appropriated for 
the Pilot Program and any funds not obligated or expended under the 
Pilot Program on that date shall be deposited in the general fund of 
the Treasury of the United States.
    (h) Cyber Workforce Defined.--In this Act, the term ``cyber 
workforce'' means the following:
            (1) Personnel in positions that require the performance of 
        cybersecurity or other cyber-related functions as so identified 
        pursuant to the Federal Cybersecurity Workforce Assessment Act 
        of 2015 (Public Law 114-113; 5 U.S.C. 301 note) .
            (2) Military personnel or civilian employees of the 
        Department of Defense who are not described in paragraph (1) 
        but who--
                    (A) are assigned functions that contribute 
                significantly to cyber operations; and
                    (B) are designated as temporary members of the 
                cyber workforce by the Chief Information Officer of the 
                Department of Defense, or by the head of a military 
                department or Defense Agency, for the limited purpose 
                of receiving training for the performance of cyber-
                related functions.

SEC. 1658. DEFINITION OF DETERRENCE IN THE CONTEXT OF CYBER OPERATIONS.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall--
            (1) develop a definition of the term ``deterrence'' as such 
        term is used in the context of the cyber operations of the 
        Department of Defense; and
            (2) assess how the definition developed under paragraph (1) 
        affects the overall cyber strategy of the Department.
    (b) Inclusion of Other Activities.--The definition of the term 
``deterrence'' developed under subsection (a) may include activities, 
capability efforts, and operations other than cyber activities, cyber 
capability efforts, and cyber operations.

                       Subtitle E--Nuclear Forces

SEC. 1661. NOTIFICATIONS REGARDING DUAL-CAPABLE F-35A AIRCRAFT.

    Section 179(f) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraph (6) as paragraph (7); and
            (2) by inserting after paragraph (5) the following new 
        paragraph (6):
    ``(6) If a House of Congress adopts a bill authorizing or 
appropriating funds for the Department of Defense that, as determined 
by the Council, provides funds in an amount that will result in a delay 
in the nuclear certification or delivery of F-35A dual-capable 
aircraft, the Council shall notify the congressional defense committees 
of the determination.''.

SEC. 1662. OVERSIGHT OF DELAYED ACQUISITION PROGRAMS BY COUNCIL ON 
              OVERSIGHT OF THE NATIONAL LEADERSHIP COMMAND, CONTROL, 
              AND COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM.

    (a) Status Updates.--Section 171a of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (k) as subsection (l); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (j) the following new 
        subsection (k):
    ``(k) Status of Acquisition Programs.--(1) On a quarterly basis, 
each program manager of a covered acquisition program shall transmit to 
the co-chairs of the Council, acting through the senior steering group 
of the Council, a report that identifies--
            ``(A) the covered acquisition program;
            ``(B) the requirements of the program;
            ``(C) the development timeline of the program; and
            ``(D) the status of the program, including whether the 
        program is delayed and, if so, whether such delay will result 
        in a program schedule delay.
    ``(2) Not later than seven days after the end of each quarter, the 
co-chairs of the Council shall submit to the congressional defense 
committees a report that identifies, with respect to the reports 
transmitted to the Council under paragraph (1) for that quarter--
            ``(A) each covered acquisition program that is delayed more 
        than 180 days; and
            ``(B) any covered acquisition program that should have been 
        included in such reports but was excluded, and the reasons for 
        such exclusion.
    ``(3) In this subsection, the term `covered acquisition program' 
means each acquisition program of the Department of Defense that 
materially contributes to--
            ``(A) the nuclear command, control, and communications 
        systems of the United States; or
            ``(B) the continuity of government systems of the United 
        States.''.
    (b) Instructions.--The Secretary of Defense shall issue a 
Department of Defense Instruction, or revise such an Instruction, to 
ensure that program managers carry out subsection (k)(1) of section 
171a of title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection (a).

SEC. 1663. ESTABLISHMENT OF NUCLEAR COMMAND AND CONTROL INTELLIGENCE 
              FUSION CENTER.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense and the Director of 
National Intelligence shall jointly establish an intelligence fusion 
center to enhance the protection of nuclear command, control, and 
communications programs, systems, and processes and continuity of 
government programs, systems, and processes.
    (b) Charter.--In establishing the fusion center under subsection 
(a), the Secretary and the Director shall develop a charter for the 
fusion center that includes the following:
            (1) To carry out the duties of the fusion center, a 
        description of--
                    (A) the roles and responsibilities of officials and 
                elements of the Federal Government, including a 
                detailed description of the organizational 
                relationships of such officials and the elements of the 
                Federal Government that are key stakeholders;
                    (B) the organization reporting chain of the fusion 
                center;
                    (C) the staffing of the fusion center;
                    (D) the processes of the fusion center; and
                    (E) how the fusion center integrates with other 
                elements of the Federal Government;
            (2) The management and administration processes required to 
        carry out the fusion center, including with respect to 
        facilities and security authorities.
            (3) Procedures to ensure that the appropriate number of 
        staff of the fusion center have the security clearance 
        necessary to access information on the programs, systems, and 
        processes that relate, either wholly or substantially, to 
        nuclear command, control, and communications or continuity of 
        government, including with respect to both the programs, 
        systems, and processes that are designated as special access 
        programs (as described in section 4.3 of Executive Order 13526 
        (50 U.S.C. 3161 note) or any successor Executive order) and the 
        programs, systems, and processes that contain sensitive 
        compartmented information.
    (c) Coordination.--In establishing the fusion center under 
subsection (a), the Secretary and the Director shall coordinate with 
the elements of the Federal Government that the Secretary and Director 
determine appropriate.
    (d) Reports.--
            (1) Initial report.--Not later than 120 days after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary and the Director 
        shall jointly submit to the appropriate congressional 
        committees a report containing--
                    (A) the charter for the fusion center developed 
                under subsection (b); and
                    (B) a plan on the budget and staffing of the fusion 
                center.
            (2) Annual reports.--At the same time as the President 
        submits to Congress the annual budget request under section 
        1105 of title 31, United States Code, for fiscal year 2019 and 
        each fiscal year thereafter, the Secretary and the Director 
        shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees a 
        report on the fusion center, including, with respect to the 
        period covered by the report--
                    (A) any updates to the plan on the budget and 
                staffing of the fusion center;
                    (B) any updates to the charter developed under 
                subsection (b); and
                    (C) a summary of the activities and accomplishments 
                of the fusion center.
            (3) Sunset.--No report is required under this subsection 
        after December 31, 2021.
    (e) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the congressional defense committees; and
            (2) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
        House of Representatives and the Select Committee on 
        Intelligence of the Senate.

SEC. 1664. SECURITY OF NUCLEAR COMMAND, CONTROL, AND COMMUNICATIONS 
              SYSTEM FROM COMMERCIAL DEPENDENCIES.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) At a hearing before the Committee on Armed Services of 
        the House of Representatives on September 30, 2015, Deputy 
        Secretary of Defense Robert Work, responding to a question 
        about the use of Huawei telecommunications equipment, stated, 
        ``In the Office of the Secretary of Defense, absolutely not. 
        And I know of no other--I don't believe we operate in the 
        Pentagon, any [Huawei] systems in the Pentagon.''.
            (2) At such hearing, the Commander of the United States 
        Cyber Command, Admiral Mike Rogers, responding to a question 
        about why such Huawei telecommunications equipment is not used, 
        stated, ``as we look at supply chain and we look at potential 
        vulnerabilities within the system, that it is a risk we felt 
        was unacceptable.''.
            (3) At a hearing before the Committee on Armed Services of 
        the House of Representatives on June 22, 2016, Acting Assistant 
        Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Global Security 
        Thomas Atkin, stated, ``There are currently no Huawei or ZTE 
        products on the DoD Unified Capabilities Approved Products List 
        (APL).''.
    (b) Certification.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall certify to the 
congressional defense committees whether the Secretary uses covered 
telecommunications equipment or services as a substantial or essential 
component of any system, or as critical technology as part of any 
system, to carry out--
            (1) the nuclear deterrence mission of the Department of 
        Defense, including with respect to nuclear command, control, 
        and communications, integrated tactical warning and attack 
        assessment, and continuity of government; or
            (2) the homeland defense mission of the Department, 
        including with respect to ballistic missile defense.
    (c) Prohibition and Mitigation.--
            (1) Prohibition.--Except as provided by paragraph (2), 
        beginning on the date that is one year after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense may not procure 
        or obtain, or extend or renew a contract to procure or obtain, 
        any equipment, system, or service to carry out the missions 
        described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (b) that uses 
        covered telecommunications equipment or services as a 
        substantial or essential component of any system, or as 
        critical technology as part of any system.
            (2) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive the prohibition in 
        paragraph (1) on a case-by-case basis for a single one-year 
        period if the Secretary--
                    (A) determines such waiver to be in the national 
                security interests of the United States; and
                    (B) certifies to the congressional committees 
                that--
                            (i) there are sufficient mitigations in 
                        place to guarantee the ability of the Secretary 
                        to carry out the missions described in 
                        paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (b); and
                            (ii) the Secretary is removing the use of 
                        covered telecommunications equipment or 
                        services in carrying out such missions.
            (3) Delegation.--The Secretary may not delegate the 
        authority to make a waiver under paragraph (2) to any official 
        other than the Deputy Secretary of Defense or the co-chairs of 
        the Council on Oversight of the National Leadership Command, 
        Control, and Communications System established by section 171a 
        of title 10, United States Code.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``congressional defense committees'' has the 
        meaning given that term in section 101(a)(16) of title 10, 
        United States Code.
            (2) The term ``covered foreign country'' means any of the 
        following:
                    (A) The People's Republic of China.
                    (B) The Russian Federation.
            (3) The term ``covered telecommunications equipment or 
        services'' means any of the following:
                    (A) Telecommunications equipment produced by Huawei 
                Technologies Company or ZTE Corporation (or any 
                subsidiary or affiliate of such entities).
                    (B) Telecommunications services provided by such 
                entities or using such equipment.
                    (C) Telecommunications equipment or services 
                produced or provided by an entity that the Secretary of 
                Defense reasonably believes to be an entity owned or 
                controlled by, or otherwise connected to, the 
                government of a covered foreign country.

SEC. 1665. OVERSIGHT OF AERIAL-LAYER PROGRAMS BY COUNCIL ON OVERSIGHT 
              OF THE NATIONAL LEADERSHIP COMMAND, CONTROL, AND 
              COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM.

    Any analysis of alternatives for the Senior Leader Airborne 
Operations Center, the executive airlift program of the Air Force, and 
the E-6B modernization program may not receive final approval by the 
Joint Requirements Oversight Council, and the Director of Cost 
Assessment and Program Evaluation may not conduct any sufficiency 
review of such an analysis of alternatives, unless--
            (1) the Council on Oversight of the National Leadership 
        Command, Control, and Communications System established by 
        section 171a of title 10, United States Code, determines that 
        the alternatives for such programs are capable of meeting the 
        requirements for senior leadership communications in support of 
        the nuclear command, control, and communications mission of the 
        Department of Defense and the continuity of government mission 
        of the Department;
            (2) the Council submits to the congressional defense 
        committees such determination; and
            (3) a period of 30 days elapses following the date of such 
        submission.

SEC. 1666. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION GUIDE FOR PROGRAMS RELATING TO 
              NUCLEAR COMMAND, CONTROL, AND COMMUNICATIONS AND NUCLEAR 
              DETERRENCE.

    (a) Requirement for Security Classification Guide.--Not later than 
90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of 
Defense shall require the issuance of a security classification guide 
for each covered program to ensure the protection of sensitive 
information from public disclosure.
    (b) Requirements.--Each security classification guide issued 
pursuant to subsection (a) shall be--
            (1) approved by--
                    (A) the Council on Oversight of the National 
                Leadership Command, Control, and Communications System 
                with respect to covered programs under paragraph (1) or 
                (2) of subsection (c); or
                    (B) the Nuclear Weapons Council with respect to 
                covered programs under paragraph (3) of such 
                subsection; and
            (2) issued not later than March 19, 2019, with respect to a 
        covered program in existence as of such date.
    (c) Covered Program Defined.--In this section, the term ``covered 
program'' means programs of the Department of Defense in existence on 
or after the date of the enactment of this Act relating to any of the 
following:
            (1) Continuity of government.
            (2) Nuclear command, control, and communications.
            (3) Nuclear deterrence.

SEC. 1667. EVALUATION AND ENHANCED SECURITY OF SUPPLY CHAIN FOR NUCLEAR 
              COMMAND, CONTROL, AND COMMUNICATIONS AND CONTINUITY OF 
              GOVERNMENT PROGRAMS.

    (a) Evaluations of Supply Chain Vulnerabilities.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than December 31, 2019, and in 
        accordance with the plan under paragraph (2)(A), the Secretary 
        of Defense shall conduct evaluations of the supply chain 
        vulnerabilities of each covered program.
            (2) Plan.--
                    (A) Development.--The Secretary shall develop a 
                plan to carry out the evaluations under paragraph (1).
                    (B) Submission.--Not later than 180 days after the 
                date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall 
                submit to the congressional defense committees the plan 
                under subparagraph (A).
            (3) Waiver.--The Secretary may waive, on a case-by-case 
        basis with respect to a weapons system, a program, or a system 
        of systems, of a covered program, either the requirement to 
        conduct an evaluation under paragraph (1) or the deadline 
        specified in such paragraph if the Secretary certifies to the 
        congressional defense committees before such date that all 
        known supply chain vulnerabilities of such weapons system, 
        program, or system of systems have minimal consequences for the 
        capability of such weapons system, program, or system of 
        systems to meet operational requirements or otherwise satisfy 
        mission requirements.
            (4) Risk mitigation strategies.--In carrying out an 
        evaluation under paragraph (1) with respect to a covered 
        program specified in subparagraph (B) or (C) of subsection 
        (c)(2), the Secretary shall develop strategies for mitigating 
        the risks of supply chain vulnerabilities identified in the 
        course of such evaluation.
    (b) Prioritization of Certain Supply Chain Risk Management 
Efforts.--
            (1) Instructions.--Not later than 180 days after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall issue a 
        Department of Defense Instruction, or update such an 
        Instruction, establishing the prioritization of supply chain 
        risk management programs, including supply chain risk 
        management threat assessment reporting, to ensure that 
        acquisition and sustainment programs relating to covered 
        programs receive the highest priority of such supply chain risk 
        management programs and reporting.
            (2) Requirements.--
                    (A) Establishment.--The Secretary shall establish 
                requirements to carry out supply chain risk management 
                threat assessment collections and analyses under 
                acquisition and sustainment programs relating to 
                covered programs.
                    (B) Submission.--Not later than 120 days after the 
                date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall 
                submit to the appropriate congressional committees the 
                requirements established under subparagraph (A).
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees; and
                    (B) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence 
                of the House of Representatives and the Select 
                Committee on Intelligence of the Senate.
            (2) The term ``covered programs'' means programs relating 
        to any of the following:
                    (A) Nuclear weapons.
                    (B) Nuclear command, control, and communications.
                    (C) Continuity of government.
                    (D) Ballistic missile defense.

SEC. 1668. LIMITATION ON PURSUIT OF CERTAIN COMMAND AND CONTROL 
              CONCEPT.

    (a) Limitation on Command and Control Concept.--The Secretary of 
the Air Force may not award a contract for engineering and 
manufacturing development for the ground-based strategic deterrent 
program that would result in a command and control concept for such 
program that consists of less than 15 fixed launch control centers per 
missile wing unless the Commander of the United States Strategic 
Command--
            (1) determines that--
                    (A) the plans of the Secretary for a command and 
                control concept consisting of less than 15 fixed launch 
                control centers per missile wing are appropriate, meet 
                requirements, and do not contain excessive risk;
                    (B) the risks to schedules and costs from such 
                concept are minimized and manageable;
                    (C) the strategy and plan of the Secretary for 
                addressing cyber threats for such concept are robust; 
                and
                    (D) with respect to such concept, the Secretary has 
                established an appropriate process for considering and 
                managing trade-offs among requirements relating to 
                survivability, long-term operations and sustainment 
                costs, procurement costs, and military personnel needs; 
                and
            (2) submits, in writing, to the Secretary and the 
        congressional defense committees such determination.
    (b) Inability to Make Determination.--If the Secretary proposes to 
award a contract specified in subsection (a) and the Commander is 
unable to make the determination under such subsection, the Commander 
shall submit, in writing, to the Secretary and the congressional 
defense committees the reasons for not making such determination.
    (c) No Effect on Competition.--Nothing in subsection (a) or (b) 
shall be construed to affect or prohibit the ability of the Secretary 
to use fair and open competition procedures in soliciting, evaluating, 
and awarding contracts for the ground-based strategic deterrent 
program.

SEC. 1669. PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR CERTAIN PARTS OF INTERCONTINENTAL 
              BALLISTIC MISSILE FUZES.

    (a) Availability of Funds.--Notwithstanding section 1502(a) of 
title 31, United States Code, of the amount authorized to be 
appropriated for fiscal year 2018 by section 101 and available for 
Missile Procurement, Air Force, as specified in the funding table in 
division D, $6,334,000 shall be available for the procurement of 
covered parts pursuant to contracts entered into under section 1645(a) 
of the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 
3651).
    (b) Covered Parts Defined.--In this section, the term ``covered 
parts'' means commercially available off-the-shelf items as defined in 
section 104 of title 41, United States Code.

SEC. 1670. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON IMPORTANCE OF INDEPENDENT NUCLEAR 
              DETERRENT OF UNITED KINGDOM.

    It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) nuclear deterrence is foundational to the defense and 
        security of the United States and the security of the United 
        States is enhanced by a nuclear-armed ally with common values 
        and security priorities;
            (2) the United States sees the nuclear deterrent of the 
        United Kingdom as central to transatlantic security and 
        welcomes the commitment of the United Kingdom to the North 
        Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to continue to spend two 
        percent of gross domestic product on defense;
            (3) in the face of increasing threats, the presence of 
        credible nuclear deterrent forces of the United Kingdom is 
        essential to international stability and for NATO;
            (4) the commitment of the United Kingdom to sustaining an 
        independent nuclear deterrent, deployed continuously at sea, 
        provides a vital second decision-making point within the 
        deterrent capability of NATO, creating essential uncertainty in 
        the mind of any potential adversary;
            (5) the United States Navy must continue to execute the 
        Columbia-class submarine program on time and within budget to 
        ensure that the sea-based leg of the nuclear triad of the 
        United States is sustained and the program delivers a Common 
        Missile Compartment, the Trident II (D5) Strategic Weapon 
        System, and associated equipment and production capabilities, 
        to support the successful development and deployment of the 
        Dreadnought submarines of the United Kingdom;
            (6) the support that the United Kingdom provides to 
        deployments of strategic ships and aircraft of the United 
        States at specialized facilities enables a vital part of the 
        deterrence posture of the United States as well as mutual 
        deterrence of adversaries and assurance to the allies and 
        partners of the United States; and
            (7) the collaboration of the United Kingdom with the United 
        States on the military use of atomic energy ensures a peer in 
        the technology and science of nuclear weapons and provides 
        independent expert peer review of the nuclear programs of the 
        United States, ensuring resilience, and cost effectiveness to 
        the nuclear defense programs of both nations.

SEC. 1671. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR MOBILE VARIANT OF 
              GROUND-BASED STRATEGIC DETERRENT MISSILE.

    (a) Prohibition.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated 
by this Act or otherwise made available for any of fiscal years 2017 
through 2019 may be obligated or expended to retain the option for, or 
develop, a mobile variant of the ground-based strategic deterrent 
missile.
    (b) Conforming Repeal.--Section 1664 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 
2615) is repealed.

SEC. 1672. REPORT ON IMPACTS OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) nuclear proliferation continues to be a serious threat 
        to the security of the United States;
            (2) it is critical for the United States to understand the 
        impacts of nuclear proliferation and ensure the necessary 
        policies and resources are in place to prevent the 
        proliferation of nuclear materials and weapons;
            (3) effectively addressing the danger of states and non-
        state actors acquiring nuclear weapons or nuclear-weapons-
        usable material should be a clear priority for United States 
        national security; and
            (4) Secretary of Defense James Mattis testified before 
        Congress on June 12, 2017, that ``nuclear nonproliferation has 
        not received enough attention over quite a few years''.
    (b) Report.--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 containing--
            (1) a description of the impacts of nuclear proliferation 
        on the security of the United States;
            (2) a description of how the Department of Defense is 
        contributing to the current strategy to respond to the threat 
        of nuclear proliferation, and what resources are being applied 
        to this effort, including whether there are any funding gaps; 
        and
            (3) if and how nuclear proliferation is being addressed in 
        the Nuclear Posture Review and other pertinent strategy 
        reviews.

SEC. 1673. MODIFICATION TO ANNUAL REPORT ON PLAN FOR THE NUCLEAR 
              WEAPONS STOCKPILE, NUCLEAR WEAPONS COMPLEX, NUCLEAR 
              WEAPONS DELIVERY SYSTEMS, AND NUCLEAR WEAPONS COMMAND AND 
              CONTROL SYSTEM.

    Subsection (a)(2)(F) of section 1043 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 
1576), as most recently amended by section 1643 of the Carl Levin and 
Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3650), is further amended by 
inserting after the period at the end the following: ``The Secretary 
may include information and data for a period beyond such 10-year 
period if the Secretary determines that such information and data is 
accurate and useful in understanding the long-term nuclear 
modernization plan.''.

SEC. 1674. PROHIBITION ON REDUCTION OF THE INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC 
              MISSILES OF THE UNITED STATES.

    (a) Prohibition.--Except as provided by subsection (b), none of the 
funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made 
available for fiscal year 2018 for the Department of Defense shall be 
obligated or expended for--
            (1) reducing, or preparing to reduce, the responsiveness or 
        alert level of the intercontinental ballistic missiles of the 
        United States; or
            (2) reducing, or preparing to reduce, the quantity of 
        deployed intercontinental ballistic missiles of the United 
        States to a number less than 400.
    (b) Exception.--The prohibition in subsection (a) shall not apply 
to any of the following activities:
            (1) The maintenance or sustainment of intercontinental 
        ballistic missiles.
            (2) Ensuring the safety, security, or reliability of 
        intercontinental ballistic missiles.
            (3) Reduction in the number of deployed intercontinental 
        ballistic missiles that are carried out in compliance with--
                    (A) the limitations of the New START Treaty (as 
                defined in section 494(a)(2)(D) of title 10, United 
                States Code); and
                    (B) section 1644 of the Carl Levin an Howard P. 
                ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for 
                Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3651; 
                10 U.S.C. 494 note).

                  Subtitle F--Missile Defense Programs

SEC. 1681. ADMINISTRATION OF MISSILE DEFENSE AND DEFEAT PROGRAMS.

    (a) Major Force Program.--
            (1) In general.--Chapter 9 of title 10, United States Code, 
        is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 239a. Missile defense and defeat programs: major force program 
              and budget assessment
    ``(a) Establishment of Major Force Program.--The Secretary of 
Defense shall establish a unified major force program for missile 
defense and defeat programs pursuant to section 222(b) of this title to 
prioritize missile defense and defeat programs in accordance with the 
requirements of the Department of Defense and national security.
    ``(b) Budget Assessment.--(1) The Secretary shall include with the 
defense budget materials for each of fiscal years 2019 through 2023 a 
report on the budget for missile defense and defeat programs of the 
Department of Defense.
    ``(2) Each report on the budget for missile defense and defeat 
programs of the Department under paragraph (1) shall include the 
following:
            ``(A) An overview of the budget, including--
                    ``(i) a comparison between that budget, the 
                previous budget, the most recent and prior future-years 
                defense program submitted to Congress under section 221 
                of this title (such comparison shall exclude the 
                responsibility for research and development of the 
                continuing improvement of such missile defense and 
                defeat program), and the amounts appropriated for such 
                missile defense and defeat programs during the previous 
                fiscal year; and
                    ``(ii) the specific identification, as a budgetary 
                line item, for the funding under such programs.
            ``(B) An assessment of the budget, including significant 
        changes, priorities, challenges, and risks.
            ``(C) Any additional matters the Secretary determines 
        appropriate.
    ``(3) Each report under paragraph (1) shall be submitted in 
unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
    ``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
            ``(1) The term `budget', with respect to a fiscal year, 
        means the budget for that fiscal year that is submitted to 
        Congress by the President under section 1105(a) of title 31.
            ``(2) The term `defense budget materials', with respect to 
        a fiscal year, means the materials submitted to Congress by the 
        Secretary of Defense in support of the budget for that fiscal 
        year.
            ``(3) The term `missile defense and defeat programs' means 
        active and passive ballistic missile defense programs, cruise 
        missile defense programs for the homeland, and missile defeat 
        programs.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of such chapter is amended by inserting after the 
        item relating to section 239 the following new item:

``239a. Missile defense and defeat programs: major force program and 
                            budget assessment.''.
    (b) Transition of Ballistic Missile Defense Programs to Military 
Departments.--
            (1) Requirement.--Not later than the date on which the 
        budget of the President for fiscal year 2020 is submitted under 
        section 1105 of title 31, United States Code, the Secretary of 
        Defense shall transfer the acquisition authority and the total 
        obligational authority for each missile defense program 
        described in paragraph (2) from the Missile Defense Agency to a 
        military department.
            (2) Missile defense program described.--A missile defense 
        program described in this paragraph is a missile defense 
        program of the Missile Defense Agency that, as of the date 
        specified in paragraph (1), has received Milestone C approval 
        (as defined in section 2366 of title 10, United States Code).
            (3) Report.--
                    (A) In general.--Not later than one year after the 
                date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of 
                Defense shall submit to the congressional defense 
                committees a report on the plans of the Department of 
                Defense for the transition of missile defense programs 
                from the Missile Defense Agency to the military 
                departments pursuant to paragraph (1).
                    (B) Scope.--The report under subparagraph (A) shall 
                cover the period covered by the future-years defense 
                program that is submitted under section 221 of title 
                10, United States Code, in the year in which such 
                report is submitted.
                    (C) Matters included.--The report under 
                subparagraph (A) shall include the following:
                            (i) An identification of--
                                    (I) the missile defense programs 
                                planned to be transitioned from the 
                                Missile Defense Agency to the military 
                                departments; and
                                    (II) the missile defense programs, 
                                if any, not planned for transition to 
                                the military departments.
                            (ii) The schedule for transition of each 
                        missile defense program planned to be 
                        transitioned to a military department, and an 
                        explanation of such schedule.
                            (iii) A description of--
                                    (I) the status of the plans of the 
                                Missile Defense Agency and the military 
                                departments for the transition of 
                                missile defense programs from that 
                                agency to the military departments; and
                                    (II) the status of any agreement 
                                between the Missile Defense Agency and 
                                one or more of the military departments 
                                on the transition of any such program 
                                from that agency to the military 
                                departments, including any agreement on 
                                the operational test criteria that must 
                                be achieved before such transition.
                            (iv) An identification of the element of 
                        the Department of Defense (whether the Missile 
                        Defense Agency, a military department, or both) 
                        that will be responsible for funding each 
                        missile defense program to be transitioned to a 
                        military department, and at what date.
                            (v) A description of the type of funds that 
                        will be used (whether funds for research, 
                        development, test, and evaluation, procurement, 
                        military construction, or operation and 
                        maintenance) for each missile defense program 
                        to be transitioned to a military department.
                            (vi) An explanation of the number of 
                        systems planned for procurement for each 
                        missile defense program to be transitioned to a 
                        military department, and the schedule for 
                        procurement of each such system.
                            (vii) A description of how the Missile 
                        Defense Agency will continue the responsibility 
                        for the research and development of 
                        improvements to missile defense programs.
    (c) Role of Missile Defense Agency.--
            (1) In general.--Chapter 8 of title 10, United States Code, 
        is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 205. Missile Defense Agency
    ``(a) Term of Director.--The Director of the Missile Defense Agency 
shall be appointed for a six-year term.
    ``(b) Reporting.--The Missile Defense Agency shall be under the 
authority, direction, and control of the Under Secretary of Defense for 
Research and Engineering.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of subchapter II of such chapter is amended by adding 
        at the end the following new item:

``205. Missile Defense Agency.''.
            (3) Application.--
                    (A) Terms.--Subsection (a) of section 205 of title 
                10, United States Code, as added by paragraph (1), 
                shall apply the day following the date on which the 
                present incumbent in the office of the Director of the 
                Missile Defense Agency, as of the date of the enactment 
                of this Act, ceases to serve as such.
                    (B) Reporting.--Subsection (b) of such section 205 
                shall apply beginning on February 1, 2018. In carrying 
                out such subsection, the Missile Defense Agency shall 
                be under the authority, direction, and control of the 
                Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering 
                in the same manner as the Missile Defense Agency was 
                under the authority, direction, and control of the 
                Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, 
                and Logistics pursuant to Department of Defense 
                Directive 5134.09. Any reference in such Instruction to 
                the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
                Technology, and Logistics shall be deemed to be a 
                reference to the Under Secretary of Defense for 
                Research and Engineering, including with respect to the 
                Under Secretary serving as the chairman of the Missile 
                Defense Executive Board.

SEC. 1682. PRESERVATION OF THE BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE CAPACITY OF 
              THE ARMY.

    (a) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 or any fiscal 
year thereafter for the Army may be obligated or expended to 
demilitarize any GEM-T interceptor or remove any such interceptor from 
the operational inventory of the Army until the date on which the 
Secretary of the Army submits to the congressional defense committees 
the evaluation conducted under subsection (b).
    (b) Evaluation.--The Secretary and the Chief of Staff of the Army 
shall jointly conduct an evaluation of the ability of the Army to meet 
warfighter requirements and operational needs if GEM-T interceptors are 
removed from the operational inventory of the Army. In conducting such 
evaluation, the Secretary and the Chief of Staff shall evaluate whether 
the Army can maintain an inventory of interceptors necessary to retain 
the capability provided by GEM-T interceptors and to meet such 
operational needs by either--
            (1) recertifying GEM-T interceptors (either with or without 
        modification); or
            (2) developing, testing, and fielding a new low-cost 
        interceptor that can be placed on the operational inventory of 
        the Army prior to the retirement of GEM-T interceptors.
    (c) Exception.--The limitation in subsection (a) shall not apply to 
activities that the Secretary determines are critical to the safety of 
GEM-T interceptors.
    (d) GEM-T Interceptor Defined.--In this section, the term ``GEM-T 
interceptor'' means the Patriot guidance enhanced missile TBM.

SEC. 1683. MODERNIZATION OF ARMY LOWER TIER AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE 
              SENSOR.

    (a) Approval of Acquisition Strategy.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than April 15, 2018, the 
        Secretary of the Army shall issue an acquisition strategy for a 
        360-degree lower tier air and missile defense sensor that 
        achieves initial operating capability by not later than January 
        1, 2022.
            (2) Requirements.--The acquisition strategy under paragraph 
        (1) shall--
                    (A) ensure the use of competitive procedures;
                    (B) clearly describe the open-architecture design 
                to be used;
                    (C) provide a comprehensive fielding plan that 
                provides 360-degree lower tier air and missile defense 
                sensor capability to all units of the Army by not later 
                than January 1, 2026;
                    (D) define the operation and sustainment cost 
                savings of the acquisition strategy and other 
                acquisition options of the Army;
                    (E) identify any programmatic cost avoidance that 
                could be achieved through co-production, co-
                development, or foreign military sales;
                    (F) ensure the fielding of an interim gap-filler 
                capability to the highest priority forces (consisting 
                of not less than three battalions) for imminent 
                threats; and
                    (G) identify the estimated cost to field both the 
                360-degree lower tier air and missile defense sensor 
                capability and the interim capability pursuant to 
                subparagraph (E).
            (3) Limitation.--If the Secretary of the Army does not 
        issue the acquisition strategy under subsection (a) by April 
        15, 2018, none of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
        this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for 
        the lower tier air and missile defense sensor of the Army that 
        are unobligated as of such date may be obligated or expended.
    (b) Conditional Transfer.--
            (1) MDA.--If the Secretary of the Army does not issue the 
        acquisition strategy under subsection (a) by April 15, 2018, 
        the Secretary of Defense shall transfer from the Secretary of 
        the Army to the Director of the Missile Defense Agency--
                    (A) the responsibility to issue the acquisition 
                strategy described in subsection (a) by not later than 
                December 15, 2018; and
                    (B) beginning on the date of such approval, the 
                responsibility to implement such acquisition strategy 
                to procure a 360-degree lower tier air and missile 
                defense sensor.
            (2) Army.--If the Secretary of Defense carries out the 
        transfer under paragraph (1), after the 360-degree lower tier 
        air and missile defense sensor achieves Milestone B approval 
        (or equivalent), but before such sensor achieves Milestone C 
        approval (or equivalent), the Secretary of Defense shall 
        transfer from the Director of the Missile Defense Agency to the 
        Secretary of the Army the responsibility to procure such 
        sensor.
    (c) Definitions.--The terms ``Milestone B approval'' and 
``Milestone C approval'' have the meanings given those terms in section 
2366 of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 1684. ENHANCEMENT OF OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION OF BALLISTIC 
              MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM.

    (a) Integration of Patriot Missiles Into Integrated Master Test 
Plan.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Director of the Missile Defense Agency, the Director of 
Operational Test and Evaluation, the Secretary of the Army, and the 
Secretary of the Navy shall jointly ensure that--
            (1) the test plans of the Integrated Master Test Plan of 
        the ballistic missile defense system include planned tests 
        activity of the lower tier ballistic missile defenses of the 
        Army;
            (2) such plans prioritize the integration of such defenses 
        with elements of the ballistic missile defense system; and
            (3) such plans are clearly described in such Integrated 
        Master Test Plan.
    (b) Normalizing Operational Test and Evaluation.--
            (1) Condition for proceeding beyond low-rate initial 
        production.--Section 2399(a)(1) of title 10, United States 
        Code, is amended by striking ``or a covered designated major 
        subprogram'' and inserting ``a covered designated major 
        subprogram, or an element of the ballistic missile defense 
        system''.
            (2) Conforming repeal.--Section 1662 of the Carl Levin and 
        Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act 
        for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 10 U.S.C. 2431 note) 
        is repealed.

SEC. 1685. DEFENSE OF HAWAII FROM NORTH KOREAN BALLISTIC MISSILE 
              ATTACK.

    (a) Findings; Sense of Congress.--
            (1) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
                    (A) The North Korean ballistic missile threat to 
                the United States, including Hawaii, is growing 
                rapidly.
                    (B) Since Kim Jong-un took power in 2012, North 
                Korea has conducted 78 ballistic missile tests, of 
                which 61 are considered to have been successful.
                    (C) The existing ballistic missile defense 
                protection for Hawaii, including the ground-based 
                midcourse defense system in Alaska, and the sea-based 
                x-band radar, provide limited ballistic missile defense 
                capabilities today.
                    (D) Through use of existing ballistic missile 
                defense assets, including AN/TPY-2 radars and the Aegis 
                Ashore Site located on the Pacific Missile Range 
                Facility, the ballistic missile defense of Hawaii could 
                benefit from a near-term improvement by adding a layer 
                of defense.
                    (E) The proposed program of record for a medium 
                range discriminating radar to be fully mission capable 
                after 2023 would leave the defense of Hawaii dependent 
                only on the ground-based midcourse defense system in 
                Alaska, and the sea-based x-band radar until that time, 
                while the threat to the United States, including 
                Hawaii, from North Korean ballistic missiles continues 
                to grow.
                    (F) The National Defense Authorization Act for 
                Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) required that the 
                Missile Defense Agency plan to provide additional 
                ballistic missile defense sensor coverage for the 
                defense of Hawaii and ``field such radar or equivalent 
                sensor by not later than December 31, 2021''.
                    (G) When asked at a hearing of the Committee on 
                Armed Services of the House of Representatives on April 
                26, 2017, about the threat to Hawaii from North Korean 
                ballistic missiles, the Commander of the United States 
                Pacific Command, Admiral Harry Harris, testified that 
                ``Kim Jong-un is clearly in a position to threaten 
                Hawaii today. . .I believe that our ballistic missile 
                (defense) architecture is sufficient to protect Hawaii 
                today. But it can be overwhelmed'' and ``I think that 
                we would be better served, my personal opinion, is that 
                we would be better served with a defensive Hawaii radar 
                and interceptors in Hawaii. I know that is being 
                discussed''.
            (2) Sense of congress.--It is the sense of Congress that 
        Congress supports assessing the feasibility of improving the 
        missile defense of Hawaii from the evolving ballistic missile 
        threat, including from North Korea, through a permanent missile 
        defense sensor capability and the possible introduction of 
        interim missile defense coverage.
    (b) Sequenced Approach.--The Secretary of Defense shall protect the 
test and training operations of the Pacific Missile Range Facility, and 
assess the siting and functionality of a discrimination radar for 
homeland defense throughout the Hawaiian Islands before assessing the 
feasibility of improving the missile defense of Hawaii by using 
existing missile defense assets that could materially improve the 
defense of Hawaii.
    (c) Test.--The Director of the Missile Defense Agency shall--
            (1) not later than 270 days after the date of the enactment 
        of this Act, conduct a test to evaluate and demonstrate, if 
        technologically feasible, the capability to defeat a simple 
        intercontinental ballistic missile threat using the standard 
        missile 3 block IIA missile interceptor; and
            (2) as part of the integrated master test plan for the 
        ballistic missile defense system, develop a plan to demonstrate 
        a capability to defeat a complex intercontinental ballistic 
        missile threat, including a complex threat posed by the 
        intercontinental ballistic missiles of North Korea.
    (d) Report.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report--
            (1) that indicates whether demonstrating an 
        intercontinental ballistic missile defense capability against 
        North Korean ballistic missiles by the standard missile 3 block 
        IIA missile interceptor poses any risks to strategic stability; 
        and
            (2) if the Secretary determines under paragraph (1) that 
        such demonstration poses such risks to strategic stability, a 
        description of the plan developed and implemented by the 
        Secretary to address and mitigate such risks, as determined 
        appropriate by the Secretary.

SEC. 1686. AEGIS ASHORE ANTI-AIR WARFARE CAPABILITY.

    (a) Authorization.--Using funds authorized to be appropriated by 
sections 101 and 201 of this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal 
year 2018 for procurement and research, development, test, and 
evaluation, as specified in the funding tables in division D, the 
Secretary of Defense shall continue the development, procurement, and 
deployment of anti-air warfare capabilities at each Aegis Ashore site 
in Romania and Poland. The Secretary shall ensure the deployment of 
such capabilities--
            (1) at such sites in Romania by not later than one year 
        after the date of the enactment of this Act; and
            (2) at such sites in Poland by not later than one year 
        after the declaration of operational status for such sites.
    (b) Reprogramming and Transfers.--Any reprogramming or transfer 
made to carry out subsection (a) shall be carried out in accordance 
with established procedures for reprogramming or transfers.

SEC. 1687. IRON DOME SHORT-RANGE ROCKET DEFENSE SYSTEM, ISRAELI 
              COOPERATIVE MISSILE DEFENSE PROGRAM CODEVELOPMENT AND 
              COPRODUCTION, AND ARROW 3 TESTING.

    (a) Iron Dome Short-range Rocket Defense System.--
            (1) Availability of funds.--Of the funds authorized to be 
        appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal 
        year 2018 for procurement, Defense-wide, and available for the 
        Missile Defense Agency, not more than $92,000,000 may be 
        provided to the Government of Israel to procure system 
        components for the Iron Dome Defense short-range rocket defense 
        program, through the coproduction of such system components in 
        the United States by industry of the United States.
            (2) Conditions.--
                    (A) Agreement.--Funds described in paragraph (1) 
                for the Iron Dome short-range rocket defense program 
                shall be available subject to the terms and conditions 
                in the Agreement Between the Department of Defense of 
                the United States of America and the Ministry of 
                Defense of the State of Israel Concerning Iron Dome 
                Defense System Procurement, signed on March 5, 2014, 
                subject to an amended bilateral international agreement 
                for coproduction for Tamir interceptors. In 
                negotiations by the Missile Defense Agency and the 
                Missile Defense Organization of the Government of 
                Israel regarding such production, the goal of the 
                United States is to maximize opportunities for 
                coproduction of the Tamir interceptors described in 
                paragraph (1) in the United States by industry of the 
                United States.
                    (B) Certification.--Not later than 30 days prior to 
                the initial obligation of funds described in paragraph 
                (1), the Director of the Missile Defense Agency and the 
                Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, 
                and Logistics shall jointly submit to the appropriate 
                congressional committees--
                            (i) a certification that the amended 
                        bilateral international agreement specified in 
                        subparagraph (A) is being implemented as 
                        provided in such agreement; and
                            (ii) an assessment detailing any risks 
                        relating to the implementation of such 
                        agreement.
    (b) Israeli Cooperative Missile Defense Program Codevelopment and 
Coproduction.--
            (1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), of the funds 
        authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018 for 
        procurement, Defense-wide, and available for the Missile 
        Defense Agency--
                    (A) not more than $221,500,000 may be provided to 
                the Government of Israel for the David's Sling Weapon 
                System Program, of which not more than $120,000,000 may 
                be used to procure the David's Sling Weapon System, 
                including for coproduction of parts and components in 
                the United States by United States industry; and
                    (B) not more than $287,300,000 may be provided to 
                the Government of Israel for the Arrow Weapon System, 
                including the Arrow 3 Upper Tier System, of which not 
                more than $120,000,000 may be used to procure the Arrow 
                3 Upper Tier Interceptor System, including for 
                coproduction of parts and components in the United 
                States by United States industry.
            (2) Certification.--
                    (A) Criteria.--Except as provided by paragraph (3), 
                the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, 
                Technology, and Logistics shall submit to the 
                appropriate congressional committees a certification 
                that--
                            (i) the Government of Israel has 
                        demonstrated the successful completion of the 
                        knowledge points, technical milestones, and 
                        production readiness reviews required by the 
                        research, development, and technology 
                        agreements for the David's Sling Weapon System 
                        and the Arrow 3 Upper Tier Development Program, 
                        respectively;
                            (ii) funds specified in subparagraphs (A) 
                        and (B) of paragraph (1) will be provided on 
                        the basis of a one-for-one cash match made by 
                        Israel for such respective systems or in 
                        another matching amount that otherwise meets 
                        best efforts (as mutually agreed to by the 
                        United States and Israel);
                            (iii) the United States has entered into a 
                        bilateral international agreement with Israel 
                        that establishes, with respect to the use of 
                        such funds--
                                    (I) in accordance with clause (iv), 
                                the terms of coproduction of parts and 
                                components of such respective systems 
                                on the basis of the greatest 
                                practicable coproduction of parts, 
                                components, and all-up rounds (if 
                                appropriate) by United States industry 
                                and minimizes nonrecurring engineering 
                                and facilitization expenses to the 
                                costs needed for coproduction;
                                    (II) complete transparency on the 
                                requirement of Israel for the number of 
                                interceptors and batteries of such 
                                respective systems that will be 
                                procured, including with respect to the 
                                procurement plans, acquisition 
                                strategy, and funding profiles of 
                                Israel;
                                    (III) technical milestones for 
                                coproduction of parts and components 
                                and procurement of such respective 
                                systems; and
                                    (IV) joint approval processes for 
                                third-party sales of such respective 
                                systems and the components of such 
                                respective systems;
                            (iv) the level of coproduction described in 
                        clause (iii)(I) for the Arrow 3 Upper Tier 
                        Interceptor Program and the David's Sling 
                        Weapon System is not less than 50 percent; and
                            (v) there is a separate, clear plan for 
                        each of the David's Sling Weapon System and the 
                        Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor Program for 
                        improving the affordability of the respective 
                        system, and each such plan is approved by a 
                        United States-Israeli joint working group on 
                        cost-reduction for such respective system.
                    (B) Number.--In carrying out subparagraph (A), the 
                Under Secretary may submit--
                            (i) one certification covering both the 
                        David's Sling Weapon System and the Arrow 3 
                        Upper Tier Interceptor Program; or
                            (ii) separate certifications for each 
                        respective system.
                    (C) Timing.--The Under Secretary shall submit to 
                the congressional defense committees the certification 
                under subparagraph (A) by not later than 60 days before 
                the funds specified in paragraph (1) for the respective 
                system covered by the certification are provided to the 
                Government of Israel.
            (3) Waiver.--The Under Secretary may waive the 
        certification required by paragraph (2) if the Under Secretary 
        certifies to the appropriate congressional committees that the 
        Under Secretary has received sufficient data from the 
        Government of Israel to demonstrate--
                    (A) the funds specified in subparagraphs (A) and 
                (B) of paragraph (1) are provided to Israel solely for 
                funding the procurement of long-lead components and 
                critical hardware in accordance with a production plan, 
                including a funding profile detailing Israeli 
                contributions for production, including long-lead 
                production, of either David's Sling Weapon System or 
                the Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor Program;
                    (B) such long-lead components have successfully 
                completed knowledge points, technical milestones, and 
                production readiness reviews; and
                    (C) the long-lead procurement will be conducted in 
                a manner that maximizes coproduction in the United 
                States without incurring nonrecurring engineering 
                activity or cost other than such activity or cost 
                required for suppliers of the United States to start or 
                restart production in the United States.
            (4) Briefing.--Not later than 30 days after the date on 
        which both plans described in paragraph (2)(A)(v) are 
        completed, the Under Secretary shall provide to the appropriate 
        congressional committees a joint briefing on such plans.
    (c) Limitation on Availability of Funding for Certain Arrow 3 
Testing.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the Missile Defense 
Agency, not more than $105,000,000 may be obligated or expended for--
            (1) testing of the Arrow 3 Upper Tier Development Program 
        that is carried out at ranges located in the United States; and
            (2) expenses relating to such testing that the Director 
        determines to be required and appropriate.
    (d) Cross Reference.--The amounts and purposes referred to in this 
section correspond to amounts specified for such purposes in the 
funding tables in division D.
    (e) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means the following:
            (1) The congressional defense committees.
            (2) The Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Foreign Relations of the 
        Senate.

SEC. 1688. REVIEW OF PROPOSED GROUND-BASED MIDCOURSE DEFENSE SYSTEM 
              CONTRACT.

    (a) Limitation on Changes to Contracting Strategy.--The Director of 
the Missile Defense Agency may not change the contracting strategy for 
the systems integration, operations, and test of the ground-based 
midcourse defense system until the date on which--
            (1) the report under subsection (b)(3) is submitted to the 
        congressional defense committees; and
            (2) a period of 30 days has elapsed following the date of 
        such submission.
    (b) Review.--
            (1) In general.--The Director of Cost Assessment and 
        Program Evaluation shall conduct a review of the contract for 
        the systems integration, operations, and test of the ground-
        based midcourse defense system. Such review shall include the 
        following:
                    (A) Contract performance of current industry-led 
                prime contract approach, including with respect to--
                            (i) system readiness performance and 
                        reliability growth;
                            (ii) development, integration, and fielding 
                        of new homeland defense capabilities; and
                            (iii) cost performance against baseline 
                        contract.
                    (B) With respect to alternate contracting 
                approaches--
                            (i) an enumeration and detailing of any 
                        specific benefits for each such alternate 
                        approach;
                            (ii) an identification of specific costs to 
                        switching to each such alternate approach; and
                            (iii) detailing of the specific risks of 
                        each such alternate approach to homeland 
                        defense, including regarding schedule, costs, 
                        and the sustainment, maintenance, development, 
                        and fielding, of integrated capabilities.
                    (C) With respect to contracting approaches that 
                transition to Federal Government-led systems 
                engineering integration and test--
                            (i) an enumeration of the processes, 
                        procedures, and command media that have been 
                        established by the Missile Defense Agency and 
                        proven to be effective for the execution of 
                        programs that are of the scale of the ground-
                        based midcourse defense system; and
                            (ii) the manner in which a new contract 
                        will control for growth in the personnel and 
                        support contracts of the Federal Government to 
                        support cost growth and minimize the risk of 
                        schedule delay.
                    (D) A baseline for historical and current staffing 
                of the ground-based midcourse defense system program, 
                specifically with respect to personnel of the Federal 
                Government, personnel of federally funded research and 
                development centers, personnel of departments and 
                agencies of the Federal Government, and support 
                contractors.
                    (E) Projections of the staffing categories 
                specified in subparagraph (D) under a new contracting 
                strategy and how such staffing categories will be 
                limited to prevent significant cost growth and to 
                minimize the risk of schedule delays.
                    (F) The views and recommendations of the Director 
                for any changes the current ground-based midcourse 
                defense system contract or a new contract, including 
                the proposed contracting strategy of the Missile 
                Defense Agency.
                    (G) Any other such matters the Director determines 
                appropriate.
            (2) Transmission.--The Director of Cost Assessment and 
        Program Evaluation shall transmit to the Under Secretary of 
        Defense for Research and Engineering and the Missile Defense 
        Executive Board the review under paragraph (1).
            (3) Report.--Not later than 30 days after the date on which 
        the Under Secretary and the Missile Defense Executive Board 
        receive the review under paragraph (1), the Under Secretary and 
        Board shall jointly submit to the congressional defense 
        committees a report containing--
                    (A) the review, without change; and
                    (B) any views and recommendations of the Under 
                Secretary and the Board on such review.

SEC. 1689. SENSE OF CONGRESS AND PLAN FOR DEVELOPMENT OF SPACE-BASED 
              SENSOR LAYER FOR BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the defense of the homeland, the deployed members of 
        the Armed Forces, and the allies of the United States against 
        the threat of attack by ballistic and hypersonic missiles is 
        the highest priority of the Missile Defense Agency;
            (2) the Missile Defense Agency, and the Defense Agencies 
        and combat support agencies, must prioritize the design, 
        development, and deployment of the space-based missile defense 
        sensor layer;
            (3) a space-based missile defense sensor layer is essential 
        for the future of the missile defense of the homeland, the 
        deployed members of the Armed Forces, and the allies of the 
        United States; and
            (4) such a space-based layer can, and should, benefit a 
        multitude of other important defense and intelligence 
        requirements, including targeting and space situational 
        awareness.
    (b) Development.--After the date on which the Director of the 
Missile Defense Agency submits the plan under subsection (c), the 
Director, in coordination with the Secretary of the Air Force and the 
heads of the Defense Agencies and combat support agencies that the 
Director determines appropriate, shall develop a space-based ballistic 
missile defense sensor layer that--
            (1) provides missile defense engagement quality precision 
        tracking data of the United States beginning in the boost phase 
        and continuing throughout subsequent flight regimes; and
            (2) serves other defense and intelligence requirements for 
        intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, including 
        targeting and space situational awareness; and
            (3) achieves an operational prototype payload at the 
        earliest practicable date.
    (c) Space-based Missile Defense Sensor Layer Plan.--Not later than 
one year after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Director 
shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees a plan that 
includes--
            (1) how the Director will carry out subsection (b), 
        including with respect to the estimated costs--
                    (A) for the operational prototype payload specified 
                in paragraph (3) of such subsection; and
                    (B) to develop, acquire, and deploy, and the 
                lifecycle costs to operate and sustain, a space-based 
                sensor layer and support systems to provide global 
                missile defense coverage;
            (2) an assessment of the maturity of critical technologies 
        necessary to make operational such a space-based sensor layer, 
        and recommendations for any research and development activities 
        to rapidly mature such technologies;
            (3) an assessment of what capabilities such a space-based 
        sensor layer can contribute that other sensor layers do not 
        contribute;
            (4) how the Director will leverage the use of national 
        technical means, commercially available space and terrestrial 
        capabilities, hosted payloads, small satellites, and other 
        capabilities to carry out subsection (b); and
            (5) any other matters the Director determines appropriate.
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees; and
                    (B) the Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
                Senate and the Permanent Select Committee on 
                Intelligence of the House of Representatives.
            (2) The term ``combat support agency'' has the meaning 
        given that term in section 193(f) of title 10, United States 
        Code.
            (3) The term ``Defense Agency'' has the meaning given that 
        term in section 101(a)(11) of title 10, United States Code.

SEC. 1690. SENSE OF CONGRESS AND PLAN FOR DEVELOPMENT OF SPACE-BASED 
              BALLISTIC MISSILE INTERCEPT LAYER.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) a space-based missile defense layer will exploit the 
        natural advantages of space systems and integrate them into the 
        ballistic missile defense system; and
            (2) these advantages include--
                    (A) a 24/7 global presence to defend against 
                asymmetric threats;
                    (B) access to geographically denied areas;
                    (C) an ability to close a global fire control loop 
                for such system;
                    (D) complementing existing terrestrial 
                capabilities; and
                    (E) increasing the overall survivability and 
                resilience of the entire national missile defense 
                system.
    (b) Development.--The Director of the Missile Defense Agency shall 
develop a space-based ballistic missile intercept layer to the 
ballistic missile defense system that is--
            (1) regionally focused;
            (2) capable of providing boost-phase defense; and
            (3) achieves an operational capability at the earliest 
        practicable date.
    (c) Space-based Ballistic Missile Intercept Layer Plan.--Not later 
than one year after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Director 
shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees a plan to 
carry out subsection (b) during the five-year period following the date 
of the plan. Such plan shall include the following:
            (1) A concept definition phase consisting of multiple 
        awarded contracts to identify feasible solutions consistent 
        with architectural principles, performance goals, and price 
        points established by the Director, such as contracts relating 
        to--
                    (A) refined requirements;
                    (B) conceptual designs;
                    (C) technology readiness assessments;
                    (D) critical technical and operational issues;
                    (E) cost, schedule, performance estimates; and
                    (F) risk reduction plans.
            (2) A technology risk reduction phase consisting of up to 
        three competitively awarded contracts focused on maturing, 
        integrating, and characterizing key technologies, algorithms, 
        components, and sub-systems, such as contracts relating to--
                    (A) refined concepts and designs;
                    (B) engineering trade studies;
                    (C) medium-to-high fidelity digital representations 
                of the space-based ballistic missile intercept weapon 
                system; and
                    (D) a proposed integration and test sequence that 
                could potentially lead to a live-fire boost phase 
                intercept during fiscal year 2022.
            (3) During the technology risk reduction phase, contractors 
        will define proposed demonstrations to a preliminary design 
        review level prior to a technology development phase down-
        select.
            (4) A technology development phase consisting of two 
        competitively awarded contracts to mature the preferred space-
        based ballistic missile intercept weapon system concepts and to 
        potentially conduct a live-fire boost phase intercept fly-off 
        during fiscal year 2022 with brassboard hardware and prototype 
        software on a path to the operational goal.
            (5) A concurrent space-based ballistic missile intercept 
        weapon system fire control test bed activity that incrementally 
        incorporates modeling and simulation elements, real-world data, 
        hardware, algorithms, and systems to evaluate with increasing 
        confidence the performance of evolving designs and concepts of 
        such weapon system from target detection to intercept.
            (6) Any other matters the Director determines appropriate.
    (d) Establishment of Space Test Bed.--In carrying out subsection 
(b), the Director of the Missile Defense Agency shall establish a space 
test bed to--
            (1) conduct research and development regarding options for 
        a space-based defensive layer, including with respect to space-
        based interceptors and directed energy platforms; and
            (2) identify the most cost-efficient and promising 
        technological solutions to implementing such layer.
    (e) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
            (1) the congressional defense committees; and
            (2) the Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate and 
        the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 1691. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR GROUND-BASED 
              MIDCOURSE DEFENSE ELEMENT OF THE BALLISTIC MISSILE 
              DEFENSE SYSTEM.

    Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise 
made available for fiscal year 2018 for the ground-based midcourse 
defense element of the ballistic missile defense system, $50,000,000 
may not be obligated or expended until the date on which the Secretary 
of Defense provides to the congressional defense committees--
            (1) a written certification that the risk of mission 
        failure of ground-based midcourse interceptor enhanced kill 
        vehicles due to foreign object debris has been minimized; or
            (2) if the certification under paragraph (1) cannot be 
        made, a briefing on the corrective measures that will be 
        carried out to minimize such risk, including--
                    (A) a timeline for the implementation of the 
                measures; and
                    (B) the estimated cost of implementing the 
                measures.

SEC. 1692. CONVENTIONAL PROMPT GLOBAL STRIKE WEAPONS SYSTEM.

    (a) Early Operational Capability.--The Secretary of Defense, in 
coordination with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, shall plan 
to reach early operational capability for the conventional prompt 
strike weapon system by not later than September 30, 2022.
    (b) Limitation on Availability of Funds.--Of the funds authorized 
to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal 
year 2018 for research, development, test, and evaluation, Defense-
wide, for the conventional prompt global strike weapons system, not 
more than 50 percent may be obligated or expended until the date on 
which the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in consultation with 
the Chief of Staff of the Army, the Commander of the United States 
European Command, the Commander of the United States Pacific Command, 
and the Commander of the United States Strategic Command, submits to 
the congressional defense committees, a report on--
            (1) the required level of resources that is consistent with 
        the level of priority assigned to the associated capability 
        gap;
            (2) the estimated period for the delivery of a medium-range 
        early operational capability, the required level of resources 
        necessary to field a medium-range conventional prompt global 
        strike weapon within the United States (including the 
        territories and possessions of the United States), and a 
        detailed plan consistent with the urgency of the associated 
        capability gap across multiple platforms;
            (3) the joint performance requirements that--
                    (A) ensure interoperability, where appropriate, 
                between and among joint military capabilities; and
                    (B) are necessary, as designated by the Chairman of 
                the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to fulfill capability gaps 
                of more than one military department, Defense Agency, 
                or other element of the Department; and
            (4) in coordination with the Secretary of Defense, any plan 
        (including policy options) considered appropriate to address 
        any potential risks of ambiguity from the launch or employment 
        of such a capability.

SEC. 1693. DETERMINATION OF LOCATION OF CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES 
              INTERCEPTOR SITE.

    (a) Determination.--Not later than 30 days after the date on which 
the Ballistic Missile Defense Review is issued, the Secretary of 
Defense shall determine the location of a potential additional 
continental United States interceptor site. In making such 
determination, the Secretary shall consider the full spectrum of 
contributing factors, including with respect to each of the following:
            (1) Strategic and operational effectiveness, including with 
        respect to the location that is the most advantageous site to 
        the continental United States, including by having the 
        capability to provide shoot-assess-shoot coverage to the entire 
        continental United States.
            (2) Existing infrastructure at the location.
            (3) Economic impacts.
            (4) Public support.
            (5) Cost to construct and operate.
    (b) Report.--Not later than 30 days after making the determination 
described in subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a report detailing all of the 
contributing factors considered by the Secretary in making such 
determination, including any other factors that the Secretary 
considered, including any relevant recommendations of the Ballistic 
Missile Defense Review.

SEC. 1694. NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILES.

    Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Secretary shall provide to the congressional defense 
committees a briefing on the hazards or risks posed directly or 
indirectly by the nuclear ambitions of North Korea, focusing upon--
            (1) the development and deployment of intercontinental 
        ballistic missiles or nuclear weapons;
            (2) the consequences to the United States, the interests of 
        the United States, and allies of the United States of North 
        Korea's nuclear and missile programs;
            (3) a plan to deter and defend against such threats from 
        North Korea;
            (4) protecting vital interest and capabilities of the 
        United States in space from such threats from North Korea; and
            (5) the potential damage or destruction caused by such 
        missiles to satellites and space stations, including magnetic 
        fields such as the Van Allen belts.

SEC. 1694A. BOOST PHASE BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE.

    (a) Initial Operational Deployment.--The Secretary of Defense shall 
ensure that an effective interim kinetic or directed energy boost phase 
ballistic missile defense capability is available for initial 
operational deployment not later than December 31, 2020.
    (b) Plan.--Together with the budget of the President submitted to 
Congress under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, for 
fiscal year 2019, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees a plan to achieve the requirement in 
subsection (a). Such plan shall include--
            (1) the budget requirements;
            (2) a robust test schedule;
            (3) a plan to develop an enduring boost phase ballistic 
        missile defense capability, including cost and test schedule.

                       Subtitle G--Other Matters

SEC. 1695. PROTECTION OF CERTAIN FACILITIES AND ASSETS FROM UNMANNED 
              AIRCRAFT.

    Subparagraph (C) of section 130i(e)(1) of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended to read as follows:
                            ``(C)(i) relates to--
                                            ``(I) the nuclear 
                                        deterrence mission of the 
                                        Department of Defense, 
                                        including with respect to 
                                        nuclear command and control, 
                                        integrated tactical warning and 
                                        attack assessment, and 
                                        continuity of government;
                                            ``(II) the missile defense 
                                        mission of the Department; or
                                            ``(III) the national 
                                        security space mission of the 
                                        Department; or
                                    ``(ii) is part of a Major Range and 
                                Test Facility Base (as defined in 
                                section 196(i) of this title).''.

SEC. 1696. USE OF COMMERCIAL ITEMS IN DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND 
              SYSTEMS.

    (a) In General.--The procurement process for each covered 
Distributed Common Ground System shall be carried out in accordance 
with section 2377 of title 10, United States Code.
    (b) Certification.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Service Acquisition Executive responsible 
for each covered Distributed Common Ground System shall certify to the 
appropriate congressional committees that the procurement process for 
increments of the system procured after the date of the enactment of 
this Act will be carried out in accordance with section 2377 of title 
10, United States Code.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) Appropriate congressional committees defined.--The term 
        ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees; and
                    (B) the Select Committee on Intelligence of the 
                Senate and the Permanent Select Committee on 
                Intelligence of the House of Representatives.
            (2) Covered dcgs system.--The term ``covered Distributed 
        Common Ground System'' includes the following:
                    (A) The Distributed Common Ground System of the 
                Army.
                    (B) The Distributed Common Ground System of the 
                Navy.
                    (C) The Distributed Common Ground System of the 
                Marine Corps.
                    (D) The Distributed Common Ground System of the Air 
                Force.
                    (E) The Distributed Common Ground System of the 
                Special Operations Forces.

SEC. 1697. INDEPENDENT ASSESSMENT OF COSTS RELATING TO AMMONIUM 
              PERCHLORATE.

    (a) Assessment.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall seek to enter 
into a contract with a federally funded research and development center 
to conduct an assessment of the costs to the Department of Defense 
relating to contractors and subcontractors of the Department using a 
new supplier of ammonium perchlorate for weapon systems.
    (b) Elements.--The assessment under subsection (a) shall include 
the following:
            (1) For each weapon system that must be requalified by 
        reason of the new supplier of ammonium perchlorate as described 
        in subsection (a), an estimate of the requalification costs.
            (2) The types and number of tests that are needed for any 
        such requalification, including whether any currently planned 
        tests, as of the date of the assessment, may be leveraged, or 
        testing across programs may be used, to decrease 
        requalification costs while retaining and ensuring 
        qualification standards.
            (3) Estimates of any other costs relating to ammonium 
        perchlorate that the Secretary determines appropriate.
    (c) Submission.--Not later than 120 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees the assessment under subsection (a), without change, 
together with any comments or views of the Secretary regarding the 
assessment.

SEC. 1698. LIMITATION AND BUSINESS CASE ANALYSIS REGARDING AMMONIUM 
              PERCHLORATE.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense, acting through the 
Director of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation, shall conduct a 
business case analysis regarding the options of the Federal Government 
to ensure a robust domestic industrial base to supply ammonium 
perchlorate for use in solid rocket motors. Such analysis should 
include assessments of the near and long-term costs, program impacts, 
opportunities for competition, opportunities for redundant or 
complementary capabilities, and national security implications of--
            (1) continuing to rely on one domestic provider;
            (2) supporting development of a second domestic source;
            (3) procuring ammonium perchlorate as Government-furnished 
        material and providing it to all necessary programs; and
            (4) such other options as the Secretary determines 
        appropriate.
    (b) Elements.--The analysis under subsection (a) shall, at minimum, 
include--
            (1) an estimate of all associated costs, including 
        development, procurement, and qualification costs, as 
        applicable;
            (2) an assessment of options, under various scenarios, for 
        the quantity of ammonium perchlorate that would be required by 
        the Department of Defense; and
            (3) the assessment of the Secretary of how the requirements 
        for ammonium perchlorate of other Federal agencies impact the 
        requirements of the Department of Defense.
    (c) Report.--The Secretary shall submit the business case analysis 
required by subsection (a) to the Comptroller General of the United 
States and the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of 
Representatives by March 1, 2018, along with any views of the 
Secretary.
    (d) Review.--The Comptroller General of the United States shall 
conduct a review of the report submitted by the Secretary under 
subsection (c) and, not later than 30 days after receiving such report, 
provide a briefing on such review to the Committees on Armed Services 
of the Senate and House of Representatives.
    (e) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by 
this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the 
Department of Defense may be obligated or expended for the development 
or construction of a new source for ammonium perchlorate until 45 days 
after the date on which the report under subsection (c) is submitted to 
the Comptroller General and the Committees on Armed Services of the 
Senate and House of Representatives.
    (f) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the limitation 
under subsection (e) if the Secretary--
            (1) determines such waiver to be in the national security 
        interest of the United States; and
            (2) submits written notification of such determination to 
        the congressional defense committees and waits 15 days.

SEC. 1699. INDUSTRIAL BASE FOR LARGE SOLID ROCKET MOTORS AND RELATED 
              TECHNOLOGIES.

    (a) Plan.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the 
Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 
shall develop a plan to ensure a robust domestic industrial base for 
large solid rocket motors, including with respect to the critical 
technologies, subsystems, components, and materials within and relating 
to such rocket motors.
    (b) Sustainment of Domestic Suppliers.--The Secretary shall develop 
the plan under subsection (a) in a manner that, if carried out, 
sustains not less than two domestic suppliers for each of the 
following:
            (1) Large solid rocket motors.
            (2) Small liquid-fueled rocket engines.
            (3) Aeroshells for reentry vehicles (or reentry bodies).
            (4) Strategic radiation-hardened microelectronics.
            (5) Any other critical technologies, subsystems, 
        components, and materials within and relating to large solid 
        rocket motors that the Secretary determines appropriate.
    (c) Report.--
            (1) Submission.--Not later than February 1, 2018, the 
        Secretary shall submit to the Committee on Armed Services and 
        the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Armed Services of the 
        Senate a report that includes the plan under subsection (a).
            (2) Matters included.--With respect to the sustainment of 
        domestic suppliers as described in subsection (b), the report 
        under paragraph (1) shall include the views of the Secretary on 
        the following:
                    (A) Such sustainment of not less than two domestic 
                suppliers for each item specified in paragraphs (1) 
                through (5) of such subsection.
                    (B) The risks within the industrial base for each 
                such item.
                    (C) The estimated costs for such sustainment.
                    (D) The opportunities to ensure or promote 
                competition within the industrial base for each such 
                item.

SEC. 1699A. PILOT PROGRAM ON ENHANCING INFORMATION SHARING FOR SECURITY 
              OF SUPPLY CHAIN.

    (a) Establishment.--Not later than June 1, 2019, the Secretary of 
Defense shall establish a pilot program to enhance information sharing 
with cleared defense contractors to ensure all source information is 
appropriately, singularly, and exclusively shared for the purpose of 
ensuring the security of the supply chain of covered programs.
    (b) Selection.--The Secretary shall select 10 acquisition or 
sustainment programs of the Department of Defense to participate in the 
pilot program under subsection (a), of which--
            (1) not fewer than one program shall be related to nuclear 
        weapons;
            (2) not fewer than one program shall be related to nuclear 
        command, control, and communications;
            (3) not fewer than one program shall be related to 
        continuity of government;
            (4) not fewer than one program shall be related to 
        ballistic missile defense;
            (5) not fewer than one program shall be related to other 
        command and control systems; and
            (6) not fewer than one program shall be related to 
        logistics.
    (c) Report.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the Secretary shall 
submit to the congressional defense committees a report that includes--
            (1) details on how the Secretary will establish the pilot 
        program under subsection (a) to ensure all source information 
        is appropriately, singularly, and exclusively shared for the 
        purpose of ensuring the security of the supply chain of covered 
        programs; and
            (2) the identification of any legislative action or 
        administrative action required to provide the Secretary with 
        specific additional authorities required to fully implement the 
        pilot program.
    (d) Cleared Defense Contractors Defined.--In this section, the term 
``cleared defense contractors'' means contractors of the Department of 
Defense who have a security clearance, including contractor facilities 
that have a security clearance.

SEC. 1699B. COMMISSION TO ASSESS THE THREAT TO THE UNITED STATES FROM 
              ELECTROMAGNETIC PULSE ATTACKS AND EVENTS.

    (a) Establishment.--There is hereby established a commission to be 
known as the ``Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States 
from Electromagnetic Pulse Attacks and Events'' (hereafter in this 
section referred to as the ``Commission''). The purpose of the 
Commission is to assess and make recommendations with respect to the 
threat to the United States from electromagnetic pulse attacks and 
events.
    (b) Composition.--
            (1) Membership.--The Commission shall be composed of 12 
        members appointed as follows:
                    (A) Three members appointed by the chair of the 
                Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
                Representatives.
                    (B) Three members appointed by the ranking minority 
                member of the Committee on Armed Services of the House 
                of Representatives.
                    (C) Three members appointed by the chair of the 
                Committee on Armed Services of the Senate.
                    (D) Three members appointed by the ranking minority 
                member of the Committee on Armed Services of the 
                Senate.
            (2) Chair and vice chair.--
                    (A) Chair.--The chair of the Committee on Armed 
                Services of the House of Representative and the chair 
                of the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate shall 
                jointly designate one member of the Commission to serve 
                as chair of the Commission.
                    (B) Vice chair.--The ranking minority member of the 
                Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
                Representative and the ranking minority member of the 
                Committee on Armed Services of the Senate shall jointly 
                designate one member of the Commission to serve as vice 
                chair of the Commission.
            (3) Security clearance required.--Each individual appointed 
        as a member of the Commission shall possess (or have recently 
        possessed before the date of such appointment) the appropriate 
        security clearance necessary to carry out the duties of the 
        Commission.
            (4) Qualification.--Members of the Commission shall be 
        appointed from among private United States citizens with 
        knowledge and expertise in the scientific, technical, and 
        defense aspects of electromagnetic pulse threats and 
        vulnerabilities.
            (5) Period of appointment; vacancies.--Members shall be 
        appointed for the life of the Commission. Any vacancy in the 
        Commission shall be filled in the same manner as the original 
        appointment.
    (c) Duties.--
            (1) Review and assessment.--The Commission shall review and 
        assess--
                    (A) the nature, magnitude, and likelihood of 
                potential electromagnetic pulse (hereafter in section 
                referred to as ``EMP'') attacks and events, both 
                manmade and natural, that could be directed at or 
                affect the United States within the next 20 years;
                    (B) the vulnerability of United States military and 
                civilian systems to EMP attacks and events, including 
                with respect to emergency preparedness and immediate 
                response;
                    (C) the capability of the United States to repair 
                and recover from damage inflicted on United States 
                military and civilian systems by EMP attacks and 
                events; and
                    (D) the feasibility and cost of hardening critical 
                military and civilian systems against EMP attack and 
                events.
            (2) Recommendations.--The Commission shall recommend any 
        actions it believes should be taken by the United States to 
        better prepare, prevent, mitigate, or recover military and 
        civilian systems with respect to EMP attacks and events.
    (d) Cooperation From Government.--
            (1) Cooperation.--In carrying out its duties, the 
        Commission shall receive the full and timely cooperation of the 
        Secretary of Defense and the pertinent heads of any other 
        Federal agency in providing the Commission with analysis, 
        briefings, and other information necessary for the fulfillment 
        of its responsibilities.
            (2) Liaison.--The Secretary shall designate at least one 
        officer or employee of the Department of Defense to serve as a 
        liaison officer between the Department and the Commission.
    (e) Report.--
            (1) Final report.--
                    (A) In general.--Not later than December 1, 2018, 
                the Commission shall submit to the President, the 
                Secretary of Defense, the Committee on Armed Services 
                of the House of Representatives, and the Committee on 
                Armed Services of the Senate a report on the findings, 
                conclusions, and recommendations of the Commission.
                    (B) Form of report.--The report submitted to 
                Congress under subparagraph (A) shall be submitted in 
                unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
            (2) Views of the secretary.--Not later than 90 days after 
        the submittal of the report under paragraph (1), the Secretary 
        of Defense shall submit to the Committee on Armed Services of 
        the House of Representatives and the Committee on Armed 
        Services of the Senate a report that contains the views of the 
        Secretary with respect to the findings, conclusions, and 
        recommendations of the Commission and any actions the Secretary 
        intends to take as a result.
            (3) Interim briefing.--Not later than June 1, 2018, the 
        Commission shall provide to the Committee on Armed Services of 
        the House of Representatives and the Committee on Armed 
        Services of the Senate a briefing on the status of the 
        activities of the Commission, including a discussion of any 
        interim recommendations.
    (f) Funding.--Of the amounts authorized to be appropriated by this 
Act for the Department of Defense, $3,000,000 is available to fund the 
activities of the Commission, as specified in the funding tables in 
division D.
    (g) Application of Federal Advisory Committee Act.--The Federal 
Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) shall apply to the Commission.
    (h) Termination.--The Commission shall terminate three months after 
the date on which the Secretary of Defense submits the report under 
subsection (e)(2).
    (i) Repeal.--Title XIV of Floyd D. Spence National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (Public Law 106-398) is 
repealed.

SEC. 1699C. PILOT PROGRAM ON ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM MAPPING.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish a pilot 
program to assess the viability of space-based mapping of the 
electromagnetic spectrum used by the Department of Defense.
    (b) Duration.--The authority of the Secretary to carry out the 
pilot program under subsection (a) shall terminate on the date that is 
one year after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (c) Interim Briefing.--Not later than 60 days after the date of 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall provide a 
briefing to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Senate (and to any other congressional defense 
committee upon request) demonstrating how the Secretary plans to 
implement the pilot program under subsection (a).
    (d) Final Briefing.--Not later than 90 days after the pilot program 
under subsection (a) is completed, the Secretary shall provide a 
briefing to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives and the Senate (and to any other congressional defense 
committee upon request) on the utility, cost, and other considerations 
regarding the mapping of the electromagnetic spectrum used by the 
Department of Defense.

      Subtitle H--Advancing America's Missile Defense Act of 2017

SEC. 1699D. SHORT TITLE.

    This subtitle may be cited as the ``Advancing America's Missile 
Defense Act of 2017''.

SEC. 1699E. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON CURRENT STATE OF UNITED STATES MISSILE 
              DEFENSE, FUTURE INVESTMENT, AND ACCELERATING CAPABILITIES 
              TO OUTPACE CURRENT THREATS.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that the 
Secretary of Defense should use the upcoming Ballistic Missile Defense 
Review (BMDR) and the Missile Defeat Review (MDR) to accelerate the 
development of new and existing means to sustain and increase the 
capacity, capability, and reliability of the ground-based midcourse 
defense element of the ballistic missile defense system and other 
missile defense programs.
    (b) Acceleration of Development of Certain Advanced Missile Defense 
Technologies Toward Fielding.--
            (1) In general.--To the degree practicable, the Director of 
        the Missile Defense Agency shall use the policies of the 
        Department of Defense to accelerate the development, testing, 
        and fielding of the redesigned kill vehicle, the multi-object 
        kill vehicle, the C3 booster, a space-based sensor layer, an 
        airborne laser on unmanned aerial vehicles, and a potential 
        additional missile defense site, including the completion of 
        any outstanding environmental impact statements (EISs) for an 
        additional missile defense site on the East Coast or in the 
        Midwest regions of the United States.
            (2) Priority.--The Director shall prioritize the 
        development of capabilities listed in paragraph (1) subject to 
        annual authorization and appropriation of funding.
            (3) Development.--The Director shall use sound acquisition 
        processes and program management to develop the capabilities 
        set forth in paragraph (1).

SEC. 1699F. AUTHORIZATION TO INCREASE CURRENT GROUND-BASED MIDCOURSE 
              DEFENSE CAPACITY BY 28 GROUND-BASED INTERCEPTORS.

    (a) Increase in Capacity.--The Secretary of Defense shall, subject 
to the annual authorization of appropriations and the annual 
appropriation of funds for National Missile Defense, increase the 
number of United States ground-based interceptors by up to 28.
    (b) Report to Congress.--
            (1) In general.--Unless otherwise directed or recommended 
        by the BMDR, not later than 90 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Director of the Missile Defense 
        Agency shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        report on infrastructure requirements and costs associated to 
        increase the number of ground-based interceptors at Missile 
        Field 1 and Missile Field 2 at Fort Greely to 20 ground-based 
        interceptors each.
            (2) Contents.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall 
        include the following:
                    (A) An analysis of the strategic, operational, and 
                tactical benefits of adding additional ground-based 
                interceptors at each missile field.
                    (B) A detailed description of the infrastructure 
                needed and costs associated with expanding each missile 
                field.
                    (C) An identification of any environmental, 
                technical, or logistical barriers to expanding each 
                missile field.
                    (D) Any analysis of alternatively using Missile 
                Field 4 and Missile Field 5 to increase the number of 
                ground-based interceptors.
            (3) Form.--The report submitted under paragraph (1) shall 
        be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified 
        annex.

SEC. 1699G. MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY REPORT ON INCREASING NUMBER OF 
              GROUND-BASED INTERCEPTORS UP TO 100.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that it is the 
policy of the United States to maintain and improve, with the allies of 
the United States, an effective, robust layered missile defense system 
capable of defending the citizens of the United States residing in 
territories and States of the United States, allies of the United 
States, and deployed Armed Forces of the United States.
    (b) Report to Congress.--
            (1) In general.--Unless otherwise directed or recommended 
        by the BMDR, not later than 90 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Director of the Missile Defense 
        Agency shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        report on the costs and benefits of increasing the capacity of 
        the ground-based midcourse defense element of the ballistic 
        missile defense system.
            (2) Contents.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall 
        include the following:
                    (A) An identification of potential sites--new or 
                existing--to allow for the increase of up to 100 
                ground-based interceptors.
                    (B) An analysis of the strategic, operational, 
                tactical, and cost benefits of each site.
                    (C) A description of any environmental, legal, or 
                tactical challenges associated with each site.
                    (D) A detailed description of the infrastructure 
                needed and costs associated with each site.
                    (E) A summary of any completed or outstanding 
                environmental impact statements (EIS) on each site.
                    (F) An operational evaluation and cost analysis of 
                the deployment of transportable ground-based 
                interceptors, including an identification of potential 
                sites, including in the eastern United States and at 
                Vandenberg Air Force Base, and an examination of any 
                environmental, legal, or tactical challenges associated 
                with such deployments, including to any sites 
                identified in subparagraph (A).
                    (G) A determination of the appropriate fleet mix of 
                ground-based interceptor kill vehicles and boosters to 
                maximize overall system effectiveness and increase its 
                capacity and capability, including the costs and 
                benefits of continued inclusion of capability 
                enhancement II (CE-II) Block 1 interceptors after the 
                fielding of the redesigned kill vehicle.
                    (H) A description of the planned improvements to 
                homeland ballistic missile defense sensor and 
                discrimination capabilities and an assessment of the 
                expected operational benefits of such improvements to 
                homeland ballistic missile defense.
                    (I) The costs and benefits of supplementing ground-
                based midcourse defense elements with other, more 
                distributed, elements, including both Aegis ships and 
                Aegis Ashore installations with Standard Missile-3 
                Block IIA and other interceptors in Hawaii and at other 
                locations for homeland missile defense.
            (3) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified 
        annex.

SEC. 1699H. EVALUATION AND EVOLUTION OF TERRESTRIAL GROUND-BASED 
              MIDCOURSE DEFENSE SENSORS.

    (a) Report to Congress.--
            (1) In general.--Unless otherwise directed or recommended 
        by the BMDR, not later than 90 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Director of the Missile Defense 
        Agency, in coordination with the Secretary of the Air Force, 
        shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
        on the status of the integrated layers of missile defense 
        radars.
            (2) Contents.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall 
        include the following:
                    (A) A detailed analysis of the expected 
                improvements resulting from the integration of the Long 
                Range Discrimination Radar into the missile defense 
                system architecture of the United States, including--
                            (i) any adjustments to homeland missile 
                        defense tactics, techniques, and procedures;
                            (ii) possible adjustments to ground-based 
                        midcourse defense shot-doctrine and required 
                        interceptor capacity;
                            (iii) possibilities for direct integration 
                        with Fort Greely's Command and Control node; 
                        and
                            (iv) impacts on regional missile defense 
                        systems including Aegis Ballistic Missile 
                        Defense, Aegis Ashore, and Terminal High 
                        Altitude Area Defense.
                    (B) A detailed comparison of the capabilities of 
                Long Range Discrimination Radar and the COBRA DANE 
                radar, including--
                            (i) the unique capabilities of each radar;
                            (ii) the overlapping capabilities of each 
                        radar; and
                            (iii) the advantages and disadvantages of 
                        each radar's location.
                    (C) A modernization plan and costs for the long-
                term continued operations and maintenance of the COBRA 
                DANE radar or a plan to replace its capability if COBRA 
                DANE cannot remain operational, and the costs 
                associated with each plan.
    (b) Assessment by Comptroller General of the United States.--Not 
later than 90 days after the date on which the Director submits the 
report under subsection (a)(1), the Comptroller General of the United 
States shall--
            (1) complete a review of the plan required by subsection 
        (a)(2)(C); and
            (2) submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
        on such review that includes the findings and recommendations 
        of the Comptroller General.
    (c) Form.--The reports submitted subsections (a) and (b) shall be 
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.

SEC. 1699I. AUTHORIZATION FOR MORE GROUND-BASED MIDCOURSE DEFENSE 
              TESTING.

    (a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) at a minimum, the Missile Defense Agency should 
        continue to flight test the ground-based midcourse defense 
        element at least once each fiscal year;
            (2) the Department of Defense should allocate increased 
        funding to homeland missile defense testing to ensure that our 
        defenses continue to evolve faster than the threats against 
        which they are postured to defend while pursuing a robust 
        acquisition process;
            (3) in order to rapidly innovate, develop, and field new 
        technologies, the Director of the Missile Defense Agency should 
        continue to focus testing campaigns on delivering increased 
        capabilities to the Armed Forces as quickly as possible; and
            (4) the Director of the Missile Defense Agency should seek 
        to establish a more prudent balance between risk mitigation and 
        the more rapid testing pace needed to quickly develop and 
        deliver new capabilities to the Armed Forces.
    (b) Report to Congress.--
            (1) In general.--Unless otherwise directed or recommended 
        by the BMDR, not later than 90 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Director of the Missile Defense 
        Agency shall submit to the congressional defense committees a 
        revised missile defense testing campaign plan that accelerates 
        the development and deployment of new missile defense 
        technologies.
            (2) Contents.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall 
        include the following:
                    (A) A detailed analysis of the costs and benefits 
                of accelerating each following programs:
                            (i) Redesigned kill vehicle.
                            (ii) Multi-object kill vehicle.
                            (iii) Configuration-3 booster.
                            (iv) Lasers mounted on small unmanned 
                        aerial vehicles.
                            (v) Space-based missile defense sensor 
                        architecture.
                            (vi) Such additional technologies as the 
                        Director considers appropriate.
                    (B) A new deployment timeline for each of the 
                programs in listed in subparagraph (A) or a detailed 
                description of why the current timeline for deployment 
                technologies under those programs is most suitable.
                    (C) An identification of any funding or policy 
                restrictions that would slow down the deployment of the 
                technologies under the programs listed in subparagraph 
                (A).
                    (D) A risk assessment of the potential cost-
                overruns and deployment delays that may be encountered 
                in the expedited development process of the 
                capabilities under paragraph (1).
    (c) Report on Funding Profile.--The Director shall include with the 
budget justification materials submitted to Congress in support of the 
budget of the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2018 (as submitted 
with the budget of the President under section 1105(a) of title 31, 
United States Code) a report on the funding profile necessary for the 
new testing campaign plan required by subsection (b)(1).

       TITLE XVII--MATTERS RELATING TO SMALL BUSINESS PROCUREMENT

  Subtitle A--Improving Transparency and Clarity for Small Businesses

SEC. 1701. IMPROVING REPORTING ON SMALL BUSINESS GOALS.

    (a) In General.--Section 15(h)(2)(E) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 644(h)(2)(E)) is amended--
            (1) in clause (i)--
                    (A) in subclause (III), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                subclauses:
                                    ``(V) that were purchased by 
                                another entity after the initial 
                                contract was awarded and as a result of 
                                the purchase, would no longer be deemed 
                                to be small business concerns for 
                                purposes of the initial contract; and
                                    ``(VI) that were awarded using a 
                                procurement method that restricted 
                                competition to small business concerns 
                                owned and controlled by service-
                                disabled veterans, qualified HUBZone 
                                small business concerns, small business 
                                concerns owned and controlled by 
                                socially and economically disadvantaged 
                                individuals, small business concerns 
                                owned and controlled by women, or a 
                                subset of any such concerns;'';
            (2) in clause (ii)--
                    (A) in subclause (IV), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                subclauses:
                                    ``(VI) that were purchased by 
                                another entity after the initial 
                                contract was awarded and as a result of 
                                the purchase, would no longer be deemed 
                                to be small business concerns owned and 
                                controlled by service-disabled veterans 
                                for purposes of the initial contract; 
                                and
                                    ``(VII) that were awarded using a 
                                procurement method that restricted 
                                competition to qualified HUBZone small 
                                business concerns, small business 
                                concerns owned and controlled by 
                                socially and economically disadvantaged 
                                individuals, small business concerns 
                                owned and controlled by women, or a 
                                subset of any such concerns;'';
            (3) in clause (iii)--
                    (A) in subclause (V), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                subclauses:
                                    ``(VII) that were purchased by 
                                another entity after the initial 
                                contract was awarded and as a result of 
                                the purchase, would no longer be deemed 
                                to be qualified HUBZone small business 
                                concerns for purposes of the initial 
                                contract; and
                                    ``(VIII) that were awarded using a 
                                procurement method that restricted 
                                competition to small business concerns 
                                owned and controlled by service-
                                disabled veterans, small business 
                                concerns owned and controlled by 
                                socially and economically disadvantaged 
                                individuals, small business concerns 
                                owned and controlled by women, or a 
                                subset of any such concerns;'';
            (4) in clause (iv)--
                    (A) in subclause (V), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                subclauses:
                                    ``(VII) that were purchased by 
                                another entity after the initial 
                                contract was awarded and as a result of 
                                the purchase, would no longer be deemed 
                                to be small business concerns owned and 
                                controlled by socially and economically 
                                disadvantaged individuals for purposes 
                                of the initial contract; and
                                    ``(VIII) that were awarded using a 
                                procurement method that restricted 
                                competition to small business concerns 
                                owned and controlled by service-
                                disabled veterans, qualified HUBZone 
                                small business concerns, small business 
                                concerns owned and controlled by women, 
                                or a subset of any such concerns;'';
            (5) in clause (v)--
                    (A) in subclause (IV), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end;
                    (B) in subclause (V), by inserting ``and'' at the 
                end; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                subclause:
                                    ``(VI) that were purchased by 
                                another entity after the initial 
                                contract was awarded and as a result of 
                                the purchase, would no longer be deemed 
                                to be small business concerns owned by 
                                an Indian tribe other than an Alaska 
                                Native Corporation for purposes of the 
                                initial contract;'';
            (6) in clause (vi)--
                    (A) in subclause (IV), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end;
                    (B) in subclause (V), by inserting ``and'' at the 
                end; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                subclause:
                                    ``(VI) that were purchased by 
                                another entity after the initial 
                                contract was awarded and as a result of 
                                the purchase, would no longer be deemed 
                                to be small business concerns owned by 
                                a Native Hawaiian Organization for 
                                purposes of the initial contract;'';
            (7) in clause (vii)--
                    (A) in subclause (IV), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                subclause:
                                    ``(VI) that were purchased by 
                                another entity after the initial 
                                contract was awarded and as a result of 
                                the purchase, would no longer be deemed 
                                to be small business concerns owned by 
                                an Alaska Native Corporation for 
                                purposes of the initial contract; 
                                and''; and
            (8) in clause (viii)--
                    (A) in subclause (VII), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end;
                    (B) in subclause (VIII), by striking ``and'' at the 
                end; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                subclauses:
                                    ``(IX) that were purchased by 
                                another entity after the initial 
                                contract was awarded and as a result of 
                                the purchase, would no longer be deemed 
                                to be small business concerns owned and 
                                controlled by women for purposes of the 
                                initial contract; and
                                    ``(X) that were awarded using a 
                                procurement method that restricted 
                                competition to small business concerns 
                                owned and controlled by service-
                                disabled veterans, qualified HUBZone 
                                small business concerns, small business 
                                concerns owned and controlled by 
                                socially and economically disadvantaged 
                                individuals, or a subset of any such 
                                concerns; and''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The Administrator of the Small Business 
Administration shall be required to report on the information required 
by clauses (i)(V), (ii)(VI), (iii)(VII), (iv)(VII), (v)(VI), (vi)(VI), 
(vii)(VI), and (viii)(IX) of section 15(h)(2)(E) of the Small Business 
Act (15 U.S.C. 644(h)(2)(E)) beginning on the date that such 
information is available in the Federal Procurement Data System, the 
System for Award Management, or any new or successor system.

SEC. 1702. UNIFORMITY IN PROCUREMENT TERMINOLOGY.

    (a) In General.--Section 15(j)(1) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 644(j)(1)) is amended by striking ``greater than $2,500 but not 
greater than $100,000'' and inserting ``greater than the micro-purchase 
threshold, but not greater than the simplified acquisition threshold''.
    (b) Technical Amendment.--Section 3(m) of the Small Business Act 
(15 U.S.C. 632(m)) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(m) Definitions Relating to Contracting.--In this Act:
            ``(1) Prime contract.--The term `prime contract' has the 
        meaning given such term in section 8701(4) of title 41, United 
        States Code.
            ``(2) Prime contractor.--The term `prime contractor' has 
        the meaning given such term in section 8701(5) of title 41, 
        United States Code.
            ``(3) Simplified acquisition threshold.--The term 
        `simplified acquisition threshold' has the meaning given such 
        term in section 134 of title 41, United States Code.
            ``(4) Micro-purchase threshold.--The term `micro-purchase 
        threshold' has the meaning given such term in section 1902 of 
        title 41, United States Code.
            ``(5) Total purchases and contracts for property and 
        services.--The term `total purchases and contracts for property 
        and services' shall mean total number and total dollar amount 
        of contracts and orders for property and services.''.

SEC. 1703. RESPONSIBILITIES OF COMMERCIAL MARKET REPRESENTATIVES.

    Section 4(h) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 633(h)) is 
amended to read as follows:
    ``(h) Commercial Market Representatives.--
            ``(1) Duties.--The principal duties of a commercial market 
        representative employed by the Administrator and reporting to 
        the senior official appointed by the Administrator with 
        responsibilities under sections 8, 15, 31, and 36 (or the 
        designee of such official) shall be to advance the policies 
        established in section 8(d)(1) relating to subcontracting. Such 
        duties shall include--
                    ``(A) helping prime contractors to find small 
                business concerns that are capable of performing 
                subcontracts;
                    ``(B) for contractors awarded contracts containing 
                the clause described in section 8(d)(3), providing--
                            ``(i) counseling on the contractor's 
                        responsibility to maximize subcontracting 
                        opportunities for small business concerns;
                            ``(ii) instruction on methods and tools to 
                        identify potential subcontractors that are 
                        small business concerns; and
                            ``(iii) assistance to increase awards to 
                        subcontractors that are small business concerns 
                        through visits, training, and reviews of past 
                        performance;
                    ``(C) providing counseling on how a small business 
                concern may promote its capacity to contractors awarded 
                contracts containing the clause described in section 
                8(d)(3); and
                    ``(D) conducting periodic reviews of contractors 
                awarded contracts containing the clause described in 
                section 8(d)(3) to assess compliance with 
                subcontracting plans required under section 8(d)(6).
            ``(2) Certification requirements.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Consistent with the requirements 
                of subparagraph (B), a commercial market representative 
                referred to in section 15(q)(3) shall have a Level I 
                Federal Acquisition Certification in Contracting (or 
                any successor certification) or the equivalent 
                Department of Defense certification.
                    ``(B) Delay of certification requirement.--The 
                certification described in subparagraph (A) is not 
                required--
                            ``(i) for any person serving as a 
                        commercial market representative on the date of 
                        the enactment of this subsection, until the 
                        date that is one calendar year after the date 
                        such person was appointed as a commercial 
                        market representative; or
                            ``(ii) for any person serving as a 
                        commercial market representative on or before 
                        November 25, 2015, until November 25, 2020.
            ``(3) Job posting requirements.--The duties and 
        certification requirements described in this subsection shall 
        be included in any initial job posting for the position of a 
        commercial market representative.''.

SEC. 1704. RESPONSIBILITIES OF BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY SPECIALISTS.

    Section 4(g) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 633(g)) is 
amended to read as follows:
    ``(g) Business Opportunity Specialists.--
            ``(1) Duties.--The exclusive duties of a Business 
        Opportunity Specialist employed by the Administrator and 
        reporting to the senior official appointed by the Administrator 
        with responsibilities under sections 8, 15, 31, and 36 (or the 
        designee of such official) shall be to implement sections 7, 8, 
        and 45 and to complete other duties related to contracting 
        programs under this Act. Such duties shall include--
                    ``(A) with respect to small business concerns 
                eligible to receive contracts and subcontracts pursuant 
                to section 8(a)--
                            ``(i) providing guidance, counseling, and 
                        referrals for assistance with technical, 
                        management, financial, or other matters that 
                        will improve the competitive viability of such 
                        concerns;
                            ``(ii) identifying causes of success or 
                        failure of such concerns;
                            ``(iii) providing comprehensive assessments 
                        of such concerns, including identifying the 
                        strengths and weaknesses of such concerns;
                            ``(iv) monitoring and documenting 
                        compliance with the requirements of sections 7 
                        and 8 and any regulations implementing those 
                        sections;
                            ``(v) explaining the requirements of 
                        sections 7, 8, 15, 31, 36, and 45; and
                            ``(vi) advising on compliance with 
                        contracting regulations (including the Federal 
                        Acquisition Regulation) after award of such a 
                        contract or subcontract;
                    ``(B) reviewing and monitoring compliance with 
                mentor-protege agreements under section 45;
                    ``(C) representing the interests of the 
                Administrator and small business concerns in the award, 
                modification, and administration of contracts and 
                subcontracts awarded pursuant to section 8(a); and
                    ``(D) reporting fraud or abuse under section 7, 8, 
                15, 31, 36, or 45 or any regulations implementing such 
                sections.
            ``(2) Certification requirements.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Consistent with the requirements 
                of subparagraph (B), a Business Opportunity Specialist 
                described under section 7(j)(10)(D) shall have a Level 
                I Federal Acquisition Certification in Contracting (or 
                any successor certification) or the equivalent 
                Department of Defense certification.
                    ``(B) Delay of certification requirement.--The 
                certification described in subparagraph (A) is not 
                required--
                            ``(i) for any person serving as a Business 
                        Opportunity Specialist on the date of the 
                        enactment of this subsection, until the date 
                        that is one calendar year after the date such 
                        person was appointed as a Business Opportunity 
                        Specialist; or
                            ``(ii) for any person serving as a Business 
                        Opportunity Specialist on or before January 3, 
                        2013, until January 3, 2020.
            ``(3) Job posting requirements.--The duties and 
        certification requirements described in this subsection shall 
        be included in any initial job posting for the position of a 
        Business Opportunity Specialist.''.

                 Subtitle B--Women's Business Programs

SEC. 1711. OFFICE OF WOMEN'S BUSINESS OWNERSHIP.

    Section 29(g) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 656(g)) is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2), by striking subparagraphs (B) and (C) 
        and inserting the following:
                    ``(B) Responsibilities.--The responsibilities of 
                the Assistant Administrator shall be to administer the 
                programs and services of the Office of Women's Business 
                Ownership.
                    ``(C) Duties.--The Assistant Administrator shall 
                perform the following functions with respect to the 
                Office of Women's Business Ownership:
                            ``(i) Recommend the annual administrative 
                        and program budgets of the Office and eligible 
                        entities receiving a grant under the Women's 
                        Business Center Program.
                            ``(ii) Review the annual budgets submitted 
                        by each eligible entity receiving a grant under 
                        the Women's Business Center Program.
                            ``(iii) Select applicants to receive grants 
                        to operate a women's business center after 
                        reviewing information required by this section, 
                        including the budget of each applicant.
                            ``(iv) Collaborate with other Federal 
                        departments and agencies, State and local 
                        governments, not-for-profit organizations, and 
                        for-profit enterprises to maximize utilization 
                        of taxpayer dollars and reduce (or eliminate) 
                        any duplication among the programs overseen by 
                        the Office of Women's Business Ownership and 
                        those of other entities that provide similar 
                        services to women entrepreneurs.
                            ``(v) Maintain a clearinghouse to provide 
                        for the dissemination and exchange of 
                        information between women's business centers.
                            ``(vi) Serve as the vice chairperson of the 
                        Interagency Committee on Women's Business 
                        Enterprise and as the liaison for the National 
                        Women's Business Council.''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) Mission.--The mission of the Office of Women's 
        Business Ownership shall be to assist women entrepreneurs to 
        start, grow, and compete in global markets by providing quality 
        support with access to capital, access to markets, job 
        creation, growth, and counseling by--
                    ``(A) fostering participation of women 
                entrepreneurs in the economy by overseeing a network of 
                women's business centers throughout States and 
                territories;
                    ``(B) creating public-private partnerships to 
                support women entrepreneurs and conducting outreach and 
                education to startup and existing small business 
                concerns owned and controlled by women; and
                    ``(C) working with other programs overseen by the 
                Administrator to ensure women are well-represented and 
                being served and identifying gaps where participation 
                by women could be increased.
            ``(4) Accreditation program.--
                    ``(A) Establishment.--Not later than 270 days after 
                the date of enactment of this paragraph, the 
                Administrator shall establish standards for an 
                accreditation program for accrediting eligible entities 
                receiving a grant under this section.
                    ``(B) Transition provision.--Before the date on 
                which standards are established under subparagraph (A), 
                the Administrator may not terminate a grant under this 
                section absent evidence of fraud or other criminal 
                misconduct by the recipient.
                    ``(C) Contracting authority.--The Administrator may 
                provide financial assistance, by contract or otherwise, 
                to a relevant national women's business center 
                representative association to provide assistance in 
                establishing the standards required under subparagraph 
                (A) or for carrying out an accreditation program 
                pursuant to such standards.''.

SEC. 1712. WOMEN'S BUSINESS CENTER PROGRAM.

    (a) Definitions.--Section 29(a) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 656(a)) is amended--
            (1) by striking paragraph (4);
            (2) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as paragraphs 
        (3) and (4), respectively;
            (3) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
            ``(2) the term `eligible entity' means--
                    ``(A) an organization described in section 501(c) 
                of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and exempt from 
                taxation under section 501(a) of such Code;
                    ``(B) a State, regional, or local economic 
                development organization, so long as the organization 
                certifies that grant funds received under this section 
                will not be commingled with other funds;
                    ``(C) an institution of higher education, unless 
                such institution is currently receiving a grant under 
                section 21;
                    ``(D) a development, credit, or finance corporation 
                chartered by a State, so long as the corporation 
                certifies that grant funds received under this section 
                will not be commingled with other funds; or
                    ``(E) any combination of entities listed in 
                subparagraphs (A) through (D);''; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(5) the term `women's business center' means the location 
        at which counseling and training on the management, operations 
        (including manufacturing, services, and retail), access to 
        capital, international trade, Government procurement 
        opportunities, and any other matter is needed to start, 
        maintain, or expand a small business concern owned and 
        controlled by women.''.
    (b) Authority.--Section 29(b) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
656(b)) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) as 
        subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C), respectively, and adjusting 
        the margins accordingly;
            (2) by striking ``The Administration'' and all that follows 
        through ``5-year projects'' and inserting the following:
            ``(1) In general.--There is established a Women's Business 
        Center Program under which the Administrator may provide a 
        grant to any eligible entity to operate one or more women's 
        business centers'';
            (3) by striking ``The projects shall'' and inserting the 
        following:
            ``(2) Use of funds.--The women's business centers shall be 
        designed to provide counseling and training that meets the 
        needs of women, especially socially or economically 
        disadvantaged women, and shall''; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following:
            ``(3) Amount of grants.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The amount of a grant provided 
                under this subsection to an eligible entity per project 
                year shall be not more than $185,000 (as such amount is 
                annually adjusted by the Administrator to reflect the 
                change in inflation).
                    ``(B) Additional grants.--
                            ``(i) In general.--Notwithstanding 
                        subparagraph (A), with respect to an eligible 
                        entity that has received $185,000 under this 
                        subsection in a project year, the Administrator 
                        may award an additional grant under this 
                        subsection of up to $65,000 during such project 
                        year if the Administrator determines that the 
                        eligible entity--
                                    ``(I) agrees to obtain, after its 
                                application has been approved and 
                                notice of award has been issued, cash 
                                contributions from non-Federal sources 
                                of 1 non-Federal dollar for each 
                                Federal dollar;
                                    ``(II) is in good standing with the 
                                Women's Business Center Program; and
                                    ``(III) has met performance goals 
                                for the previous project year, if 
                                applicable.
                            ``(ii) Limitations.--The Administrator may 
                        only award additional grants under clause (i)--
                                    ``(I) during the 3rd and 4th 
                                quarters of the fiscal year; and
                                    ``(II) from unobligated amounts 
                                made available to the Administrator to 
                                carry out this section.
            ``(4) Notice and comment required.--The Administrator may 
        only make a change to the standards by which an eligible entity 
        obtains or maintains grants under this section, the standards 
        for accreditation, or any other requirement for the operation 
        of a women's business center if the Administrator first 
        provides notice and the opportunity for public comment, as set 
        forth in section 553(b) of title 5, United States Code, without 
        regard to any exceptions provided for under such section.''.
    (c) Conditions of Participation.--Section 29(c) of the Small 
Business Act (15 U.S.C. 656(c)) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``the recipient organization'' and 
                inserting ``an eligible entity''; and
                    (B) by striking ``financial assistance'' and 
                inserting ``a grant'';
            (2) in paragraph (3)--
                    (A) by striking ``financial assistance authorized 
                pursuant to this section may be made by grant, 
                contract, or cooperative agreement and'' and inserting 
                ``grants authorized pursuant to this section''; and
                    (B) in the second sentence, by striking ``a 
                recipient organization'' and inserting ``an eligible 
                entity'';
            (3) in paragraph (4)--
                    (A) by striking ``recipient of assistance'' and 
                inserting ``eligible entity'';
                    (B) by striking ``during any project, it shall not 
                be eligible thereafter'' and inserting ``during any 
                project for 2 consecutive years, the eligible entity 
                shall not be eligible at any time after that 2-year 
                period'';
                    (C) by striking ``such organization'' and inserting 
                ``the eligible entity''; and
                    (D) by striking ``the recipient'' and inserting 
                ``the eligible entity''; and
            (4) by adding at end the following:
            ``(5) Separation of project and funds.--An eligible entity 
        shall--
                    ``(A) carry out a project under this section 
                separately from other projects, if any, of the eligible 
                entity; and
                    ``(B) separately maintain and account for any 
                grants under this section.
            ``(6) Examination of eligible entities.--
                    ``(A) Required site visit.--Each applicant, prior 
                to receiving a grant under this section, shall have a 
                site visit by an employee of the Administration, in 
                order to ensure that the applicant has sufficient 
                resources to provide the services for which the grant 
                is being provided.
                    ``(B) Annual review.--An employee of the 
                Administration shall--
                            ``(i) conduct an annual review of the 
                        compliance of each eligible entity receiving a 
                        grant under this section with the grant 
                        agreement, including a financial examination; 
                        and
                            ``(ii) provide such review to the eligible 
                        entity as required under subsection (l).
            ``(7) Remediation of problems.--
                    ``(A) Plan of action.--If a review of an eligible 
                entity under paragraph (6)(B) identifies any problems, 
                the eligible entity shall, within 45 calendar days 
                after receiving such review, provide the Assistant 
                Administrator with a plan of action, including specific 
                milestones, for correcting such problems.
                    ``(B) Plan of action review by the assistant 
                administrator.--The Assistant Administrator shall 
                review each plan of action submitted under subparagraph 
                (A) within 30 calendar days after receiving such plan 
                and--
                            ``(i) if the Assistant Administrator 
                        determines that such plan will bring the 
                        eligible entity into compliance with all the 
                        terms of the grant agreement, approve such 
                        plan; or
                            ``(ii) if the Assistant Administrator 
                        determines that such plan is inadequate to 
                        remedy the problems identified in the annual 
                        review to which the plan of action relates, the 
                        Assistant Administrator shall set forth such 
                        reasons in writing and provide such 
                        determination to the eligible entity within 15 
                        calendar days after such determination.
                    ``(C) Amendment to plan of action.--An eligible 
                entity receiving a determination under subparagraph 
                (B)(ii) shall have 30 calendar days after the receipt 
                of the determination to amend the plan of action to 
                satisfy the problems identified by the Assistant 
                Administrator and resubmit such plan to the Assistant 
                Administrator.
                    ``(D) Amended plan review by the assistant 
                administrator.--Within 15 calendar days after the 
                receipt of an amended plan of action under subparagraph 
                (C), the Assistant Administrator shall either approve 
                or reject such plan and provide such approval or 
                rejection in writing to the eligible entity.
                    ``(E) Appeal of assistant administrator 
                determination.--
                            ``(i) In general.--If the Assistant 
                        Administrator rejects an amended plan under 
                        subparagraph (D), the eligible entity shall 
                        have the opportunity to appeal such decision to 
                        the Administrator, who may delegate such appeal 
                        to an appropriate officer of the 
                        Administration.
                            ``(ii) Opportunity for explanation.--Any 
                        appeal described under clause (i) shall provide 
                        an opportunity for the eligible entity to 
                        provide, in writing, an explanation of why the 
                        eligible entity's plan remedies the problems 
                        identified in the annual review.
                            ``(iii) Notice of determination.--The 
                        determination of the appeal shall be provided 
                        to the eligible entity, in writing, within 15 
                        calendar days after the eligible entity's 
                        filing of the appeal.
                            ``(iv) Effect of failure to act.--If the 
                        Administrator fails to act on an appeal made 
                        under this subparagraph within the 15 calendar 
                        day period specified under clause (iii), the 
                        eligible entity's amended plan of action 
                        submitted under subparagraph (C) shall be 
                        deemed to be approved.
            ``(8) Termination of grant.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Administrator shall require 
                that, if an eligible entity fails to comply with a plan 
                of action approved by the Assistant Administrator under 
                paragraph (7)(B)(i) or an amended plan of action 
                approved by the Assistant Administrator under paragraph 
                (7)(D) or approved on appeal under paragraph (7)(E), 
                the Assistant Administrator terminate the grant 
                provided to the eligible entity under this section.
                    ``(B) Appeal of termination.--An eligible entity 
                that has a grant terminated under subparagraph (A) 
                shall have the opportunity to challenge the termination 
                on the record and after an opportunity for a hearing.
                    ``(C) Final agency action.--The determination made 
                pursuant to subparagraph (B) shall be considered final 
                agency action for the purposes of chapter 7 of title 5, 
                United States Code.''.
    (d) Submission of 5-Year Plan.--Section 29(e) of the Small Business 
Act (15 U.S.C. 656(e)) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``applicant organization'' and inserting 
        ``eligible entity'';
            (2) by striking ``a recipient organization'' and inserting 
        ``an eligible entity'';
            (3) by striking ``financial assistance'' and inserting 
        ``grants''; and
            (4) by striking ``site''.
    (e) Applications and Criteria for Initial Grant.--Subsection (f) of 
section 29 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 656) is amended to read 
as follows:
    ``(f) Applications and Criteria for Initial Grant.--
            ``(1) Application.--Each eligible entity desiring a grant 
        under subsection (b) shall submit to the Administrator an 
        application that contains--
                    ``(A) a certification that the eligible entity--
                            ``(i) has designated an executive director 
                        or program manager, who may be compensated 
                        using grant funds under subsection (b) or other 
                        sources, to manage the women's business center 
                        for which a grant under subsection (b) is 
                        sought; and
                            ``(ii) meets the accounting and reporting 
                        requirements established by the Director of the 
                        Office of Management and Budget;
                    ``(B) information demonstrating that the eligible 
                entity has the ability and resources to meet the needs 
                of the market to be served by the women's business 
                center, including the ability to obtain the non-Federal 
                contribution required under subsection (c);
                    ``(C) information relating to the assistance to be 
                provided by the women's business center in the area in 
                which the women's business center is located;
                    ``(D) information demonstrating the experience and 
                effectiveness of the eligible entity in--
                            ``(i) conducting the services described 
                        under subsection (a)(5);
                            ``(ii) providing training and services to a 
                        representative number of women who are socially 
                        or economically disadvantaged; and
                            ``(iii) working with resource partners of 
                        the Administration and other entities, such as 
                        universities; and
                    ``(E) a 5-year plan that describes the ability of 
                the eligible entity to provide the services described 
                under subsection (a)(3), including to a representative 
                number of women who are socially or economically 
                disadvantaged.
            ``(2) Review and approval of applications for initial 
        grants.--
                    ``(A) Review and selection of eligible entities.--
                            ``(i) In general.--The Administrator shall 
                        review applications to determine whether the 
                        applicant can meet obligations to perform the 
                        activities required by a grant under this 
                        section, including--
                                    ``(I) the experience of the 
                                applicant in conducting activities 
                                required by this section;
                                    ``(II) the amount of time needed 
                                for the applicant to commence 
                                operations should it be awarded a 
                                grant;
                                    ``(III) the capacity of the 
                                applicant to meet the accreditation 
                                standards established by the 
                                Administrator in a timely manner;
                                    ``(IV) the ability of the applicant 
                                to sustain operations for more than 5 
                                years (including its ability to obtain 
                                sufficient non-Federal funds for that 
                                period);
                                    ``(V) the location of the women's 
                                business center and its proximity to 
                                other grant recipients under this 
                                section; and
                                    ``(VI) the population density of 
                                the area to be served by the women's 
                                business center.
                            ``(ii) Selection criteria.--
                                    ``(I) Guidance.--The Administrator 
                                shall issue guidance (after providing 
                                an opportunity for notice and comment) 
                                to specify the criteria for review and 
                                selection of applicants under this 
                                subsection.
                                    ``(II) Modifications prohibited 
                                after announcement.--With respect to a 
                                public announcement of any opportunity 
                                to be awarded a grant under this 
                                section made by the Administrator 
                                pursuant to subsection (l)(1), the 
                                Administrator may not modify guidance 
                                issued pursuant to subclause (I) with 
                                respect to such opportunity unless 
                                required to do so by an Act of Congress 
                                or an order of a Federal court.
                                    ``(III) Rule of construction.--
                                Nothing in this clause may be construed 
                                as prohibiting the Administrator from 
                                modifying the guidance issued pursuant 
                                to subclause (I) (after providing an 
                                opportunity for notice and comment) as 
                                such guidance applies to an opportunity 
                                to be awarded a grant under this 
                                section that the Administrator has not 
                                yet publicly announced pursuant to 
                                subsection (l)(1).
                    ``(B) Record retention.--
                            ``(i) In general.--The Administrator shall 
                        maintain a copy of each application submitted 
                        under this subsection for not less than 5 
                        years.
                            ``(ii) Paperwork reduction.--The 
                        Administrator shall take steps to reduce, to 
                        the maximum extent practicable, the paperwork 
                        burden associated with carrying out clause 
                        (i).''.
    (f) Notification Requirements Under the Women's Business Center 
Program.--Section 29 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 656) is 
amended by inserting after subsection (k) the following:
    ``(l) Notification Requirements Under the Women's Business Center 
Program.--The Administrator shall provide--
            ``(1) a public announcement of any opportunity to be 
        awarded grants under this section, and such announcement shall 
        include the standards by which such award will be made, 
        including the guidance issued pursuant to subsection 
        (f)(2)(A)(ii);
            ``(2) the opportunity for any applicant for a grant under 
        this section that failed to obtain such a grant a debriefing 
        with the Assistant Administrator to review the reasons for the 
        applicant's failure; and
            ``(3) with respect to any site visit or evaluation of an 
        eligible entity receiving a grant under this section that is 
        carried out by an officer or employee of the Administration 
        (other than the Inspector General), a copy of the site visit 
        report or evaluation, as applicable, within 30 calendar days 
        after the completion of such visit or evaluation.''.
    (g) Continued Funding for Centers.--Section 29(m) of the Small 
Business Act (15 U.S.C. 656(m)) is amended--
            (1) by striking paragraph (3) and inserting the following:
            ``(3) Application and approval for continuation grants.--
                    ``(A) Solicitation of applications.--The 
                Administrator shall solicit applications and award 
                continuation grants under this subsection for the first 
                fiscal year beginning after the date of enactment of 
                this paragraph, and every third fiscal year thereafter.
                    ``(B) Contents of application.--Each eligible 
                entity desiring a grant under this subsection shall 
                submit to the Administrator an application that 
                contains--
                            ``(i) a certification that the applicant--
                                    ``(I) is an eligible entity;
                                    ``(II) has designated an executive 
                                director or program manager to manage 
                                the women's business center operated by 
                                the applicant; and
                                    ``(III) as a condition of receiving 
                                a grant under this subsection, agrees--
                                            ``(aa) to receive a site 
                                        visit as part of the final 
                                        selection process, at the 
                                        discretion of the 
                                        Administrator; and
                                            ``(bb) to remedy any 
                                        problem identified pursuant to 
                                        the site visit under item (aa);
                            ``(ii) information demonstrating that the 
                        applicant has the ability and resources to meet 
                        the needs of the market to be served by the 
                        women's business center for which a grant under 
                        this subsection is sought, including the 
                        ability to obtain the non-Federal contribution 
                        required under paragraph (4)(C);
                            ``(iii) information relating to assistance 
                        to be provided by the women's business center 
                        in the geographic area served by the women's 
                        business center for which a grant under this 
                        subsection is sought;
                            ``(iv) information demonstrating that the 
                        applicant has worked with resource partners of 
                        the Administration and other entities;
                            ``(v) a 3-year plan that describes the 
                        services provided by the women's business 
                        center for which a grant under this subsection 
                        is sought--
                                    ``(I) to serve women who are 
                                business owners or potential business 
                                owners by conducting training and 
                                counseling activities; and
                                    ``(II) to provide training and 
                                services to a representative number of 
                                women who are socially or economically 
                                disadvantaged; and
                            ``(vi) any additional information that the 
                        Administrator may reasonably require.
                    ``(C) Review and approval of applications for 
                grants.--
                            ``(i) In general.--The Administrator--
                                    ``(I) shall review each application 
                                submitted under subparagraph (B), based 
                                on the information described in such 
                                subparagraph and the criteria set forth 
                                under clause (ii) of this subparagraph; 
                                and
                                    ``(II) as part of the final 
                                selection process, may conduct a site 
                                visit to each women's business center 
                                for which a grant under this subsection 
                                is sought to evaluate the women's 
                                business center using the selection 
                                criteria described in clause (ii)(II).
                            ``(ii) Selection criteria.--
                                    ``(I) In general.--The 
                                Administrator shall evaluate applicants 
                                for grants under this subsection in 
                                accordance with selection criteria that 
                                are--
                                            ``(aa) established before 
                                        the date on which applicants 
                                        are required to submit the 
                                        applications;
                                            ``(bb) stated in terms of 
                                        relative importance; and
                                            ``(cc) publicly available 
                                        and stated in each solicitation 
                                        for applications for grants 
                                        under this subsection made by 
                                        the Administrator.
                                    ``(II) Required criteria.--The 
                                selection criteria for a grant under 
                                this subsection shall include--
                                            ``(aa) the total number of 
                                        entrepreneurs served by the 
                                        applicant;
                                            ``(bb) the total number of 
                                        new startup companies assisted 
                                        by the applicant;
                                            ``(cc) the percentage of 
                                        clients of the applicant that 
                                        are socially or economically 
                                        disadvantaged;
                                            ``(dd) the percentage of 
                                        individuals in the community 
                                        served by the applicant who are 
                                        socially or economically 
                                        disadvantaged;
                                            ``(ee) the successful 
                                        accreditation of the applicant 
                                        under the accreditation program 
                                        developed under subsection 
                                        (g)(5); and
                                            ``(ff) any additional 
                                        criteria that the Administrator 
                                        may reasonably require.
                            ``(iii) Conditions for continued funding.--
                        In determining whether to make a grant under 
                        this subsection, the Administrator--
                                    ``(I) shall consider the results of 
                                the most recent evaluation of the 
                                women's business center for which a 
                                grant under this subsection is sought, 
                                and, to a lesser extent, previous 
                                evaluations; and
                                    ``(II) may withhold a grant under 
                                this subsection, if the Administrator 
                                determines that the applicant has 
                                failed to provide the information 
                                required to be provided under this 
                                paragraph, or the information provided 
                                by the applicant is inadequate.
                    ``(D) Notification.--Not later than 60 calendar 
                days after the date of each deadline to submit 
                applications under this paragraph, the Administrator 
                shall approve or deny each submitted application and 
                notify the applicant for each such application of the 
                approval or denial.
                    ``(E) Record retention.--
                            ``(i) In general.--The Administrator shall 
                        maintain a copy of each application submitted 
                        under this paragraph for not less than 5 years.
                            ``(ii) Paperwork reduction.--The 
                        Administrator shall take steps to reduce, to 
                        the maximum extent practicable, the paperwork 
                        burden associated with carrying out clause 
                        (i).''; and
            (2) by striking paragraph (5) and inserting the following:
            ``(5) Award to previous recipients.--There shall be no 
        limitation on the number of times the Administrator may award a 
        grant to an applicant under this subsection.''.
    (h) Technical and Conforming Amendments.--Section 29 of the Small 
Business Act (15 U.S.C. 656) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (h)(2), by striking ``to award a contract 
        (as a sustainability grant) under subsection (l) or'';
            (2) in subsection (j)(1), by striking ``The 
        Administration'' and inserting ``Not later than November 1 of 
        each year, the Administrator'';
            (3) in subsection (k)--
                    (A) by striking paragraphs (1) and (4);
                    (B) by inserting before paragraph (2) the 
                following:
            ``(1) In general.--There are authorized to be appropriated 
        to the Administration to carry out this section, to remain 
        available until expended, $21,750,000 for each of fiscal years 
        2018 through 2021.''; and
                    (C) in paragraph (2), by striking subparagraph (B) 
                and inserting the following:
                    ``(B) Exceptions.--Of the amount made available 
                under this subsection for a fiscal year, the following 
                amounts shall be available for selection panel costs, 
                costs associated with maintaining an accreditation 
                program, and post-award conference costs:
                            ``(i) For the first fiscal year beginning 
                        after the date of the enactment of this 
                        subparagraph, 2.65 percent.
                            ``(ii) For the second fiscal year beginning 
                        after the date of the enactment of this 
                        subparagraph and each fiscal year thereafter 
                        through fiscal year 2021, 2.5 percent.''; and
            (4) in subsection (m)--
                    (A) in paragraph (2), by striking ``subsection (b) 
                or (l)'' and inserting ``this subsection or subsection 
                (b)''; and
                    (B) in paragraph (4)(D), by striking ``or 
                subsection (l)''.
    (i) Effect on Existing Grants.--
            (1) Terms and conditions.--A nonprofit organization 
        receiving a grant under section 29(m) of the Small Business Act 
        (15 U.S.C. 656(m)), as in effect on the day before the date of 
        enactment of this Act, shall continue to receive the grant 
        under the terms and conditions in effect for the grant on the 
        day before the date of enactment of this Act, except that the 
        nonprofit organization may not apply for a continuation of the 
        grant under section 29(m)(5) of the Small Business Act (15 
        U.S.C. 656(m)(5)), as in effect on the day before the date of 
        enactment of this Act.
            (2) Length of continuation grant.--The Administrator of the 
        Small Business Administration may award a grant under section 
        29(m) of the Small Business Act to a nonprofit organization 
        receiving a grant under section 29(m) of the Small Business Act 
        (15 U.S.C. 656(m)), as in effect on the day before the date of 
        enactment of this Act, for the period--
                    (A) beginning on the day after the last day of the 
                grant agreement under such section 29(m); and
                    (B) ending at the end of the third fiscal year 
                beginning after the date of enactment of this Act.

SEC. 1713. MATCHING REQUIREMENTS UNDER WOMEN'S BUSINESS CENTER PROGRAM.

    Section 29(c) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 656(c)), as 
amended by this Act, is further amended by adding at the end the 
following new paragraph:
            ``(9) Waiver of non-federal share.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Upon request by an eligible 
                entity, and in accordance with this paragraph, the 
                Administrator may waive, in whole or in part, the 
                requirement to obtain non-Federal funds under this 
                subsection for counseling and training activities of 
                the eligible entity carried out using a grant under 
                this section for a fiscal year. The Administrator may 
                not waive the requirement for an eligible entity to 
                obtain non-Federal funds under this paragraph for more 
                than a total of 2 consecutive fiscal years.
                    ``(B) Considerations.--In determining whether to 
                waive the requirement to obtain non-Federal funds under 
                this paragraph, the Administrator shall consider--
                            ``(i) the economic conditions affecting the 
                        eligible entity;
                            ``(ii) the impact a waiver under this 
                        paragraph would have on the credibility of the 
                        Women's Business Center Program under this 
                        section;
                            ``(iii) the demonstrated ability of the 
                        eligible entity to raise non-Federal funds; and
                            ``(iv) the performance of the eligible 
                        entity.
                    ``(C) Limitation.--The Administrator may not waive 
                the requirement to obtain non-Federal funds under this 
                paragraph if granting the waiver would undermine the 
                credibility of the Women's Business Center Program.
            ``(10) Solicitation.--Notwithstanding any other provision 
        of law, an eligible entity may--
                    ``(A) solicit cash and in-kind contributions from 
                private individuals and entities to be used to carry 
                out the activities of the eligible entity under a 
                project conducted under this section; and
                    ``(B) use amounts made available by the 
                Administrator under this section for the cost of such 
                solicitation and management of the contributions 
                received.
            ``(11) Excess non-federal dollars.--The amount of non-
        Federal dollars obtained by an eligible entity that is above 
        the amount that is required to be obtained by the eligible 
        entity under this subsection shall not be subject to the 
        requirements of part 200 of title 2, Code of Federal 
        Regulations, or any successor thereto, if such amount of non-
        Federal dollars--
                    ``(A) is not used as matching funds for purposes of 
                implementing the Women's Business Center Program; and
                    ``(B) was not obtained using funds from the Women's 
                Business Center Program.''.

                       Subtitle C--SCORE Program

SEC. 1721. SCORE REAUTHORIZATION.

    Section 20 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 631 note) is 
amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (j) as subsection (f); and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(g) SCORE Program.--There are authorized to be appropriated to 
the Administrator to carry out the SCORE program authorized by section 
8(b)(1) such sums as may be necessary for the Administrator to make 
grants or enter into cooperative agreements in a total amount that does 
not exceed $10,500,000 in each of fiscal years 2018 and 2019.''.

SEC. 1722. SCORE PROGRAM.

    Section 8 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 637) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b)(1)(B), by striking ``a Service Corps 
        of Retired Executives (SCORE)'' and inserting ``the SCORE 
        program described in subsection (c)''; and
            (2) by striking subsection (c) and inserting the following 
        new subsection:
    ``(c) SCORE Program.--
            ``(1) Definition.--In this subsection:
                    ``(A) SCORE association.--The term `SCORE 
                Association' means the Service Corps of Retired 
                Executives Association or any successor or other 
                organization that receives a grant from the 
                Administrator to operate the SCORE program under 
                paragraph (2)(A).
                    ``(B) SCORE program.--The term `SCORE program' 
                means the SCORE program authorized by subsection 
                (b)(1)(B).
            ``(2) Management and volunteers.--
                    ``(A) In general.--The Administrator shall provide 
                a grant to the SCORE Association to manage the SCORE 
                program.
                    ``(B) Volunteers.--A volunteer participating in the 
                SCORE program shall--
                            ``(i) based on the business experience and 
                        knowledge of the volunteer--
                                    ``(I) provide at no cost to 
                                individuals who own, or aspire to own, 
                                small business concerns personal 
                                counseling, mentoring, and coaching 
                                relating to the process of starting, 
                                expanding, managing, buying, and 
                                selling a business; and
                                    ``(II) facilitate low-cost 
                                educational workshops for individuals 
                                who own, or aspire to own, small 
                                business concerns; and
                            ``(ii) as appropriate, use tools, 
                        resources, and expertise of other organizations 
                        to carry out the SCORE program.
            ``(3) Plans and goals.--The Administrator, in consultation 
        with the SCORE Association, shall ensure that the SCORE program 
        and each chapter of the SCORE program develop and implement 
        plans and goals to more effectively and efficiently provide 
        services to individuals in rural areas, economically 
        disadvantaged communities, and other traditionally underserved 
        communities, including plans for electronic initiatives, web-
        based initiatives, chapter expansion, partnerships, and the 
        development of new skills by volunteers participating in the 
        SCORE program.
            ``(4) Annual report.--The SCORE Association shall submit to 
        the Administrator an annual report that contains--
                    ``(A) the number of individuals counseled or 
                trained under the SCORE program;
                    ``(B) the number of hours of counseling provided 
                under the SCORE program; and
                    ``(C) to the extent possible--
                            ``(i) the number of small business concerns 
                        formed with assistance from the SCORE program;
                            ``(ii) the number of small business 
                        concerns expanded with assistance from the 
                        SCORE program; and
                            ``(iii) the number of jobs created with 
                        assistance from the SCORE program.
            ``(5) Privacy requirements.--
                    ``(A) In general.--Neither the Administrator nor 
                the SCORE Association may disclose the name, address, 
                or telephone number of any individual or small business 
                concern receiving assistance from the SCORE Association 
                without the consent of such individual or small 
                business concern, unless--
                            ``(i) the Administrator is ordered to make 
                        such a disclosure by a court in any civil or 
                        criminal enforcement action initiated by a 
                        Federal or State agency; or
                            ``(ii) the Administrator determines such a 
                        disclosure to be necessary for the purpose of 
                        conducting a financial audit of the SCORE 
                        program, in which case disclosure shall be 
                        limited to the information necessary for the 
                        audit.
                    ``(B) Administrator use of information.--This 
                paragraph shall not--
                            ``(i) restrict the access of the 
                        Administrator to program activity data; or
                            ``(ii) prevent the Administrator from using 
                        client information to conduct client surveys.
                    ``(C) Standards.--
                            ``(i) In general.--The Administrator shall, 
                        after the opportunity for notice and comment, 
                        establish standards for--
                                    ``(I) disclosures with respect to 
                                financial audits under subparagraph 
                                (A)(ii); and
                                    ``(II) conducting client surveys, 
                                including standards for oversight of 
                                the surveys and for dissemination and 
                                use of client information.
                            ``(ii) Maximum privacy protection.--The 
                        standards issued under this subparagraph shall, 
                        to the extent practicable, provide for the 
                        maximum amount of privacy protection.''.

SEC. 1723. ONLINE COMPONENT.

    (a) In General.--Section 8(c) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
637(c)), as amended by this Act, is further amended by adding at the 
end the following:
            ``(6) Online component.--In carrying out this subsection, 
        the SCORE Association shall make use of online counseling, 
        including by developing and implementing webinars and an 
        electronic mentoring platform to expand access to services 
        provided under this subsection and to further support 
        entrepreneurs.''.
    (b) Online Component Report.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than September 30, 2018, the 
        SCORE Association shall issue a report to the Committee on 
        Small Business of the House of Representatives and the 
        Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship of the Senate 
        on the effectiveness of the electronic mentoring and webinars 
        required as part of the SCORE program, including--
                    (A) how the SCORE Association determines electronic 
                mentoring and webinar needs, develops training for 
                electronic mentoring, establishes webinar curricula, 
                and evaluates webinar and electronic mentoring results;
                    (B) describing the internal controls that are used 
                and a summary of the topics covered by the webinars; 
                and
                    (C) performance metrics, including the number of 
                small business concerns counseled by, the number of 
                small business concerns created by, the number of jobs 
                created and retained by, and the funding amounts 
                directed towards such online counseling and webinars.
            (2) Definitions.--For purposes of this subsection, the 
        terms ``SCORE Association'' and ``SCORE program'' have the 
        meaning given those terms, respectively, under section 8(c)(1) 
        of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 637(c)(1)).

SEC. 1724. STUDY AND REPORT ON THE FUTURE ROLE OF THE SCORE PROGRAM.

    (a) Study.--The SCORE Association shall carry out a study on the 
future role of the SCORE program and develop a strategic plan for how 
the SCORE program will evolve to meet the needs of small business 
concerns over the course of the 5 years following the date of enactment 
of this Act, with markers and specific objectives for the first, third, 
and final year of the 5-year period.
    (b) Report.--Not later than the end of the 6-month period beginning 
on the date of the enactment of this Act, the SCORE Association shall 
submit a report to the Committee on Small Business of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Small Business and 
Entrepreneurship of the Senate containing--
            (1) all findings and determination made in carrying out the 
        study required under subsection (a);
            (2) the strategic plan developed under subsection (a);
            (3) an explanation of how the SCORE Association plans to 
        achieve the strategic plan, assuming both stagnant and 
        increased funding levels.
    (c) Definitions.--For purposes of this section, the terms ``SCORE 
Association'' and ``SCORE program'' have the meaning given those terms, 
respectively, under section 8(c)(1) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 637(c)(1)).

SEC. 1725. TECHNICAL AND CONFORMING AMENDMENTS.

    (a) Small Business Act.--The Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 631 et 
seq.) is amended--
            (1) in section 7 (15 U.S.C. 636)--
                    (A) in subsection (b)(12)(A), by striking ``Service 
                Corps of Retired Executives'' and inserting ``SCORE 
                program''; and
                    (B) in subsection (m)(3)(A)(i)(VIII), by striking 
                ``Service Corps of Retired Executives'' and inserting 
                ``SCORE program'';
            (2) in section 22 (15 U.S.C. 649)--
                    (A) in subsection (b)--
                            (i) in paragraph (1), by striking ``Service 
                        Corps of Retired Executives'' and inserting 
                        ``SCORE program''; and
                            (ii) in paragraph (3), by striking 
                        ``Service Corps of Retired Executives'' and 
                        inserting ``SCORE program''; and
                    (B) in subsection (c)(12), by striking ``Service 
                Corps of Retired Executives'' and inserting ``SCORE 
                program''.
    (b) Other Laws.--
            (1) Children's health insurance program reauthorization act 
        of 2009.--Section 621 of the Children's Health Insurance 
        Program Reauthorization Act of 2009 (15 U.S.C. 657p) is 
        amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a), by striking paragraph (4) 
                and inserting the following:
            ``(4) the term `SCORE program' means the SCORE program 
        authorized by section 8(b)(1)(B) of the Small Business Act (15 
        U.S.C. 637(b)(1)(B));''; and
                    (B) in subsection (b)(4)(A)(iv), by striking 
                ``Service Corps of Retired Executives'' and inserting 
                ``SCORE program''.
            (2) Energy policy and conservation act.--Section 
        337(d)(2)(A) of the Energy Policy and Conservation Act (42 
        U.S.C. 6307(d)(2)(A)) is amended by striking ``Service Corps of 
        Retired Executives (SCORE)'' and inserting ``SCORE program''.

      Subtitle D--Small Business Development Centers Improvements

SEC. 1731. USE OF AUTHORIZED ENTREPRENEURIAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS.

    The Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 631 et seq.) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating section 47 as section 48; and
            (2) by inserting after section 46 the following new 
        section:

``SEC. 47. USE OF AUTHORIZED ENTREPRENEURIAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS.

    ``(a) Expanded Support for Entrepreneurs.--
            ``(1) In general.--Notwithstanding any other provision of 
        law, the Administrator shall only use the programs authorized 
        in sections 7(j), 7(m), 8(a), 8(b)(1), 21, 22, 29, and 32 of 
        this Act, and sections 358 and 389 of the Small Business 
        Investment Act of 1958 to deliver entrepreneurial development 
        services, entrepreneurial education, support for the 
        development and maintenance of clusters, or business training.
            ``(2) Exception.--This section shall not apply to services 
        provided to assist small business concerns owned by an Indian 
        tribe (as such term is defined in section 8(a)(13)).
    ``(b) Annual Report.--Beginning on the first December 1 after the 
date of the enactment of this subsection, and annually thereafter, the 
Administrator shall report to the Committee on Small Business of the 
House of Representatives and the Committee on Small Business and 
Entrepreneurship of the Senate on all entrepreneurial development 
activities undertaken in the current fiscal year. This report shall 
include--
            ``(1) a description and operating details for each 
        activity;
            ``(2) operating circulars, manuals, and standard operating 
        procedures for each activity;
            ``(3) a description of the process used to award grants 
        under each activity;
            ``(4) a list of all awardees, contractors, and vendors 
        (including organization name and location) and the amount of 
        awards for the current fiscal year for each activity;
            ``(5) the amount of funding obligated for the current 
        fiscal year for each activity; and
            ``(6) the names and titles for those individuals 
        responsible for each activity.''.

SEC. 1732. MARKETING OF SERVICES.

    Section 21 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 648) is amended by 
adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(o) No Prohibition of Marketing of Services.--The Administrator 
may not prohibit applicants receiving grants under this section from 
marketing and advertising their services to individuals and small 
business concerns.''.

SEC. 1733. DATA COLLECTION.

    (a) In General.--Section 21(a)(3)(A) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 648(a)(3)(A)) is amended--
            (1) by striking ``as provided in this section and'' and 
        inserting ``as provided in this section,''; and
            (2) by inserting before the period at the end the 
        following: ``, and (iv) governing data collection activities 
        related to applicants receiving grants under this section''.
    (b) Annual Report on Data Collection.--Section 21 of the Small 
Business Act (15 U.S.C. 648), as amended by this Act, is further 
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(p) Annual Report on Data Collection.--The Administrator shall 
report annually to the Committee on Small Business of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Small Business and 
Entrepreneurship of the Senate on any data collection activities 
related to the Small Business Development Center Program.''.
    (c) Working Group To Improve Data Collection.--
            (1) Establishment and study.--The Administrator of the 
        Small Business Administration shall establish a group to be 
        known as the ``Data Collection Working Group'' consisting of 
        members from entrepreneurial development grant recipient 
        associations and organizations and Administration officials, to 
        carry out a study to determine the best way to capture data 
        collection and create or revise existing systems dedicated to 
        data collection.
            (2) Report.--Not later than the end of the 180-day period 
        beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act, the Data 
        Collection Working Group shall submit a report to the Committee 
        on Small Business of the House of Representatives and the 
        Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship of the Senate 
        containing the findings and determinations made in carrying out 
        the study required under paragraph (1), including--
                    (A) recommendations for revising existing data 
                collection practices; and
                    (B) a proposed plan for the Administrator of the 
                Small Business Administration to implement such 
                recommendations.

SEC. 1734. FEES FROM PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS AND COSPONSORSHIPS.

    Section 21(a)(3) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
648(a)(3)(C)), as amended by this Act, is further amended by adding at 
the end the following new subparagraph:
    ``(D) Fees From Private Partnerships and Cosponsorships.--
Participation in private partnerships and cosponsorships with the 
Administration shall not limit small business development centers from 
collecting fees or other income related to the operation of such 
private partnerships and cosponsorships.''.

SEC. 1735. EQUITY FOR SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CENTERS.

    Subclause (I) of section 21(a)(4)(C)(v) of the Small Business Act 
(15 U.S.C. 648(a)(4)(C)(v)(I)) is amended to read as follows:
                                    ``(I) In general.--Of the amounts 
                                made available in any fiscal year to 
                                carry out this section, not more than 
                                $600,000 may be used by the 
                                Administration to pay expenses 
                                described under subparagraphs (B) 
                                through (D) of section 20(a)(1).''.

SEC. 1736. CONFIDENTIALITY REQUIREMENTS.

    Section 21(a)(7)(A) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
648(a)(7)(A)) is amended by inserting after ``under this section'' the 
following: ``to any State, local, or Federal agency, or to any third 
party''.

SEC. 1737. LIMITATION ON AWARD OF GRANTS TO SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT 
              CENTERS.

    (a) In General.--Section 21 of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
648), as amended by this Act, is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (a)(1), by striking ``any women's 
        business center operating pursuant to section 29,'';
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(q) Limitation on Award of Grants.--Except for not-for-profit 
institutions of higher education, and notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, the Administrator may not award grants (including 
contracts and cooperative agreements) under this section to any entity 
other than those that received grants (including contracts and 
cooperative agreements) under this section prior to the date of the 
enactment of this subsection, and that seek to renew such grants 
(including contracts and cooperative agreements) after such date.''.
    (b) Rule of Construction.--The amendments made by this section may 
not be construed as prohibiting a women's business center from 
receiving a subgrant from an entity receiving a grant under section 21 
of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 648).

                       Subtitle E--Miscellaneous

SEC. 1741. MODIFICATION OF PAST PERFORMANCE PILOT PROGRAM TO INCLUDE 
              CONSIDERATION OF PAST PERFORMANCE WITH ALLIES OF THE 
              UNITED STATES.

    (a) In General.--Section 8(d)(17) of the Small Business Act (15 
U.S.C. 637(d)(17)) is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (G)--
                    (A) in clause (i), by inserting ``and, set forth 
                separately, the number of small business exporters,'' 
                after ``small business concerns''; and
                    (B) in clause (ii), by inserting ``, set forth 
                separately by applications from small business concerns 
                and from small business exporters,'' after 
                ``applications''; and
            (2) by amending subparagraph (H) to read as follows:
            ``(H) Definitions.--In this paragraph--
                    ``(i) the term `appropriate official' means--
                            ``(I) a commercial market representative;
                            ``(II) another individual designated by the 
                        senior official appointed by the Administrator 
                        with responsibilities under sections 8, 15, 31, 
                        and 36; or
                            ``(III) the Office of Small and 
                        Disadvantaged Business Utilization of a Federal 
                        agency, if the head of the Federal agency and 
                        the Administrator agree;
                    ``(ii) the term `defense item' has the meaning 
                given that term in section 38(j)(4)(A) of the Arms 
                Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2778(j)(4)(A));
                    ``(iii) the term `major non-NATO ally' means a 
                country designated as a major non-NATO ally under 
                section 517 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (22 
                U.S.C. 2321k);
                    ``(iv) the term `past performance' includes 
                performance of a contract for a sale of defense items 
                (under section 38 of the Arms Export Control Act (22 
                U.S.C. 2778)) to the government of a member nation of 
                North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the government of a 
                major non-NATO ally, or the government of a country 
                with which the United States has a defense cooperation 
                agreement (as certified by the Secretary of State); and
                    ``(v) the term `small business exporter' means a 
                small business concern that exports defense items under 
                section 38 of the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 
                2778) to the government of a member nation of the North 
                Atlantic Treaty Organization, the government of a major 
                non-NATO ally, or the government of a country with 
                which the United States has a defense cooperation 
                agreement (as certified by the Secretary of State).''.
    (b) Technical Amendment.--Section 8(d)(17)(A) of the Small Business 
Act (15 U.S.C. 637(d)(17)(A)) is amended by striking ``paragraph 
13(A)'' and inserting ``paragraph (13)(A)''.

            DIVISION B--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATIONS

SEC. 2001. SHORT TITLE.

    This division may be cited as the ``Military Construction 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018''.

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 and title XXIX 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, 2020; or
            (2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds 
        for military construction for fiscal year 2021.
    (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, 2020; or
            (2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds 
        for fiscal year 2021 for military construction projects, land 
        acquisition, family housing projects and facilities, or 
        contributions to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization 
        Security Investment Program.

SEC. 2003. EFFECTIVE DATE.

    Titles XXI through XXVII and title XXIX shall take effect on the 
later of--
            (1) October 1, 2017; or
            (2) the date of the enactment of this Act.

                 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 2104(a) 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            Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama.......................  Fort Rucker...........       $38,000,000
Arizona.......................  Davis-Monthan Air            $22,000,000
                                 Force Base...........
                                Fort Huachuca.........       $30,000,000
California....................  Fort Irwin............        $3,000,000
Colorado......................  Fort Carson...........       $29,300,000
Florida.......................  Eglin Air Force Base..       $18,000,000
Georgia.......................  Fort Benning..........       $38,800,000
                                Fort Gordon...........       $51,500,000
Indiana.......................  Crane Army Ammunition        $24,000,000
                                 Plant................
New York......................  U.S. Military Academy.       $22,000,000
South Carolina................  Fort Jackson..........       $60,000,000
                                Shaw Air Force Base...       $25,000,000
Texas.........................  Camp Bullis...........       $13,600,000
                                Fort Hood.............       $70,000,000
Virginia......................  Joint Base Langley-          $34,000,000
                                 Eustis...............
                                Joint Base Myer-             $20,000,000
                                 Henderson............
Washington....................  Joint Base Lewis-            $66,000,000
                                 McChord..............
                                Yakima................       $19,500,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant 
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2104(a) 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 the military construction 
project for the installations or locations outside the United States, 
and in the amount, set forth in the following table:

                     Army: Outside the United States
------------------------------------------------------------------------
           Country                   Installation             Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Germany.....................   Stuttgart..............      $40,000,000
                                Weisbaden..............      $43,000,000
Korea........................  Kunsan Air Base.........      $53,000,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2102. FAMILY HOUSING.

    (a) Construction and Acquisition.--Using amounts appropriated 
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section 2104(a) and 
available for military family housing functions as specified in the 
funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the Army may construct 
or acquire family housing units (including land acquisition and 
supporting facilities) at the installations or locations, in the number 
of units, and in the amounts set forth in the following table:

                                              Army: Family Housing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              State/Country                      Installation                    Units                Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Georgia.................................   Fort Gordon..............  Family Housing New              $6,100,000
                                                                       Construction.............
Germany.................................  South Camp Vilseck........  Family Housing New             $22,445,000
                                                                       Construction.............
Kwajalein...............................  Kwajalein Atoll...........  Family Housing Replacement     $31,000,000
                                                                       Construction.............
Massachusetts...........................  Natick....................  Family Housing Replacement     $21,000,000
                                                                       Construction.............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Planning and Design.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant to 
the authorization of appropriations in section 2104(a) 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 $33,559,000.

SEC. 2103. 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 2104(a) and available for military family housing functions as 
specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the 
Army may improve existing military family housing units in an amount 
not to exceed $34,156,000.

SEC. 2104. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, ARMY.

    (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized 
to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2017, 
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.
    (b) Limitation on Total Cost of Construction Projects.--
Notwithstanding the cost variations authorized by section 2853 of title 
10, United States Code, and any other cost variation authorized by law, 
the total cost of all projects carried out under section 2101 may not 
exceed the total amount authorized to be appropriated under subsection 
(a), as specified in the funding table in section 4601.

SEC. 2105. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 
              2014 PROJECT.

    In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section 
2101(a) of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2014 (division B of Public Law 113-66; 127 Stat. 986) for Joint Base 
Lewis-McChord, Washington, for construction of an airfield operations 
complex, the Secretary of the Army may construct standby generator 
capacity of 1,000 kilowatts.

SEC. 2106. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 
              2015 PROJECT.

    In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section 
2101(a) of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2015 (division B of Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3670) for Fort 
Shafter, Hawaii, for construction of a command and control facility, 
the Secretary of the Army may construct 15 megawatts of redundant power 
generation for a total project amount of $370,000,000.

SEC. 2107. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATION OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2014 
              PROJECT.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (division B of 
Public Law 113-66; 127 Stat. 985), the authorization set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2101 of that Act (127 
Stat. 986), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018, or the date 
of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military construction 
for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                  Army: Extension of 2014 Project Authorization
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         Installation or
          State or Country                  Location                   Project                    Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Japan..............................  Kyogamisaki...........  Company Operations Complex              $33,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2108. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2015 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (division B of 
Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3669), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2101 of that Act 
(128 Stat. 3670), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018, or the 
date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                 Army: Extension of 2015 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                         Installation or
           State/Country                    Location                   Project                    Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California.........................  Military Ocean          Access Control Point......               $9,900,000
                                      Terminal Concord.....
 Hawaii............................  Fort Shafter..........  Command and Control                    $370,000,000
                                                              Facility (SCIF)..........
Japan..............................  Kadena Air Base.......  Missile Magazine..........              $10,600,000
Texas..............................  Fort Hood.............  Simulation Center.........              $46,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2109. ADDITIONAL AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2000, 
              2005, 2006, AND 2007 PROJECTS.

    (a) Project Authorization.--In connection with the authorizations 
contained in the tables in section 2101(a) of the Military Construction 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 (division B of Public Law 106-
65; 113 Stat. 825), section 2101(a) of the Military Construction 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2005 (division B of Public Law 108-
375; 118 Stat. 2101), section 2101(a) of the Military Construction 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006 (division B of Public Law 109-
163; 119 Stat. 3485), and section 2101(a) of the Military Construction 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (division B of Public Law 109-
364; 120 Stat. 2445) for Fort Irwin, California, for Land Acquisition - 
National Training Center, Phases 1 through 4, the Secretary of the Army 
may carry out military construction projects to complete the land 
acquisitions within the initial scope of the projects.
    (b) Congressional Notification.--The Secretary of the Army shall 
provide information in accordance with section 2851(c) of title 10, 
United States Code, regarding the projects described in subsection (a).

                 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(a) 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:

                                         Navy: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                     State                                  Installation or Location                  Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arizona.......................................  Yuma............................................     $36,358,000
California....................................  Barstow.........................................     $36,539,000
                                                Camp Pendleton..................................     $61,139,000
                                                Lemoore.........................................     $60,828,000
                                                Twentynine Palms................................     $55,099,000
                                                Miramar.........................................     $47,600,000
                                                Coronado........................................     $36,000,000
District of Columbia..........................  NSA Washington..................................     $14,810,000
Florida.......................................  Mayport.........................................     $84,818,000
Georgia.......................................  Albany..........................................     $43,300,000
Guam..........................................  Joint Region Marianas...........................    $284,679,000
Hawaii........................................  Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam..................     $73,200,000
                                                Wahiawa.........................................     $65,864,000
Maine.........................................  Kittery.........................................     $61,692,000
North Carolina................................  Camp Lejeune....................................    $103,767,000
                                                Cherry Point Marine Corps Air Station...........     $15,671,000
Virginia......................................  Dam Neck........................................     $29,262,000
                                                Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Story.....      $2,596,000
                                                Portsmouth......................................     $72,990,000
                                                Yorktown........................................     $36,358,000
Washington....................................  Indian Island...................................     $44,440,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant 
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2204(a) 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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Greece........................................  Souda Bay.......................................     $22,045,000
 Japan........................................  Iwakuni.........................................     $21,860,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2202. FAMILY HOUSING.

    (a) Construction and Acquisition.--Using amounts appropriated 
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section 2204(a) and 
available for military family housing functions as specified in the 
funding table in section 4601, the Secretary of the Navy may construct 
or acquire family housing units (including land acquisition and 
supporting facilities) at the installations or locations, in the number 
of units, and in the amounts set forth in the following table:

                                              Navy: Family Housing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Country                         Installation                    Units                Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bahrain Island..........................  SW Asia...................  Construct On-Base GFOQ....      $2,138,000
Mariana Islands.........................  Guam......................  Replace Andersen Housing       $40,875,000
                                                                       PH II....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Planning and Design.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant to 
the authorization of appropriations in section 2204(a) 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 $4,418,000.

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(a) 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 $36,251,000.

SEC. 2204. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NAVY.

    (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized 
to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2017, 
for military construction, land acquisition, and military family 
housing functions of the Department of the Navy, as specified in the 
funding table in section 4601.
    (b) Limitation on Total Cost of Construction Projects.--
Notwithstanding the cost variations authorized by section 2853 of title 
10, United States Code, and any other cost variation authorized by law, 
the total cost of all projects carried out under section 2201 may not 
exceed the total amount authorized to be appropriated under subsection 
(a), as specified in the funding table in section 4601.

SEC. 2205. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS FOR CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2014 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (division B of 
Public Law 113-66; 127 Stat. 985), the authorizations set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2201 of that Act (127 
Stat. 989) and extended by section 2207 of the Military Construction 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division B of Public Law 114-
328; 130 Stat. 2694), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018, or 
the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                 Navy: Extension of 2014 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  State                    Installation or Location             Project               Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Illinois................................   Great Lakes..............  Unaccompanied Housing.....     $35,851,000
Nevada..................................  Fallon....................  Wastewater Treatment Plant     $11,334,000
Virginia................................  Quantico..................  Fuller Road Improvements..      $9,013,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2206. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2015 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (division B of 
Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3669), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2201 of that Act 
(128 Stat. 3675), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018, or the 
date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                                 Navy: Extension of 2015 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              State/Country                Installation or Location             Project               Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
District of Columbia....................   NSA Washington...........  Electronics Science and        $31,735,000
                                                                       Technology Lab...........
Maryland................................  Indian Head...............  Advanced Energetics            $15,346,000
                                                                       Research Lab Complex Ph 2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2207. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 
              2016 PROJECT.

    In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section 
2201(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 
(division B of Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1150) for construction of 
an Aegis Ashore Missile Defense Complex at RedziKowo Base, Poland, the 
Secretary of the Navy may construct a 6,180 square meter multipurpose 
facility, for the purposes of providing additional berthing space, 
using amounts available for the project pursuant to the authorization 
of appropriations in section 2204 of such Act.

              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(a) 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
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   Installation or
            State                     Location               Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska.......................  Eielson Air Force Base       $168,900,000
California...................   Travis Air Force Base       $122,500,000
Colorado.....................   Buckley Air Force            $38,000,000
                                Base.
                               Fort Carson...........        $13,000,000
                               U.S. Air Force Academy        $30,000,000
Florida......................   Eglin Air Force Base.        $90,700,000
                               MacDill Air Force Base         $8,100,000
                               Tyndall Air Force Base        $17,000,000
Georgia......................  Robins Air Force Base.         $9,800,000
Kansas.......................   McConnell Air Force          $17,500,000
                                Base.
Maryland.....................  Joint Base Andrews....       $271,500,000
Nevada.......................  Nellis Air Force Base.        $61,000,000
New Mexico...................  Cannon Air Force Base.        $42,000,000
                               Holloman Air Force             $4,250,000
                                Base.
                               Kirtland Air Force             $9,300,000
                                Base.
New Jersey...................   McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst       $146,500,000
North Dakota.................   Minot Air Force Base.        $27,000,000
Oklahoma.....................   Altus Air Force Base.         $4,900,000
Texas........................  Joint Base San Antonio       $156,630,000
Utah.........................  Hill Air Force Base...        $28,000,000
Wyoming......................  F.E. Warren Air Force         $62,000,000
                                Base.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant 
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2304(a) 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 installation or location outside the United States, 
and in the amount, set forth in the following table:

                                      Air Force: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    Country                                Installation or Location                  Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Australia......................................   Darwin.....................................        $76,000,000
United Kingdom.................................  RAF Fairford................................        $45,650,000
                                                 RAF Lakenheath..............................       $136,992,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2302. FAMILY HOUSING.

    Using amounts appropriated pursuant to the authorization of 
appropriations in section 2304(a) 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 $4,445,000.

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(a) 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 $80,617,000.

SEC. 2304. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, AIR FORCE.

    (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized 
to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2017, 
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.
    (b) Limitation on Total Cost of Construction Projects.--
Notwithstanding the cost variations authorized by section 2853 of title 
10, United States Code, and any other cost variation authorized by law, 
the total cost of all projects carried out under section 2301 may not 
exceed the total amount authorized to be appropriated under subsection 
(a), as specified in the funding table in section 4601.

SEC. 2305. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 
              2017 PROJECTS.

    (a) Hanscom Air Force Base.--In the case of the authorization 
contained in the table in section 2301(a) of the Military Construction 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division B of Public Law 114-
328; 130 Stat. 2696) for Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts, for 
construction of a gate complex at the installation, the Secretary of 
the Air Force may construct a visitor control center of 187 square 
meters, a traffic check house of 294 square meters, and an emergency 
power generator system and transfer switch consistent with the Air 
Force's construction guidelines.
    (b) Mariana Islands.--In the case of the authorization contained in 
the table in section 2301(b) of the Military Construction Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division B of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 
2697) for acquiring 142 hectares of land at an unspecified location in 
the Mariana Islands, the Secretary of the Air Force may acquire 142 
hectares of land on Tinian in the Northern Mariana Islands for a cost 
of $21,900,000.
    (c) Chabelley Airfield.--In the case of the authorization contained 
in the table in section 2902 of the Military Construction Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division B of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 
2743) for Chabelley Airfield, Djibouti, for construction of a parking 
apron and taxiway at that location, the Secretary of the Air Force may 
construct 20,490 square meters of taxiway and apron, 8,230 square 
meters of paved shoulders, 10,650 square meters of hangar pads, and 
3,900 square meters of cargo apron.
    (d) Scott Air Force Base.--The table in section 4601 of the 
Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division 
B of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2877) is amended in the item 
relating to Scott Air Force Base, Illinois, by striking ``Consolidated 
Corrosion Facility add/alter.'' in the project title column and 
inserting ``Consolidated Communication Facility add/alter.''.

SEC. 2306. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2015 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (division B of 
Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3669), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2301 of that Act 
(128 Stat. 3679), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018, or the 
date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                               Air Force: Extension of 2015 Project Authorization
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  State                          Installation                   Project               Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska..................................  Clear Air Force Station...  Emergency Power Plant Fuel     $11,500,000
                                                                       Storage..................
Oklahoma................................  Tinker Air Force Base.....  KC-46 Two-Bay Maintenance      $63,000,000
                                                                       Hangar...................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

           TITLE XXIV--DEFENSE AGENCIES MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

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(a) 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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California......................................  Camp Pendleton.............................        $43,642,000
                                                  Coronado...................................       $258,735,000
Colorado........................................  Schriever Air Force Base...................        $10,200,000
Florida.........................................  Eglin Air Force Base.......................         $9,100,000
                                                  Hurlburt Field.............................        $46,400,000
Georgia.........................................  Fort Gordon................................        $10,350,000
Guam............................................  Andersen Air Force Base....................        $23,900,000
Hawaii..........................................  Kunia......................................         $5,000,000
Missouri........................................  Fort Leonard Wood..........................       $381,300,000
                                                  St. Louis..................................       $812,000,000
 New Mexico.....................................  Cannon Air Force Base......................         $8,228,000
 North Carolina.................................  Camp Lejeune...............................        $90,039,000
                                                  Fort Bragg.................................        $57,778,000
                                                  Seymour Johnson Air Force Base.............        $20,000,000
South Carolina..................................  Shaw Air Force Base........................        $22,900,000
Utah............................................  Hill Air Force Base........................        $20,000,000
Virginia........................................  Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Story        $23,000,000
                                                  Norfolk....................................        $18,500,000
                                                  Pentagon...................................        $50,100,000
                                                  Portsmouth.................................        $22,500,000
Worldwide Unspecified...........................  Unspecified Worldwide Locations............        $64,364,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant 
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2403(a) 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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Germany.........................................  Spangdahlem Air Base.......................        $79,141,000
                                                  Stuttgart..................................        $46,609,000
Greece..........................................  Souda Bay..................................        $18,100,000
Italy...........................................  Vicenza....................................        $62,406,000
Japan...........................................   Iwakuni...................................        $30,800,000
                                                  Kadena Air Base............................        $27,573,000
                                                  Okinawa....................................        $11,900,000
                                                  Sasebo.....................................        $45,600,000
                                                  Torii Commo Station........................        $25,323,000
Puerto Rico.....................................   Punta Borinquen...........................        $61,071,000
United Kingdom..................................  Menwith Hill Station.......................        $11,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2402. AUTHORIZED ENERGY RESILIENCY AND CONSERVATION PROJECTS.

    (a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant 
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2403(a) and available 
for energy resiliency and conservation projects inside the United 
States as specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary 
of Defense may carry out energy resiliency and conservation projects 
under chapter 173 of title 10, United States Code, for the 
installations or locations inside the United States, and the amounts 
set forth in the table:

                      Energy Resiliency and Conservation Projects: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      State                                 Installation or Location                 Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Colorado........................................  Schriever Air Force Base...................        $15,260,000
Guam............................................  Andersen Air Force Base....................         $5,880,000
                                                  NAVBASE Guam...............................         $6,920,000
Hawaii..........................................   MCBH Kaneohe Bay..........................         $6,185,000
Illinois........................................  MTC Marseilles.............................         $3,000,000
Maryland........................................   NSA South Potomac-Indian Head.............        $10,790,000
Missouri........................................   Fort Leonard Wood.........................         $5,300,000
Montana.........................................  Malmstrom AFB..............................         $6,086,000
North Carolina..................................  Fort Bragg.................................         $3,000,000
                                                  Lejeune/New River..........................         $9,750,000
Utah............................................  Tooele Army Depot..........................         $6,400,000
                                                  Dugway Proving Ground......................         $8,700,000
                                                  Hill Air Force Base........................         $8,467,000
Wyoming.........................................  F.E. Warren................................         $4,500,000
Various Locations...............................  Various Locations..........................        $12,232,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant 
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2403(a) and available 
for energy resiliency and conservation projects outside the United 
States as specified in the funding table in section 4601, the Secretary 
of Defense may carry out energy resiliency and conservation projects 
under chapter 173 of title 10, United States Code, for the 
installations or locations outside the United States, and in the 
amounts, set forth in the following table:

                     Energy Resiliency and Conservation Projects: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                     Country                                Installation or Location                 Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Honduras........................................   Soto Cano Air Base........................        $12,600,000
Italy...........................................   NSA Naples................................         $2,700,000
Japan...........................................  CFA Yokosuka...............................         $8,530,000
Korea...........................................  Osan Air Base..............................        $13,700,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2403. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, DEFENSE AGENCIES.

    (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized 
to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2017, 
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 section 4601.
    (b) Limitation on Total Cost of Construction Projects.--
Notwithstanding the cost variations authorized by section 2853 of title 
10, United States Code, and any other cost variation authorized by law, 
the total cost of all projects carried out under section 2401 of this 
Act may not exceed the total amount authorized to be appropriated under 
subsection (a), as specified in the funding table in section 4601.

SEC. 2404. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 
              2017 PROJECT.

    In the case of the authorization in the table in section 2401(b) of 
the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
(Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2700) for Kaiserslautern, Germany, for 
construction of the Sembach Elementary/Middle School Replacement, the 
Secretary of Defense may construct an elementary school.

SEC. 2405. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2014 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (division B of 
Public Law 113-66; 127 Stat. 985), the authorizations set forth in the 
table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2401 of that Act (127 
Stat. 995) and extended by section 2406 of the Military Construction 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division B of Public Law 114-
328; 130 Stat. 2702), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018, or 
the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                           Defense Agencies: Extension of 2014 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             State/Country                Installation or  Location            Project                Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
United Kingdom.........................  Royal Air Force Lakenheath.  Lakenheath Middle/High         $69,638,000
                                                                       School Replacement......
Virginia...............................  Marine Corps Base Quantico.  Quantico Middle/High           $40,586,000
                                                                       School Replacement......
                                         Pentagon...................  PFPA Support Operations        $14,800,000
                                                                       Center..................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2406. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2015 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (division B of 
Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3669), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2401 of that Act 
(128 Stat. 3681), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018, or the 
date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                           Defense Agencies: Extension of 2015 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             State/Country                Installation or  Location            Project                Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Australia..............................  Geraldton..................  Combined Communications         $9,600,000
                                                                       Gateway Geraldton.......
Belgium................................  Brussels...................  Brussels Elementary/High       $41,626,000
                                                                       School Replacement......
Japan..................................  Okinawa....................  Kubasaki High School           $99,420,000
                                                                       Replacement/Renovation..
                                         Commander Fleet Activities   E.J. King High School          $37,681,000
                                          Sasebo....................   Replacement/Renovation..
Mississippi............................   Stennis...................  SOF Land Acquisition           $17,224,000
                                                                       Western Maneuver Area...
New Mexico.............................  Cannon Air Force Base......  SOF Squadron Operations        $23,333,000
                                                                       Facility (STS)..........
Virginia...............................  Defense Distribution Depot   Replace Access Control          $5,700,000
                                          Richmond..................   Point...................
                                         Joint Base Langley-Eustis..  Hospital Addition/Central      $41,200,000
                                                                       Utility Plant
                                                                       Replacement.............
                                         Pentagon...................  Redundant Chilled Water        $15,100,000
                                                                       Loop....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                   TITLE XXV--INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS

  Subtitle A--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, 2017, 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.

             Subtitle B--Host Country In-Kind Contributions

SEC. 2511. REPUBLIC OF KOREA FUNDED CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.

    Pursuant to agreement with the Republic of Korea for required in-
kind contributions, the Secretary of Defense may accept military 
construction projects for the installations or locations, and in the 
amounts, set forth in the following table:

                                 Republic of Korea Funded Construction Projects
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Installation or
            Country                   Component           Location              Project              Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Korea..........................  Army..............  Camp Humphreys....  Unaccompanied               $76,000,000
                                                                          Enlisted Personnel
                                                                          Housing, Phase 1...
                                 Army..............  Camp Humphreys....  Type I Aircraft             $10,000,000
                                                                          Parking Apron......
                                 Air Force.........  Kunsan Air Base...  Construct Airfield           $6,500,000
                                                                          Damage Repair
                                                                          Warehouse..........
                                 Air Force.........  Osan Air Base.....  Main Gate Entry             $13,000,000
                                                                          Control Facilities.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2512. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 
              2017 PROJECTS.

    (a) Camp Humphreys.--In the case of the authorization contained in 
the table in section 2511 of the Military Construction Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division B of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 
2704) for Camp Humphreys, Republic of Korea, for construction of the 
8th Army Correctional Facility, the Secretary of Defense may construct 
a level 1 correctional facility of 26,000 square feet and a utility and 
tool storage building of 400 square feet.
    (b) K-16 Air Base.--In the case of the authorization contained in 
the table in section 2511 of the Military Construction Authorization 
Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (division B of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 
2704) for the K-16 Air Base, Republic of Korea, for renovation of the 
Special Operations Forces (SOF) Operations Facility, B-606, the 
Secretary of Defense may renovate an operations administration area of 
5,500 square meters.

            TITLE XXVI--GUARD AND RESERVE FORCES FACILITIES

Subtitle A--Project Authorizations and Authorizations of Appropriations

SEC. 2601. AUTHORIZED ARMY 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 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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      State                                         Location                         Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Delaware........................................   New Castle................................        $36,000,000
Idaho...........................................  Orchard Training Area......................        $22,000,000
                                                  MTC Gowen..................................         $9,000,000
Maine...........................................   Presque Isle..............................        $17,500,000
Maryland........................................  Sykesville.................................        $19,000,000
Minnesota.......................................  Arden Hills................................        $39,000,000
Missouri........................................  Springfield................................        $32,000,000
New Mexico......................................   Las Cruces................................         $8,600,000
Virginia........................................   Fort Pickett..............................         $4,550,000
                                                  Fort Belvoir...............................        $15,000,000
Washington......................................  Tumwater...................................        $31,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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......................................  Fallbrook..................................        $36,000,000
Washington......................................   Lewis-McChord.............................        $30,000,000
Wisconsin.......................................   Fort McCoy................................        $13,000,000
Puerto Rico.....................................  Fort Buchanan..............................        $26,000,000
                                                  Aguadilla..................................        $12,400,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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 and Marine Corps Reserve
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      State                                         Location                         Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California......................................   Lemoore...................................        $17,330,000
Georgia.........................................  Fort Gordon................................        $17,797,000
New Jersey......................................  Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst...........        $11,573,000
Texas...........................................   Fort Worth................................        $12,637,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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......................................  March Air Force Base.......................        $15,000,000
Colorado........................................  Peterson Air Force Base....................         $8,000,000
Connecticut.....................................  Bradley IAP................................         $7,000,000
Indiana.........................................  Fort Wayne International Airport...........         $1,900,000
                                                  Hulman Regional Airport....................         $8,000,000
Kentucky........................................   Louisville IAP............................         $9,000,000
Mississippi.....................................   Jackson International Airport.............         $8,000,000
Missouri........................................   Rosecrans Memorial Airport................        $10,000,000
New York........................................   Hancock Field.............................         $6,800,000
Ohio............................................  Toledo Express Airport.....................        $15,000,000
                                                  Rickenbacker International Airport.........         $8,000,000
Oklahoma........................................  Tulsa International Airport................         $8,000,000
Oregon..........................................   Klamath Falls IAP.........................        $18,500,000
South Dakota....................................  Joe Foss Field.............................        $12,000,000
Tennessee.......................................  McGhee-Tyson Airport.......................        $25,000,000
Wisconsin.......................................   Dane County Regional/Airport Truax Field..         $8,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Florida.........................................   Patrick Air Force Base....................        $25,000,000
Georgia.........................................   Robins Air Force Base.....................        $32,000,000
Guam............................................  Joint Region Marianas......................         $5,200,000
 Hawaii.........................................   Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam............         $5,500,000
Massachusetts...................................   Westover ARB..............................        $10,000,000
Minnesota.......................................  Minneapolis-St Paul IAP....................         $9,000,000
North Carolina..................................  Seymour Johnson Air Force Base.............         $6,400,000
Texas...........................................  NAS JRB Fort Worth.........................         $3,100,000
Utah............................................  Hill Air Force Base........................         $3,100,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2606. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NATIONAL GUARD AND RESERVE.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years 
beginning after September 30, 2017, 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. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 
              2015 PROJECT.

    In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section 
2602 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2015 (division B of Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3688) for Starkville, 
Mississippi, for construction of an Army Reserve Center at that 
location, the Secretary of the Army may acquire approximately fifteen 
acres (653,400 square feet) of land.

SEC. 2612. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2014 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (division B of Public Law 113-66; 
127 Stat. 985), the authorizations set forth in the table in subsection 
(b), as provided in sections 2602, 2604, and 2605 of that Act (127 
Stat. 1001, 1002), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018 or the 
date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                      National Guard and Reserve: Extension of 2014 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 State                   Installation or Location             Project                 Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Florida..............................  Homestead ARB............  Entry Control Complex.......       $9,800,000
Maryland..............................   Fort Meade..............  175th Network Warfare              $4,000,000
                                                                    Squadron Facility.
New York..............................  Bullville................  Army Reserve Center.........      $14,500,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2613. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATIONS OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2015 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (division B of Public Law 113-
291; 128 Stat. 3669), the authorizations set forth in the table in 
subsection (b), as provided in sections 2602 and 2604 of that Act (128 
Stat. 3688, 3689), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018 or the 
date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                      National Guard and Reserve: Extension of 2015 Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 State                            Location                     Project                Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Mississippi...........................   Starkville...............  Army Reserve Center.......       $9,300,000
New Hampshire..........................   Pease....................  KC-46A ADAL Airfield             $7,100,000
                                                                      Pavements and Hydrant
                                                                      Systems.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

          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.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years 
beginning after September 30, 2017, 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 established by section 2906 of such Act (as amended by 
section 2711 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2013 (division B of Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 2140)), as 
specified in the funding table in section 4601.

SEC. 2702. PROHIBITION ON CONDUCTING ADDITIONAL BASE REALIGNMENT AND 
              CLOSURE (BRAC) ROUND.

    Nothing in this Act shall be construed to authorize an additional 
Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) round.

SEC. 2703. UPDATE TO REPORT ON INFRASTRUCTURE CAPACITY.

    Not later than one year after the date of the enactment of this 
Act, the Secretary of Defense shall prepare and release to the public 
an updated version of the March 2016 report on ``Department of Defense 
Infrastructure Capacity''.

         TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION GENERAL PROVISIONS

 Subtitle A--Military Construction Program and Military Family Housing

SEC. 2801. ELIMINATION OF WRITTEN NOTICE REQUIREMENT FOR MILITARY 
              CONSTRUCTION ACTIVITIES AND RELIANCE ON ELECTRONIC 
              SUBMISSION OF NOTIFICATIONS AND REPORTS.

    (a) Military Construction Authorities.--Subchapter I of chapter 169 
of title 10, United States Code, is amended as follows:
            (1) Section 2803(b) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``in writing'';
                    (B) by striking ``seven-day period'' and inserting 
                ``five-day period''; and
                    (C) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 
                seven-day period beginning on the date on which a copy 
                of the notification is provided''.
            (2) Section 2804(b) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``in writing'';
                    (B) by striking ``14-day period'' and inserting 
                ``seven-day period; and''
                    (C) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 
                seven-day period beginning on the date on which a copy 
                of the notification is provided''.
            (3) Section 2805 is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (b)(2)--
                            (i) by striking ``in writing'';
                            (ii) by striking ``21-day period'' and 
                        inserting ``14-day period''; and
                            (iii) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end 
                        of the 14-day period beginning on the date on 
                        which a copy of the notification is provided''; 
                        and
                    (B) in subsection (d)(3)--
                            (i) by striking ``in writing'';
                            (ii) by striking ``21-day period'' and 
                        inserting ``14-day period''; and
                            (iii) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end 
                        of the 14-day period beginning on the date on 
                        which a copy of the notification is provided''.
            (4) Section 2806(c) is amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``of Defense'' 
                after ``The Secretary''; and
                    (B) by striking ``(A)'' and all that follows 
                through the end of the paragraph and inserting the 
                following: ``, only after the end of the 14-day period 
                beginning on the date on which the Secretary submits, 
                in an electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this 
                title, to the appropriate committees of Congress notice 
                of the increase, including the reasons for the increase 
                and the source of the funds to be used for the 
                increase.''.
            (5) Section 2807 is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (b)--
                            (i) by striking ``21-day period'' and 
                        inserting ``14-day period''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end 
                        of the 14-day period beginning on the date on 
                        which a copy of the report is provided''; and
                    (B) in subsection (c), by striking ``(1)'' and all 
                that follows through the end of the subsection and 
                inserting the following: ``only after the end of the 
                14-day period beginning on the date on which the 
                Secretary submits, in an electronic medium pursuant to 
                section 480 of this title, to the appropriate 
                committees of Congress notice of the need for the 
                increase, including the source of funds to be used for 
                the increase.''.
            (6) Section 2808(b) is amended by inserting after 
        ``notify'' the following: ``, in an electronic medium pursuant 
        to section 480 of this title,''.
            (7) Section 2809 is amended by striking subsection (f) and 
        inserting the following new subsection:
    ``(f) Notice and Wait Requirements.--The Secretary concerned may 
enter into a contract under this section only after the end of the 14-
day period beginning on the date on which the Secretary submits, in an 
electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this title, to the 
appropriate committees of Congress a justification of the need for the 
facility covered by the proposed contract, including an economic 
analysis (based upon accepted life cycle costing procedures) which 
demonstrates that the proposed contract is cost effective when compared 
with alternative means of furnishing the same facility.''.
            (8) Section 2811(d) is amended by inserting after 
        ``submit'' the following: ``, in an electronic medium pursuant 
        to section 480 of this title,''.
            (9) Section 2812(c) is amended by striking paragraph (1) 
        and inserting the following new paragraph:
    ``(1) The Secretary concerned may enter into a lease under this 
section only after the end of the 14-day period beginning on the date 
on which the Secretary submits, in an electronic medium pursuant to 
section 480 of this title, to the appropriate committees of Congress a 
justification of the need for the facility covered by the proposed 
lease, including an economic analysis (based upon accepted life-cycle 
costing procedures) that demonstrates the cost effectiveness of the 
proposed lease compared with a military construction project for the 
same facility.''.
            (10) Section 2813(c) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``transmits to the appropriate 
                committees of Congress a written notification'' and 
                inserting ``notifies the appropriate committees of 
                Congress'';
                    (B) by striking ``21-day period'' and inserting 
                ``14-day period''; and
                    (C) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 
                14-day period beginning on the date on which a copy of 
                the report is provided''.
            (11) Section 2814 is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a); and
                    (B) by striking subsection (g) and inserting the 
                following new subsection:
    ``(g) Notice and Wait Requirements.--The Secretary of the Navy may 
carry out a transaction authorized by this section only after the end 
of the 20-day period beginning on the date on which the Secretary 
submits, in an electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this title, 
to the appropriate committees of Congress notice of the transaction, 
including a detailed description of the transaction and a justification 
for the transaction specifying the manner in which the transaction will 
meet the purposes of this section.''.
    (b) Military Family Housing Activities.--Subchapter II of chapter 
169 of title 10, United States Code, is amended as follows:
            (1) Section 2825(b) is amended--
                    (A) by redesignating paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) 
                as paragraphs (3), (4), and (5), respectively;
                    (B) in paragraph (5), as redesignated--
                            (i) by striking ``the first sentence of''; 
                        and
                            (ii) by striking ``in that sentence'' and 
                        inserting ``in that paragraph''; and
                    (C) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) in the second sentence, by striking 
                        ``The Secretary concerned may waive the 
                        limitations contained in the preceding 
                        sentence'' and inserting the following:
    ``(2) The Secretary concerned may waive the limitations contained 
in paragraph (1)'';
                            (ii) in the third sentence, by striking 
                        ``the Secretary transmits'' and all that 
                        follows through the end of the sentence and 
                        inserting the following: ``the end of the 14-
                        day period beginning on the date on which the 
                        Secretary submits, in an electronic medium 
                        pursuant to section 480 of this title, to the 
                        appropriate committees of Congress notice of 
                        the proposed waiver, together with an economic 
                        analysis demonstrating that the improvement 
                        will be cost effective.''.
            (2) Section 2827 is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a), by inserting ``Relocation 
                Authority.--'' after ``(a)''; and
                    (B) by striking subsection (b) and inserting the 
                following new subsection:
    ``(b) Notice and Wait Requirements.--A contract to carry out a 
relocation of military family housing units under subsection (a) may be 
awarded only after the end of the 14-day period beginning on the date 
on which the Secretary concerned submits, in an electronic medium 
pursuant to section 480 of this title, to the appropriate committees of 
Congress notice of the proposed new locations of the housing units to 
be relocated and the estimated cost of and source of funds for the 
relocation.''.
            (3) Section 2828(f) is amended by striking ``may not be 
        made'' and all that follows through the end of the subsection 
        and inserting ``may be made under this section only after the 
        end of the 14-day period beginning on the date on which the 
        Secretary concerned submits, in an electronic medium pursuant 
        to section 480 of this title, to the appropriate committees of 
        Congress notice of the facts concerning the proposed lease.''.
            (4) Section 2831(f) is amended by striking ``until--'' and 
        all that follows through the end of the subsection and 
        inserting the following: ``until after the end of the 14-day 
        period beginning on the date on which the Secretary submits, in 
        an electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this title, to 
        the appropriate committees of Congress a justification of the 
        need for the maintenance or repair project, including an 
        estimate of the cost of the project.''.
            (5) Section 2835 is amended by striking subsection (g) and 
        inserting the following new subsection:
    ``(g) Notice and Wait Requirements.--A contract may be entered into 
for the lease of housing facilities under this section only after the 
end of the 14-day period beginning on the date on which the Secretary 
of Defense, or the Secretary of Homeland Security with respect to the 
Coast Guard when it is not operating as a service in the Navy, submits, 
in an electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this title, to the 
appropriate committees of Congress an economic analysis (based upon 
accepted life cycle costing procedures) which demonstrates that the 
proposed contract is cost-effective when compared with alternative 
means of furnishing the same housing facilities.''.
            (6) Section 2835a(c) is amended by striking ``until--'' and 
        all that follows through the end of the subsection and 
        inserting the following: ``until after the end of the 14-day 
        period beginning on the date on which the Secretary submits, in 
        an electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this title, to 
        the appropriate committees of Congress a notice of the intent 
        to undertake the conversion.''.
    (c) Administrative Provisions.--Subchapter III of chapter 169 of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended as follows:
            (1) Section 2853(c) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``in writing'' both places it 
                appears;
                    (B) in paragraph (1)(B)--
                            (i) by striking ``period of 21 days'' and 
                        inserting ``14-day period''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``or, if over sooner, a 
                        period of 14 days has elapsed after the date on 
                        which a copy of the notification is provided''; 
                        and
                    (C) in paragraph (2), by inserting after 
                ``notifies'' the following: ``, using an electronic 
                medium pursuant to section 480 of this title,''.
            (2) Section 2854(b) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``in writing'';
                    (B) by striking ``21-day period'' and inserting 
                ``14-day period''; and
                    (C) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 
                seven-day period beginning on the date on which a copy 
                of the notification is provided''.
            (3) Section 2854a is amended by striking subsection (c) and 
        inserting the following new subsection:
    ``(c) Notice and Wait Requirements.--(1) The Secretary concerned 
may enter into an agreement to convey a family housing facility under 
this section only after the end of the 14-day period beginning on the 
date on which the Secretary submits, in an electronic medium pursuant 
to section 480 of this title, to the appropriate committees of Congress 
a notice containing a justification for the conveyance under the 
agreement.
    ``(2) A notice under paragraph (1) shall include--
            ``(A) an estimate of the consideration to be provided the 
        United States under the agreement;
            ``(B) an estimate of the cost of repairing the family 
        housing facility to be conveyed; and
            ``(C) an estimate of the cost of replacing the family 
        housing facility to be conveyed.''.
            (4) Section 2861(c) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``in writing'';
                    (B) by striking ``21-day period'' and inserting 
                ``14-day period''; and
                    (C) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 
                14-day period beginning on the date on which a copy of 
                the notification is provided''.
            (5) Section 2866(c)(2) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``21-day period'' and inserting 
                ``14-day period''; and
                    (B) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 
                14-day period beginning on the date on which a copy of 
                the notification is provided''.
            (6) Section 2869(d)(3) is amended--
                    (A) in the first sentence, by striking ``after a 
                period of 21 days'' and all that follows through the 
                end of the sentence and inserting the following: 
                ``after the end of the 14-day period beginning on the 
                date of the submission of the notice in an electronic 
                medium pursuant to section 480 of this title.''; and
                    (B) in the second sentence, by striking ``only 
                after'' and all that follows through the end of the 
                sentence and inserting the following: ``only after the 
                end of the 45-day period beginning on the date of the 
                submission of the notice in an electronic medium 
                pursuant to section 480 of this title.''
    (d) Alternative Authority for Acquisition and Improvement of 
Military Housing.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended as follows:
            (1) Section 2881a(d)(2) is amended by inserting after 
        ``Congress'' the following: ``in an electronic medium pursuant 
        to section 480 of this title''.
            (2) Section 2883(f) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``30-day period'' and inserting 
                ``14-day period'';
                    (B) by striking ``written''; and
                    (C) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 
                14-day period beginning on the date on which a copy of 
                the notice and justification is provided''.
            (3) Section 2884(a) is amended by striking paragraph (4) 
        and inserting the following new paragraph:
    ``(4) The report shall be submitted in an electronic medium 
pursuant to section 480 of this title not later than 21 days before the 
date on which the Secretary issues the contract solicitation or offers 
the conveyance or lease.''.
            (4) Section 2885 is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (a)(4)(B)--
                            (i) by inserting after ``notify'' the 
                        following: ``, in an electronic medium pursuant 
                        to section 480 of this title,''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``, and shall provide'' 
                        and inserting ``and include''; and
                    (B) in subsection (d), by inserting after 
                ``submit'' the following: ``, in an electronic medium 
                pursuant to section 480 of this title,''.
    (e) Energy Security Activities.--Chapter 173 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended as follows:
            (1) Section 2914(b)(1) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``in writing'';
                    (B) by striking ``21-day period'' and inserting 
                ``14-day period''; and
                    (C) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 
                14-day period beginning on the date on which a copy of 
                the notification is provided''.
            (2) Section 2916(c) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``in writing'';
                    (B) by striking ``21-day period'' and inserting 
                ``14-day period''; and
                    (C) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 
                14-day period beginning on the date on which a copy of 
                the notification is provided''.
    (f) Military Construction Carried Out Using Burden Sharing 
Contributions.--Section 2350j(e)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``21-day period'' and inserting ``14-day 
        period''; and
            (2) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 14-day 
        period beginning on the date on which a copy of the report is 
        provided''.
    (g) Acquisition of Facilities for Reserve Components by Exchange.--
Section 18240(f)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``30-day period'' and inserting ``21-day 
        period''; and
            (2) by striking ``or, if earlier, the end of the 21-day 
        period beginning on the date on which a copy of the report is 
        provided''.

SEC. 2802. MODIFICATION OF THRESHOLDS APPLICABLE TO UNSPECIFIED MINOR 
              CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.

    (a) Increase in Threshold; Uniform Threshold for All Projects.--
Section 2805(a)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the first sentence, by striking ``$3,000,000'' and 
        inserting ``$6,000,000''; and
            (2) by striking the second sentence.
    (b) Notice Requirements.--Section 2805(b)(1) of such title is 
amended by striking ``$1,000,000'' and inserting ``$750,000''.
    (c) Use of Operation and Maintenance Funds.--Section 2805(c) of 
such title is amended by striking ``$1,000,000'' and inserting 
``$2,000,000''.

SEC. 2803. EXTENSION OF TEMPORARY, LIMITED AUTHORITY TO USE OPERATION 
              AND MAINTENANCE FUNDS FOR CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS OUTSIDE 
              THE UNITED STATES.

    (a) Extension of Authority.--Subsection (h) of 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 2017 (division B of Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2713), is 
amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``December 31, 2017'' and 
        inserting ``December 31, 2018''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``fiscal year 2018'' and 
        inserting ``fiscal year 2019''.
    (b) Limitation on Use of Authority.--Subsection (c)(1) of such 
section is amended--
            (1) by striking ``October 1, 2016'' and inserting ``October 
        1, 2017'';
            (2) by striking ``December 31, 2017'' and inserting 
        ``December 31, 2018''; and
            (3) by striking ``fiscal year 2018'' and inserting ``fiscal 
        year 2019''.

SEC. 2804. USE OF OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FUNDS FOR MILITARY 
              CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS TO REPLACE FACILITIES DAMAGED OR 
              DESTROYED BY NATURAL DISASTERS OR TERRORISM INCIDENTS.

    (a) Authorizing Use of Funds.--Section 2854 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
subsection:
    ``(c)(1) In using the authority described in subsection (a) to 
carry out a military construction project to replace a facility, 
including a family housing facility, that has been damaged or 
destroyed, the Secretary concerned may use appropriations available for 
operation and maintenance if--
            ``(A) the damage or destruction to the facility was the 
        result of a natural disaster or a terrorism incident; and
            ``(B) the Secretary submits a notification to the 
        appropriate committees of Congress of the decision to carry out 
        the replacement project, and includes in the notification--
                    ``(i) the current estimate of the cost of the 
                replacement project;
                    ``(ii) the source of funds for the replacement 
                project;
                    ``(iii) in the case of damage to a facility rather 
                than destruction, a certification that the replacement 
                project is more cost-effective than repair or 
                restoration; and
                    ``(iv) a certification that deferral of the 
                replacement project for inclusion in the next Military 
                Construction Authorization Act would be inconsistent 
                with national security or the protection of health, 
                safety, or environmental quality, as the case may be.
    ``(2) A replacement project under this subsection may be carried 
out only after the end of the 7-day period beginning on the date on 
which a copy of the notification described in paragraph (1) is provided 
in an electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this title.
    ``(3) The maximum aggregate amount that the Secretary concerned may 
obligate from appropriations available for operation and maintenance in 
any fiscal year for replacement projects under the authority of this 
subsection is $50,000,000.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendment.--Subsection (b) of section 2854 of such 
title, as amended by section 2801(c)(2), is amended by striking ``under 
this section'' and inserting ``under subsection (a)''.

        Subtitle B--Real Property and Facilities Administration

SEC. 2811. ELIMINATION OF WRITTEN NOTICE REQUIREMENT FOR MILITARY REAL 
              PROPERTY TRANSACTIONS AND RELIANCE ON ELECTRONIC 
              SUBMISSION OF NOTIFICATIONS AND REPORTS.

    (a) General Real Property Transaction Report.--Section 2662(a) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking paragraph (3) and 
inserting a new paragraph:
    ``(3) The authority of the Secretary concerned to enter into a 
transaction described in paragraph (1) commences only after the end of 
the 14-day period beginning on the first day of the first month 
beginning on or after the date on which the report containing the facts 
concerning such transaction, and all other such proposed transactions 
for that month, is provided in an electronic medium pursuant to section 
480 of this title.''.
    (b) Acquisition of Interests in Land When Need Is Urgent.--Section 
2663(d)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by inserting after ``submit'' the following: ``, in an 
        electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this title,''; and
            (2) by striking ``written notice'' and inserting ``a 
        notice''.
    (c) Acquisition of Land by Condemnation for Certain Military 
Purposes.--Section 2663(f)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by striking ``or, if over sooner, the end of the 14-day period 
beginning on the date on which a copy of the report is provided''.
    (d) Exceptions to Limitations on Land Acquisition Reduction in 
Scope or Increase in Cost.--Section 2664(d) of title 10, United States 
Code, is amended--
            (1) by striking ``written'';
            (2) by striking ``a period of 21 days elapses from'' and 
        inserting ``the end of the 14-day period beginning on''; and
            (3) by striking ``or, if over sooner, a period of 14 days 
        elapses from the date on which a copy of that notification is 
        provided''.
    (e) Leases of Non-excess Defense Property.--Section 2667(d)(3) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``provide to the 
congressional defense committees written notice'' and inserting 
``submit, in an electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this 
title, to the congressional defense committees a notice''.
    (f) Maintenance and Repair and Jurisdiction Over Facilities for 
Defense Agencies.--Section 2682(c)(2) of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended by striking ``to the appropriate congressional committees 
written notification'' and inserting ``, in an electronic medium 
pursuant to section 480 of this title, to the appropriate congressional 
committees a notice''.
    (g) Agreements to Limit Encroachments and Other Constraints on 
Military Training, Testing, and Operations.--Section 2684a(d)(4)(D) of 
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in clause (i), by striking ``provides written notice'' 
        and inserting ``submits, in an electronic medium pursuant to 
        section 480 of this title, a notice''; and
            (2) in clause (ii), by striking ``14 days'' and all that 
        follows through the end of the clause and inserting the 
        following: ``10 days after the date on which the notice is 
        submitted under clause (i).''.
    (h) Conveyance of Surplus Real Property for Natural Resource 
Conservation.--Section 2694a of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by striking subsection (e) and inserting the following new 
subsection:
    ``(e) Notice and Wait Requirements.--The Secretary concerned may 
not approve of the reconveyance of real property under subsection (c) 
or grant the release of a covenant under subsection (d) until after the 
end of the 14-day period beginning on the date on which the Secretary 
submits, in an electronic medium pursuant to section 480 of this title, 
to the appropriate committees of Congress a notice of the proposed 
reconveyance or release.''.

SEC. 2812. CLARIFICATION OF APPLICABILITY OF FAIR MARKET VALUE 
              CONSIDERATION IN GRANTS OF EASEMENTS ON MILITARY LANDS 
              FOR RIGHTS-OF-WAY.

    Section 2668(e) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in the subsection heading, by striking ``Disposition 
        of'' and inserting ``Conditions and''; and
            (2) by striking ``Subsections (c) and (e)'' and inserting 
        ``Subsections (b)(4), (c), and (e)''.

SEC. 2813. CRITERIA FOR EXCHANGES OF PROPERTY AT MILITARY 
              INSTALLATIONS.

    Paragraph (2) of section 2869(a) of title 10, United States Code, 
is amended to read as follows:
    ``(2) Paragraph (1) applies with respect to real property under the 
jurisdiction of the Secretary concerned--
            ``(A) that is located on a military installation that is 
        closed or realigned under a base closure law; or
            ``(B) that is located on a military installation not 
        covered by subparagraph (A) and for which the Secretary 
        concerned makes a determination that the conveyance under 
        paragraph (1) is advantageous to the United States.''.

SEC. 2814. PROHIBITING USE OF UPDATED ASSESSMENT OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS ON 
              DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE INSTALLATIONS TO SUPERSEDE FUNDING 
              OF CERTAIN PROJECTS.

    (a) Prohibiting Use of Updated Assessment to Supersede Funding of 
Certain Public School Projects.--Subsection (a) of section 2814 of the 
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 
114-328; 130 Stat. 2717) is amended by adding at the end the following 
new paragraph:
            ``(3) Prohibiting use of updated assessment to supersede 
        funding of certain remaining projects.--In determining which 
        projects will be funded under the programs described in 
        paragraph (2), the Secretary may not, on the basis of the 
        updated assessment described in paragraph (1), supersede the 
        funding of any of the remaining projects which were included 
        among the 33 projects for which Secretary assigned the highest 
        priority for receiving funds under the assessment of the 
        capacity and facility condition deficiencies of elementary and 
        secondary public schools on military installations conducted by 
        the Secretary in July 2011 under section 8109 of the Department 
        of Defense and Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011 
        (Public Law 112-10; 125 Stat. 82).''.
    (b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall 
take effect as if included in the enactment of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017.

SEC. 2815. REQUIREMENTS FOR WINDOW FALL PREVENTION DEVICES IN MILITARY 
              FAMILY HOUSING.

    (a) Requirement.--Chapter 169 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended by inserting after section 2878 the following new section:
``Sec. 2879. Window fall prevention devices in military family housing 
              units
    ``(a) Requiring Use of Devices on Certain Windows.--The Secretary 
concerned shall ensure that if a window in any military family housing 
unit acquired or constructed under this chapter is described in 
subsection (b), including a window designed for emergency escape or 
rescue, the window is equipped with fall prevention devices that 
protect against unintentional window falls by young children and that 
are in compliance with applicable International Building Code (IBC) 
standards.
    ``(b) Windows Described.--A window is described in this subsection 
if the bottom sill of the window is within 36 inches of the floor, as 
measured in the interior of the unit.''.
    (b) Briefing on Implementation.--Not later than 180 days after the 
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of each military 
department shall brief the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
Representatives on the implementation of section 2879 of title 10, 
United States Code (as added by subsection (a)), and include in the 
briefing the following:
            (1) The extent to which the Secretary is in compliance with 
        the requirements of such section.
            (2) A plan for the retrofitting of existing military family 
        housing units to enable the units to meet the requirements of 
        such section.
            (3) The feasibility and cost-effectiveness of expanding the 
        requirements of such section to apply to windows for which the 
        bottom sill--
                    (A) is within 42 inches of the floor, as measured 
                in the interior of the unit; or
                    (B) is 72 inches or more above the ground, as 
                measured on the exterior of the unit.
            (4) The feasibility and cost-effectiveness of modifying the 
        requirements of such section to require windows to be equipped 
        with fall prevention devices that meet the following 
        requirements:
                    (A) The device attaches to the window frame and 
                covers the entire opening with materials of sufficient 
                strength to withstand 60 pounds (27 kg) of force.
                    (B) The device allows protection in case of a fully 
                opened window.
                    (C) The device prohibits the passage of a 4 inch 
                rigid sphere anywhere in the window opening.
                    (D) The device has a 2 step release mechanism 
                that--
                            (i) allows the window to be fully opened 
                        for emergency escape or rescue with no more 
                        than 15 lb ft of force;
                            (ii) requires 2 distinct actions to 
                        operate;
                            (iii) is clearly identified for use in an 
                        emergency; and
                            (iv) is not designed in a manner which 
                        accommodates the use of locking devices which 
                        require special tools or knowledge to operate, 
                        such as combination locks or keyed locks.
            (5) The feasibility and cost-effectiveness of extending the 
        requirements of such section to private housing leased or 
        otherwise used by military families.
            (6) The feasibility and cost-effectiveness of other 
        potential methods to protect against unintentional window falls 
        by young children in military family housing units.
    (c) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections for chapter 169 of 
such title is amended by inserting after the item relating to section 
2878 the following new item:

``2879. Window fall prevention devices in military family housing 
                            units.''.

SEC. 2816. AUTHORIZING REIMBURSEMENT OF STATES FOR COSTS OF SUPPRESSING 
              WILDFIRES CAUSED BY DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ACTIVITIES ON 
              STATE LANDS; RESTORATION OF LANDS OF OTHER FEDERAL 
              AGENCIES FOR DAMAGE CAUSED BY DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              VEHICLE MISHAPS.

    (a) Authorities.--Section 2691 of title 10, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``or lease'' each place 
        it appears;
            (2) in subsection (b), by striking ``or lease'';
            (3) in subsection (c), by striking ``lease,''; and
            (4) by adding at the end the following new subsections:
    ``(d) Wildland Fires on State Land.--The Secretary of Defense may, 
in any lease, permit, license, or other grant of access for use of 
lands owned by a State, agree to reimburse the State for the reasonable 
costs of the State in suppressing wildland fires caused by the 
activities of the Department of Defense under such lease, permit, 
license, or other grant of access.
    ``(e) Restoration of Land Damaged by Mishap.--(1) When land under 
the administrative jurisdiction of a Federal agency that is not a part 
of the Department of Defense is damaged as the result of a mishap 
involving a vessel, aircraft, or vehicle of the Department of Defense, 
the Secretary of Defense may, with the consent of the Federal agency, 
restore the land.
    ``(2) When land under the administrative jurisdiction of the 
Department of Defense or a military department is damaged as the result 
of a mishap involving a vessel, aircraft, or vehicle of a Federal 
agency that is not a part of the Department of Defense, the head of the 
Federal agency under whose control the vessel, aircraft, or vehicle was 
operating may, with the consent of the Department of Defense, restore 
the land.''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--Such section is further amended--
            (1) in the heading, by striking ``lease'' and inserting 
        ``damaged by mishap; reimbursement of state costs of fighting 
        wildland fires'';
            (2) in subsection (a), by striking ``(a) The Secretary'' 
        and inserting ``(a) Restoration of Other Agency Land Used by 
        Permit.--The Secretary'';
            (3) in subsection (b), by striking ``(b) Unless'' and 
        inserting ``(b) Screening for Use of Improved Land.--Unless''; 
        and
            (4) in subsection (c), by striking ``(c)(1) As a 
        condition'' and inserting ``(c) Restoration of Department of 
        Defense Land Used by Other Agency.--(1) As a condition''.
    (c) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections of chapter 159 of 
such title is amended by amending the item relating to section 2691 to 
read as follows:

``2691. Restoration of land used by permit or damaged by mishap; 
                            reimbursement of State costs of fighting 
                            wildland fires.''.

SEC. 2817. PROHIBITING COLLECTION OF ADDITIONAL AMOUNTS FROM MEMBERS 
              LIVING IN UNITS UNDER MILITARY HOUSING PRIVATIZATION 
              INITIATIVE.

    (a) Prohibition.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2886. Prohibiting collection of amounts in addition to rent from 
              members assigned to units
    ``(a) Prohibition.--An agreement for acquiring or constructing a 
military family housing unit or military unaccompanied housing unit 
under this subchapter which is entered into between the Secretary and 
an eligible entity shall prohibit the entity from imposing on a member 
of the armed forces who occupies the unit a supplemental payment (such 
as an out-of-pocket fee) in addition to the amount of rent the eligible 
entity charges for a unit of similar size and composition, without 
regard to whether or not the amount of the member's basic allowance for 
housing is less than the amount of the rent.
    ``(b) Permitting Certain Additional Payments.--Nothing in this 
section shall be construed to prohibit an eligible entity from imposing 
an additional payment for optional services provided to residents, such 
as access to a gym or a parking space, or an additional payment for 
non-essential utility services, as determined in accordance with 
regulations promulgated by the Secretary.
    ``(c) No Effect on Rental Guarantees or Differential Lease 
Payments.--Nothing in this section shall be construed to limit or 
otherwise affect the authority of the Secretary to enter into rental 
guarantee agreements under section 2876 of this title or to make 
differential lease payments under section 2877 of this title, so long 
as such agreements or payments do not require a member of the armed 
forces who is assigned to a military family housing unit or military 
unaccompanied housing unit under this subchapter to pay an out-of-
pocket fee or payment in addition to the member's basic housing 
allowance.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections for subchapter IV of 
chapter 169 of such title is amended by adding at the end the following 
new item:

``2886. Prohibiting collection of amounts in addition to rent from 
                            members assigned to units.''.

SEC. 2818. CERTIFICATION RELATED TO CERTAIN ACQUISITIONS OR LEASES OF 
              REAL PROPERTY.

    Section 2662(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2), by striking the period at the end and 
        inserting the following: ``, as well as the certification 
        described in paragraph (5).''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following:
    ``(5) For purposes of paragraph (2), the certification described in 
this paragraph with respect to an acquisition or lease of real property 
is a certification that the Secretary concerned--
            ``(A) evaluated the feasibility of using space in property 
        under the jurisdiction of the Department of Defense to satisfy 
        the purposes of the acquisition or lease; and
            ``(B) determined that--
                    ``(i) space in property under the jurisdiction of 
                the Department of Defense is not reasonably available 
                to be used to satisfy the purposes of the acquisition 
                or lease;
                    ``(ii) acquiring the property or entering into the 
                lease would be more cost-effective than the use of the 
                Department of Defense property; or
                    ``(iii) the use of the Department of Defense 
                property would interfere with the ongoing military 
                mission of the property.''.

SEC. 2819. IMPROVED PROCESS FOR DISPOSAL OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE 
              SURPLUS REAL PROPERTY LOCATED OVERSEAS.

    (a) Petition to Acquire Surplus Property.--2687a of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection (h); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (f) the following new 
        subsection:
    ``(g) Petition Process for Disposal of Overseas Surplus Real 
Property.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall establish a process by 
which a foreign government may request the transfer of surplus real 
property or improvements under the jurisdiction of the Department of 
Defense in the foreign country.
    ``(2) Upon the receipt of a petition under this subsection, the 
Secretary shall determine within 90 days whether the property or 
improvement subject to the petition is surplus. If surplus, the 
Secretary shall seek to enter into an agreement with the foreign 
government within one year for the disposal of the property.
    ``(3) If real property or an improvement is determined not to be 
surplus, the Secretary shall not be obligated to consider another 
petition involving the same property or improvement for five years 
beginning on the date on which the initial determination was made.''.
    (b) Additional Use of Department of Defense Overseas Military 
Facility Investment Recovery Account.--Section 2687a(b) of title 10, 
United States Code, is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``property disposal 
        agreement,'' after ``forces agreement,''; and
            (2) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by striking ``and'' at the end of subparagraph 
                (A);
                    (B) by striking the period at the end of 
                subparagraph (B) and inserting ``; and''; and
                    (C) by adding at the end the following new 
                subparagraph:
            ``(C) military readiness programs.''.
    (c) Reporting Requirement.--Section 2687a(a) of title 10, United 
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
paragraph:
    ``(3) A report under paragraph (1) also shall specify the 
following:
            ``(A) The number of petitions received under subsection (g) 
        from foreign governments requesting the transfer of surplus 
        real property or improvements under the jurisdiction of the 
        Department of Defense overseas.
            ``(B) The status of each petition, including whether 
        reviewed, denied, or granted.
            ``(C) The implementation status of each granted 
        petition.''.

                      Subtitle C--Land Conveyances

SEC. 2821. LAND EXCHANGE, NAVAL INDUSTRIAL RESERVE ORDNANCE PLANT, 
              SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA.

    (a) Land Exchange Authorized.--The Secretary of the Navy may convey 
to an entity (in this section referred to as the ``Exchange Entity'') 
all right, title, and interest of the United States in and to the 
parcel of real property, including improvements thereon, comprising the 
Naval Industrial Reserve Ordnance Plant (NIROP) located in Sunnyvale, 
California in exchange for--
            (1) real property, including improvements thereon, that 
        will replace the NIROP and meet the readiness requirements of 
        the Department of the Navy, as determined by the Secretary; and
            (2) relocation of contractor and Government personnel and 
        equipment from the NIROP to the replacement facilities.
    (b) Land Exchange Agreement.--
            (1) In general.--The exchange authorized under subsection 
        (a) shall be governed by a land exchange agreement that 
        identifies the property to be exchanged (including improvements 
        thereon), the time period in which the exchange will occur, and 
        the roles and responsibilities of the Secretary and the 
        Exchange Entity in carrying out the exchange.
            (2) Compliance with environmental laws.--Nothing in this 
        section shall be construed to affect or limit the application 
        of, or any obligation to comply with, any environmental law, 
        including the Comprehensive Environmental Response, 
        Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. 9601).
    (c) Valuation; Cash Equalization Payment if NIROP Value Exceeds 
Value of Exchanged Property.--
            (1) Valuation.--The values of the properties to be 
        exchanged by the Secretary and the Exchange Entity under 
        subsection (a) (including improvements thereon) shall be 
        determined by an independent appraiser selected by the 
        Secretary, and in accordance with the Uniform Appraisal 
        Standards for Federal Land Acquisitions and the Uniform 
        Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice.
            (2) Cash equalization payment.--If, as determined in 
        accordance with paragraph (1), the value of the NIROP is 
        greater than the combination of the value of the property to be 
        conveyed by the Exchange Entity under subsection (a) and the 
        relocation costs covered by the Exchange Entity under such 
        subsection, the Exchange Entity shall make a cash equalization 
        payment to the Secretary to equalize the values. Nothing in 
        this paragraph may be construed to require the Secretary to 
        make a cash equalization payment to the Exchange Entity if the 
        value of the property to be conveyed by the Exchange Entity and 
        the relocation costs covered by the Exchange Entity are greater 
        than the value of the NIROP.
    (d) Payment of Costs of Conveyance.--The Secretary shall require 
the Exchange Entity to pay costs incurred by the Department of the Navy 
to carry out the exchange authorized under subsection (a), including 
costs incurred for land surveys, environmental documentation, the 
review of replacement facilities design, real estate due diligence 
(including appraisals), preparing and executing the agreement described 
in subsection (b), and any other administrative costs related to the 
exchange. If amounts are collected from the Exchange Entity in advance 
of the Secretary incurring the actual costs and the amount collected 
exceeds the costs actually incurred by the Secretary to carry out the 
exchange under subsection (a), the Secretary shall refund the excess 
amount to the Exchange Entity.
    (e) Treatment of Amounts Received.--Amounts received under 
subsections (a), (c)(2), and (d) shall be used in accordance with 
section 2695(c) of title 10, United States Code.
    (f) Description of Property.--The exact legal description of the 
property, including acreage, to be exchanged under subsection (a) shall 
be determined by surveys satisfactory to the Secretary.
    (g) Relation to Other Military Construction Requirements.--
            (1) Exclusion from treatment as military construction 
        project.--The acquisition or disposition of any property 
        pursuant to the exchange authorized under subsection (a) shall 
        not be treated as a military construction project for which an 
        authorization is required by section 2802 of title 10, United 
        States Code, or for which reporting is required by section 2662 
        of such title.
            (2) Exclusion of requirement for prior screening by general 
        services administration for additional federal use.--Section 
        2696(b) of title 10, United States Code, does not apply to the 
        conveyance of any real property pursuant to the exchange 
        authorized under subsection (a).
    (h) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary may require 
such additional terms and conditions in connection with the exchange 
authorized under subsection (a) as the Secretary considers appropriate 
to protect the interests of the United States.
    (i) Sunset.--The authority provided to the Secretary to carry out 
the exchange under subsection (a) shall expire on October 1, 2023.

SEC. 2822. LAND CONVEYANCE, NAVAL SHIP REPAIR FACILITY, GUAM.

    (a) Conveyance.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall convey, without 
consideration, to the Guam Economic Development Authority (hereafter 
referred to as the ``Authority'') all right, title, and interest of the 
United States in and to the real property (including improvements 
thereon and related personal property) consisting of the former Naval 
Ship Repair Facility in Guam, as identified under the base realignment 
and closure authority carried out under 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), for purposes of providing support for ship repair 
and other military maintenance requirements.
    (b) Reversionary Interest.--If the Secretary of the Navy determines 
at any time that the property conveyed under subsection (a) is not 
being used in accordance with the purpose of the conveyance specified 
in such subsection, all right, title, and interest in and to such 
property, including any improvements thereto, shall, at the option of 
the Secretary, revert to and become the property of the United States, 
and the United States shall have the right of immediate entry onto such 
real property. A determination by the Secretary under this subsection 
shall be made on the record after an opportunity for a hearing.
    (c) Payment of Costs of Conveyance.--The Secretary of the Navy 
shall be responsible for the costs of carrying out the conveyance under 
subsection (a), including survey costs, costs for environmental 
documentation and remediation, and any other administrative costs 
related to the conveyance.
    (c) Description of Property.--The exact acreage and legal 
description of the property to be conveyed under subsection (a) shall 
be determined as set forth in the Environmental Impact Statement for 
the Relocation of U.S. Marine Corps Forces to Guam, as completed by the 
Secretary of the Navy in September 2010.
    (d) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary of the Navy 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 and to ensure that the 
property conveyed is used in accordance with the purpose of the 
conveyance.

SEC. 2823. LAND CONVEYANCE, MOUNTAIN HOME AIR FORCE BASE, IDAHO.

    (a) Conveyance Authorized.--The Secretary of the Air Force may 
convey to the City of Mountain Home, Idaho (in this section referred to 
as the ``City'') all right, title, and interest of the United States in 
and to a parcel of real property, including improvements thereon, 
consisting of approximately 4.25 miles of railroad spur located near 
Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho, as further described in subsection 
(c), for the purpose of economic development.
    (b) Consideration.--
            (1) Consideration required.--As consideration for the land 
        conveyed under subsection (a), the City shall pay to the 
        Secretary an amount equal to the fair market value of the land, 
        as determined by an appraisal approved by the Secretary. The 
        City shall provide an amount that is acceptable to the 
        Secretary, whether by cash payment, in-kind consideration as 
        described under paragraph (2), or a combination thereof.
            (2) In-kind consideration.--In-kind consideration provided 
        by the City under paragraph (1) may include the acquisition, 
        construction, provision, improvement, maintenance, repair, or 
        restoration (including environmental restoration), or 
        combination thereof, of any facility or infrastructure under 
        the jurisdiction of the Secretary.
            (3) Treatment of consideration received.--Consideration in 
        the form of cash payment received by the Secretary under 
        paragraph (1) shall be deposited in the separate fund in the 
        Treasury described in section 572(a)(1) of title 40, United 
        States Code.
    (c) Map and Legal Description.--
            (1) In general.--As soon as practicable after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall 
        publish a final map and legal description of the property to be 
        conveyed under subsection (a), except that the Secretary may 
        correct minor errors in the map and legal description after its 
        initial publication.
            (2) Availability.--The map and legal description under this 
        subsection shall be on file and available for public 
        inspection.
    (d) Payment of Costs of Conveyance.--
            (1) Payment authorized.--The Secretary of the Air Force may 
        require the City to cover the costs to be incurred by the 
        Secretary, or to reimburse the Secretary for the costs incurred 
        by the Secretary, in carrying out the conveyance under 
        subsection (a), including survey costs, the costs of 
        environmental documentation, and other administrative costs 
        relating to the conveyance (other than costs for environmental 
        remediation of the property conveyed). If amounts are collected 
        from the City in advance of the Secretary incurring the actual 
        costs, and the amount collected exceeds the costs actually 
        incurred by the Secretary to carry out the conveyance, the 
        Secretary shall refund the excess amount to the City.
            (2) Treatment of amounts received.--Amounts received under 
        paragraph (1) as reimbursement for costs incurred by the 
        Secretary to carry out the conveyance under subsection (a) 
        shall be credited to the fund or account that was used to cover 
        the costs incurred by the Secretary in carrying out the 
        conveyance, or to an appropriate fund or account currently 
        available to the Secretary for the purposes for which the costs 
        were paid. 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.
    (e) Reservation of Use by Secretary.--After the conveyance under 
subsection (a), the City shall allow the Secretary of the Air Force to 
temporarily use, for urgent reasons of national defense and at no cost 
to the Secretary, all or a portion of the property conveyed under 
subsection (a).
    (f) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary of the Air 
Force 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. 2824. LEASE OF REAL PROPERTY TO THE UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY 
              ALUMNI ASSOCIATION AND NAVAL ACADEMY FOUNDATION AT UNITED 
              STATES NAVAL ACADEMY, ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND.

    (a) Authority.--The Secretary of the Navy may lease approximately 3 
acres at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland to the 
United States Naval Academy Alumni Association Inc. and the United 
States Naval Academy Foundation Inc. (hereafter referred to as the 
``lessees''), for the purpose of enabling the lessees to construct, 
operate, and maintain the Alumni Association and Foundation Center.
    (b) Duration of Lease.--At the option of the Secretary of the Navy, 
the lease entered into under this section shall be in effect for 50 
years. Upon the expiration of the lease, the Secretary may extend the 
lease for such additional period as the Secretary may determine.
    (c) Payments Under Lease.--
            (1) Amount of payments based on fair market value.--The 
        Secretary of the Navy shall require the lessees to make 
        payments under the lease entered into under this section, in 
        cash or in the form of in-kind consideration, in an amount and 
        form that reflects the fair market value of the lease as 
        determined by the Secretary.
            (2) Payments in the form of in-kind consideration.--
                    (A) Timing.--To the extent that the lessees make 
                payments under the lease in the form of in-kind 
                consideration, such consideration may be paid as a 
                lump-sum payment for the entire lease term, or any part 
                thereof, or in annual installments.
                    (B) Description of in-kind consideration.--The in-
                kind consideration paid under the lease--
                            (i) shall include the relocation of any 
                        Naval Support Activity Annapolis functions 
                        presently located on the land to be leased to 
                        alternate locations deemed sufficient by the 
                        Secretary; and
                            (ii) may include annual support (including 
                        cash, real property, or personal property) 
                        provided by the lessees after the date the 
                        lease is executed, to be used for the benefit 
                        of, or for use in connection with, the Naval 
                        Academy.
    (d) Retention and Use of Funds.--Funds received under the lease 
entered into under this section may be retained for use in support of 
the Naval Academy and to cover expenses incurred by the Secretary of 
the Navy in managing the lease.
    (e) Leaseback Prohibited.--During the period in which the lease 
entered into under this section is in effect, the Secretary of the Navy 
may not lease any of the space constructed by the lessees on the 
property leased under this section.
    (f) Payment of Costs of Entering Into and Managing Lease.--
            (1) Payment required.--The Secretary of the Navy shall 
        require the lessees to cover the costs to be incurred by the 
        Secretary, or to reimburse the Secretary for such costs 
        incurred by the Secretary, in entering into and managing the 
        lease under this section, including survey costs, costs for 
        environmental documentation, and any other administrative costs 
        related to the lease (as defined in section 2667 of title 10, 
        United States Code). Any expenses incurred by the lessees 
        pursuant to this provision may be considered in-kind 
        consideration for purposes of subsection (c)(2) and may be 
        credited against any payments due during the term of the lease.
            (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 those costs incurred by the 
        Secretary in entering into and managing the lease. 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. If amounts are collected from the lessees in advance 
        of the Secretary incurring the actual costs, and the amount 
        collected exceeds the costs actually incurred by the Secretary 
        in entering into and managing the lease, the Secretary may 
        refund the excess amount to the lessees.
    (g) Description of Property.--The exact acreage and legal 
description of the property to be leased under this section shall be 
determined by a survey satisfactory to the Secretary of the Navy, and 
may include property currently used for public purposes.
    (h) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary of the Navy may 
require such additional terms and conditions in connection with the 
lease entered into under this section as the Secretary considers 
appropriate to protect the interests of the United States.

SEC. 2825. LAND CONVEYANCE, NATICK SOLDIER SYSTEMS CENTER, 
              MASSACHUSETTS.

    (a) Conveyance Authorized.--The Secretary of the Army may sell and 
convey all right, title, and interest of the United States in and to 
parcels of real property, consisting of approximately 98 acres and 
improvements thereon, located in the vicinity of Hudson, Wayland, and 
Needham, Massachusetts, that are the sites of military family housing 
supporting military personnel assigned to the United States (U.S.) Army 
Natick Soldier Systems Center.
    (b) Competitive Sale Requirement.--The Secretary shall use 
competitive procedures for the sale authorized by subsection (a).
    (c) Consideration.--
            (1) Consideration required.--The Secretary shall require as 
        consideration for conveyance under subsection (a), tendered by 
        cash payment, an amount equal to no less than the fair market 
        value, as determined by the Secretary, of the real property and 
        any improvements thereon.
            (2) Cash payments.--
                    (A) Cash payments deposited in a special account.--
                Cash payments provided as consideration under this 
                subsection shall be deposited in a special account in 
                the Treasury established for the Secretary.
                    (B) Use of funds in special account.--The Secretary 
                is authorized to use funds deposited in the special 
                account established under subparagraph (A) for--
                            (i) demolition of existing military family 
                        housing on the U.S. Army Natick Soldier Systems 
                        Center (other than housing on property conveyed 
                        under subsection (a)) that the Secretary 
                        determines necessary to accommodate 
                        construction of military family housing or 
                        unaccompanied soldier housing to support 
                        military personnel assigned to the U.S. Army 
                        Natick Soldier Systems Center;
                            (ii) construction or rehabilitation of 
                        military family housing or unaccompanied 
                        soldier housing to support military personnel 
                        assigned to the U.S. Army Natick Soldier 
                        Systems Center; or
                            (iii) construction of ancillary supporting 
                        facilities (as that term is defined in section 
                        2871(1) of title 10, United States Code) to 
                        support military personnel assigned to the U.S. 
                        Army Natick Soldier Systems Center.
                    (C) Cash consideration not used prior to october 1, 
                2025.--Cash payments provided as consideration under 
                this subsection that are received by the Secretary and 
                not used by the Secretary for purposes authorized by 
                subparagraph (B) prior to October 1, 2025, shall be 
                transferred to an account in the Treasury established 
                pursuant to section 2883 of title 10, United States 
                Code.
    (d) Description of Parcels.--The exact acreage and legal 
description of the parcels to be conveyed under subsection (a) shall be 
determined by a survey that is satisfactory to the Secretary. The cost 
of the survey shall be borne by the recipient of the parcels.
    (e) 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.
    (f) Inapplicability of Certain Provisions of Law.--The conveyance 
of property under this section shall not be subject to section 2696 of 
title 10, United States Code.
    (g) Definition of Secretary.--In this section the term 
``Secretary'' means the Secretary of the Army.

SEC. 2826. IMPOSITION OF ADDITIONAL CONDITIONS ON LAND CONVEYANCE, 
              CASTNER RANGE, FORT BLISS, TEXAS.

    Section 2844 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for 
Fiscal Year 2013 (division B of Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 2157) is 
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(e) Additional Conditions on Any Conveyance of Castner Range.--
            ``(1) Conditions.--The real property described in 
        subsection (a) may not be conveyed to the Department or any 
        other governmental, public, or private entity unless the 
        recipient agrees--
                    ``(A) to prohibit the commercial development of the 
                real property; and
                    ``(B) to conserve and protect the ecological, 
                scenic, wildlife, recreational, cultural, historical, 
                natural, educational, and scientific resources of the 
                real property.
            ``(2) Reconveyance to public land trust.--The conditions 
        imposed by paragraph (1) do not prevent the recipient of real 
        property described in subsection (a) from conveying all or a 
        portion of the real property to a public land trust so long as 
        the public land trust agrees to comply with such conditions.
            ``(3) Conveyance defined.--In this subsection, the term 
        `convey' includes any transfer of administrative jurisdiction 
        over the real property described in subsection (a) to another 
        Federal agency.''.

SEC. 2827. REMOVAL OF CERTAIN DEED RESTRICTIONS AND REVERSIONS 
              ASSOCIATED WITH CONVEYANCE OF PROPERTY OF FORMER DEFENSE 
              DEPOT OGDEN, UTAH.

    (a) Negotiations to Remove Restrictions and Reversions.--As soon as 
practicable after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary 
of the Interior shall enter into negotiations with the City of Ogden, 
Utah, and Weber County, Utah, on agreements to remove deed restrictions 
and reversionary provisions on the remaining property of the former 
Defense Depot Ogden.
    (b) Contents of Agreement.--The agreements entered into pursuant to 
subsection (a) shall include such terms and conditions as may be agreed 
to by the Secretary of the Interior and the City of Ogden and Weber 
County (as the case may be), except that the following terms and 
conditions shall apply:
            (1) The Secretary may not remove the deed restrictions and 
        reversionary provisions on the property of the former Defense 
        Depot Ogden until there is a ratified agreement between the 
        Secretary and the City of Ogden or Weber County (as the case 
        may be) to encumber other specific properties owned by the City 
        or County with the same appropriate reversionary interests in 
        favor of the United States as are in effect with respect to the 
        property of the former Defense Depot Ogden as of the date of 
        the enactment of this Act.
            (2) The properties of the City of Ogden or Weber County (as 
        the case may be) that are encumbered pursuant to paragraph (1) 
        shall have approximately equal value to the property of the 
        former Defense Depot Ogden for which the deed restrictions and 
        reversionary provisions are removed under the agreement.
            (3) The City of Ogden and Weber County shall pay the costs 
        (except any costs for environmental remediation of the 
        property) to be incurred by the Secretary, or to reimburse the 
        Secretary for such reasonable and customary administrative 
        expenses incurred by the Secretary, to carry out the agreement 
        with respect to the City or County (as the case may be), 
        including survey and appraisal costs. If amounts are collected 
        from the City of Ogden or Weber County in advance of the 
        Secretary incurring the actual costs, and the amount collected 
        exceeds the costs actually incurred by the Secretary to carry 
        out the agreement with respect to the City or County, the 
        Secretary shall refund the excess amount to the City or County.

SEC. 2828. LAND CONVEYANCE, WASATCH-CACHE NATIONAL FOREST, RICH COUNTY, 
              UTAH.

    (a) Land Conveyance Authorized.--Not later than 6 months after the 
date of the enactment of this section, the Secretary of Agriculture 
shall convey, without consideration, to the Utah State University 
Research Foundation (in this section referred to as the ``Foundation'') 
all right, title, and interest of the United States in and to a parcel 
of real property consisting of approximately 80 acres, including 
improvements thereon, located outside of the boundaries of the Wasatch-
Cache National Forest in Rich County, Utah, within Sections 19 and 30, 
Township 14 North, Range 5 East, Salt Lake Base and Meridian for the 
purpose of permitting the Foundation to use the property for scientific 
and educational purposes.
    (b) Reversionary Interest.--If the Secretary of Agriculture 
determines at any time that the real property conveyed under subsection 
(a) is not being used in accordance with the purpose of the conveyance 
specified in such subsection, all right, title, and interest in and to 
such real property, including any improvements thereto, shall, at the 
option of the Secretary, revert to and become the property of the 
United States, and the United States shall have the right of immediate 
entry onto such real property. A determination by the Secretary under 
this subsection shall be made on the record after an opportunity for a 
hearing.
    (c) Payment of Costs of Conveyance.--
            (1) Payment required.--The Secretary of Agriculture shall 
        require the Foundation to cover the costs (except any costs for 
        environmental remediation of the property) to be incurred by 
        the Secretary, or to reimburse the Secretary for such costs 
        incurred by the Secretary, to carry out the conveyance under 
        subsection (a), including survey costs, costs for environmental 
        documentation, and any other administrative costs related to 
        the conveyance. If amounts are collected from the Foundation in 
        advance of the Secretary incurring the actual costs, and the 
        amount collected exceeds the costs actually incurred by the 
        Secretary to carry out the conveyance, the Secretary shall 
        refund the excess amount to the Foundation.
            (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 those costs incurred by the 
        Secretary in carrying out the conveyance. 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.
    (d) Description of Property.--The exact acreage and legal 
description of the property to be conveyed under subsection (a) shall 
be determined by a survey satisfactory to the Secretary of Agriculture.
    (e) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary of Agriculture 
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. 2829. LAND CONVEYANCE, FORMER MISSILE ALERT FACILITY KNOWN AS 
              QUEBEC-01, LARAMIE COUNTY, WYOMING.

    (a) Conveyance Authorized.--The Secretary of the Air Force may 
convey, without consideration, to the State of Wyoming (in this section 
referred to as the ``State''), all right, title, and interest of the 
United States in and to the real property, including any improvements 
thereon, consisting of the former Missile Alert Facility (MAF) known as 
``Quebec-01,'' located in Laramie County, Wyoming, for the purpose of 
operating a historical site, interpretive center, or museum.
    (b) Payment of Costs of Conveyance.--
            (1) Payment required.--Subject to paragraph (2), the 
        Secretary of the Air Force shall require the State to cover 
        costs to be incurred by the Secretary, or to reimburse the 
        Secretary for such costs incurred by the Secretary, to carry 
        out the conveyance under subsection (a), including survey 
        costs, costs for environmental documentation, and any other 
        administrative costs related to the conveyance. If amounts are 
        collected from the State in advance of the Secretary incurring 
        the actual costs, and the amount collected exceeds the costs 
        actually incurred by the Secretary to carry out the conveyance, 
        the Secretary shall refund the excess amount to the State.
            (2) Limitation on payment of costs by state.--
                    (A) Limitation.--Paragraph (1) shall apply only 
                with respect to the costs the State agrees to cover 
                under the Programmatic Agreement described in 
                subparagraph (B), as such Agreement is in effect at the 
                time of the payment of the costs.
                    (B) Programmatic agreement described.--The 
                Programmatic Agreement described in this subparagraph 
                is the Programmatic Agreement between Francis E. Warren 
                Air Force Base, and the Wyoming State Historic 
                Preservation Officer, Regarding the Implementation of 
                the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty at Francis E. 
                Warren Air Force Base Cheyenne, Laramie County, 
                Wyoming.
            (3) Treatment of amounts received.--Amounts received as 
        reimbursement under paragraph (1) shall be credited to the fund 
        or account that was used to cover those costs incurred by the 
        Secretary in carrying out the conveyance, or if such fund or 
        account has expired at the time of credit, to an appropriate 
        appropriation, fund, or account currently available to the 
        Secretary for the purposes for which the costs were paid. 
        Amounts so credited shall be merged with amounts in such 
        appropriation, fund, or account, and shall be available for the 
        same purpose, 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 property to be conveyed under subsection (a) shall 
be determined by a survey satisfactory to the Secretary of the Air 
Force.
    (d) Reversionary Interest.--If the Secretary of the Air Force 
determines at any time that the real property conveyed under subsection 
(a) is not being used in accordance with the purpose of the conveyance 
specified in subsection (a), all right, title, and interest in and to 
such real property, including any improvements thereto, shall, at the 
option of the Secretary, revert to and become the property of the 
United States, and the United States shall have the right of immediate 
entry onto such real property. A determination by the Secretary under 
this subsection shall be made on the record after an opportunity for a 
hearing.
    (e) Additional Terms.--The Secretary of the Air Force may require 
such additional terms and conditions in connection with the conveyance 
as the Secretary considers appropriate to protect the interests of the 
United States.

                 Subtitle D--Military Land Withdrawals

SEC. 2831. INDEFINITE DURATION OF CERTAIN MILITARY LAND WITHDRAWALS AND 
              RESERVATIONS AND IMPROVED MANAGEMENT OF WITHDRAWN AND 
              RESERVED LANDS.

    (a) Improving Management of Current Statutory Land Withdrawals and 
Reservations and Making Management More Transparent.--
            (1) Role of secretary of the interior.--Section 101(a)(2) 
        of the Sikes Act (16 U.S.C. 670a(a)(2)) is amended by striking 
        ``, acting through the Director of the United States Fish and 
        Wildlife Service,''.
            (2) Additional elements of integrated natural resources 
        management plan.--Section 101(b) of the Sikes Act (16 U.S.C. 
        670a(b)) is amended--
                    (A) in paragraph (1)--
                            (i) in subparagraph (I), by striking 
                        ``and'' after the semicolon;
                            (ii) by redesignating subparagraph (J) as 
                        subparagraph (K); and
                            (iii) by inserting after subparagraph (I) 
                        the following new subparagraph:
                    ``(J) procedures to ensure that each periodic 
                review of the plan is conducted jointly by the 
                Secretary of the military department and the Secretary 
                of the Interior, and that affected States and Indian 
                tribes, and the public, are provided a meaningful 
                opportunity to comment upon any substantial revisions 
                to the plan that may be proposed; and'';
                    (B) by redesignating paragraphs (2) and (3) as 
                paragraphs (3) and (4), respectively; and
                    (C) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following 
                new paragraph:
            ``(2) shall contain a determination by the Secretary of the 
        military department regarding whether there will be a 
        continuing military need for the lands covered by the 
        integrated natural resources management plan during the period 
        of the plan;''.
    (b) El Centro Naval Air Facility Ranges.--
            (1) Elimination of termination date and conforming 
        amendments.--The El Centro Naval Air Facility Ranges Withdrawal 
        Act (subtitle B of title XXIX of Public Law 104-201; 110 Stat. 
        2813) is amended--
                    (A) in section 2921(b)(3), by striking ``, before 
                the termination date specified in section 2925,'';
                    (B) in section 2924(a), by striking the third 
                sentence;
                    (C) by striking sections 2925 and 2927; and
                    (D) in section 2928(a), by striking ``specified in 
                section 2925''.
            (2) Establishment of intergovernmental executive 
        committee.--The El Centro Naval Air Facility Ranges Withdrawal 
        Act (subtitle B of title XXIX of Public Law 104-201; 110 Stat. 
        2813) is further amended by inserting after section 2924 the 
        following new section:

``SEC. 2925. INTERGOVERNMENTAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.

    ``(a) Establishment and Purpose.--The Secretary of the Navy and the 
Secretary of the Interior shall establish, by memorandum of 
understanding, an intergovernmental executive committee for the sole 
purpose of exchanging views, information, and advice relating to the 
management of the natural and cultural resources of the lands withdrawn 
and reserved under this subtitle.
    ``(b) Composition.--
            ``(1) Representatives of other federal agencies.--The 
        Secretary of the Navy and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        include representatives from interested Federal agencies as 
        members of the intergovernmental executive committee.
            ``(2) Representatives of state and local governments.--The 
        Secretary of the Navy and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        invite to serve as members of the intergovernmental executive 
        committee--
                    ``(A) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from the government of the 
                State of California; and
                    ``(B) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from each local government 
                and Indian tribal government in the vicinity of the 
                withdrawn and reserved lands, as determined by the 
                Secretaries.
    ``(c) Operation.--The intergovernmental executive committee shall 
operate in accordance with the terms set forth in the memorandum of 
understanding under subsection (a).
    ``(d) Procedures.--The memorandum of understanding under subsection 
(a) shall establish procedures for creating a forum for exchanging 
views, information, and advice relating to the management of natural 
and cultural resources on the lands withdrawn and reserved under this 
subtitle, procedures for rotating the chair of the intergovernmental 
executive committee, and procedures for scheduling regular meetings, 
which shall occur no less frequently than twice a year.
    ``(e) Coordinator.--The Secretary of the Navy, in consultation with 
the Secretary of the Interior, shall appoint an individual to serve as 
coordinator of the intergovernmental executive committee. The duties of 
the coordinator shall be included in the memorandum of understanding 
under subsection (a). The coordinator shall not be a member of the 
committee.
    ``(f) Federal Advisory Committee Act.--The Federal Advisory 
Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) does not apply to the intergovernmental 
executive committee.''.
            (3) Determination of continuing military need for 
        withdrawal and reservation and public reports.--The El Centro 
        Naval Air Facility Ranges Withdrawal Act (subtitle B of title 
        XXIX of Public Law 104-201; 110 Stat. 2813) is further amended 
        by inserting after section 2926 the following new section:

``SEC. 2927. DETERMINATION OF CONTINUING MILITARY NEED FOR WITHDRAWAL 
              AND RESERVATION AND PUBLIC REPORTS.

    ``(a) Determination of Continuing Military Need.--Whenever an 
integrated natural resources management plan covering the lands 
withdrawn and reserved under this subtitle is reviewed as to operation 
and effect as required by section 101(b)(3) of the Sikes Act (16 U.S.C. 
670a(b)(2)), but not less often than every five years, the Secretary of 
the Navy shall include the Secretary's determination regarding whether 
there will be a continuing military need for any or all of the 
withdrawn and reserved lands for the following five years.
    ``(b) Public Reports.--
            ``(1) Changes in land conditions.--(A) Concurrent with each 
        review of an integrated natural resources management plan 
        described in subsection (a), the Secretary of the Navy and the 
        Secretary of the Interior shall jointly prepare and issue a 
        report describing any changes in the condition of the lands 
        withdrawn and reserved under this subtitle since the later of 
        the date of any previous report under this paragraph or the 
        date of the environmental analysis prepared to support the 
        actions that changed the condition of the lands.
            ``(B) A report under subparagraph (A) shall include a 
        summary of current military use of the lands withdrawn and 
        reserved under this subtitle, any changes in military use of 
        the lands since the previous report, and efforts related to the 
        management of natural and cultural resources and environmental 
        remediation of the lands during the previous five years.
            ``(2) Combination with other reports.--A report under this 
        subsection may be combined with, or incorporate by reference, 
        any contemporary report required by any other provision of law 
        regarding the lands withdrawn and reserved under this subtitle.
            ``(3) Public review and comment.--(A) Before the 
        finalization of a report under this subsection, the Secretary 
        of the Navy and the Secretary of the Interior shall invite 
        interested members of the public to review and comment on the 
        report, and shall hold at least one public meeting concerning 
        the report in a location or locations reasonably accessible to 
        persons who may be affected by management of the lands 
        withdrawn and reserved under this subtitle.
            ``(B) Each public meeting under subparagraph (A) shall be 
        announced not less than 15 days before the date of the meeting 
        by advertisements in local newspapers of general circulation, 
        notices on the internet, including the website of El Centro, 
        and any other means considered necessary or desirable by the 
        Secretaries.
            ``(4) Distribution of report.--The final version of a 
        report under this subsection shall be made available to the 
        public and submitted to the Committees on Armed Services and 
        Energy and Natural Resources of the Senate and the Committees 
        on Armed Services and Natural Resources of the House of 
        Representatives.''.
    (c) Juniper Butte Range.--
            (1) Elimination of termination date and conforming 
        amendments.--The Juniper Butte Range Withdrawal Act (title XXIX 
        of Public Law 105-261; 112 Stat. 2226) is amended--
                    (A) in section 2915--
                            (i) in the section heading, by striking 
                        ``Duration'' and inserting ``Relinquishment'';
                            (ii) in subsection (a), by striking 
                        ``Termination.--'' and all that follows through 
                        ``At the time of termination'' and inserting 
                        ``Effect of Relinquishment on Operation of 
                        General Land Laws.--Upon relinquishment of 
                        Department of the Air Force jurisdiction over 
                        lands withdrawn and reserved by this title'';
                            (iii) in subsection (b)--
                                    (I) in the subsection heading, by 
                                inserting ``Process'' after 
                                ``Relinquishment'';
                                    (II) in paragraph (1), by striking 
                                ``under subsection (c)''; and
                                    (III) in paragraph (3), by striking 
                                ``before the date of termination, as 
                                provided for in subsection (a)(1)''; 
                                and
                            (iv) by striking subsection (c); and
                    (B) in section 2916--
                            (i) in the section heading, by striking 
                        ``or upon termination of withdrawal'';
                            (ii) in subsection (a)(1), by striking 
                        ``and in all cases not later than 2 years 
                        before the date of termination of withdrawal 
                        and reservation,'';
                            (iii) in subsection (b), by striking 
                        ``environmental remediation'' and all that 
                        follows through the end of the subsection and 
                        inserting ``environmental remediation before 
                        relinquishing, to the Secretary of the 
                        Interior, jurisdiction over any lands 
                        identified in a notice of intent to relinquish 
                        under section 2915(b).''; and
                            (iv) in subsection (d)--
                                    (I) in the subsection heading, by 
                                striking ``Terminates'' and inserting 
                                ``Relinquished'';
                                    (II) by striking ``termination 
                                date'' both places it appears and 
                                inserting ``relinquishment date''; and
                                    (III) in paragraph (2), by striking 
                                ``termination'' and inserting 
                                ``relinquishment''.
            (2) Establishment of intergovernmental executive 
        committee.--Section 2910 of the Juniper Butte Range Withdrawal 
        Act (title XXIX of Public Law 105-261; 112 Stat. 2231) is 
        amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(d) Intergovernmental Executive Committee.--
            ``(1) Establishment and purpose.--The memorandum of 
        understanding under subsection (a) shall be modified as 
        provided in subsection (c) to establish an intergovernmental 
        executive committee for the sole purpose of exchanging views, 
        information, and advice relating to the management of the 
        natural and cultural resources of the lands withdrawn and 
        reserved by this title.
            ``(2) Composition.--(A) The Secretary of the Air Force and 
        the Secretary of the Interior shall include representatives 
        from interested Federal agencies as members of the 
        intergovernmental executive committee.
            ``(B) The Secretary of the Air Force and the Secretary of 
        the Interior shall invite to serve as members of the 
        intergovernmental executive committee--
                    ``(i) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from the government of the 
                State of Idaho; and
                    ``(ii) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from each local government 
                and Indian tribal government in the vicinity of the 
                withdrawn and reserved lands, as determined by the 
                Secretaries.
            ``(3) Operation.--The intergovernmental executive committee 
        shall operate in accordance with the terms set forth in the 
        memorandum of understanding.
            ``(4) Procedures.--The memorandum of understanding shall 
        establish procedures for creating a forum for exchanging views, 
        information, and advice relating to the management of natural 
        and cultural resources on the lands withdrawn and reserved by 
        this title, procedures for rotating the chair of the 
        intergovernmental executive committee, and procedures for 
        scheduling regular meetings, which shall occur no less 
        frequently than twice a year.
            ``(5) Coordinator.--The Secretary of the Air Force, in 
        consultation with the Secretary of the Interior, shall appoint 
        an individual to serve as coordinator of the intergovernmental 
        executive committee. The duties of the coordinator shall be 
        included in the memorandum of understanding. The coordinator 
        shall not be a member of the committee.
            ``(6) Federal advisory committee act.--The Federal Advisory 
        Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) does not apply to the 
        intergovernmental executive committee.''.
            (3) Determinations of continuing military need for 
        withdrawal and reservation and public reports.--Section 2909 of 
        the Juniper Butte Range Withdrawal Act (title XXIX of Public 
        Law 105-261; 112 Stat. 2230) is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (c), by adding at the end the 
                following new sentence: ``The review shall include the 
                determination of the Secretary of the Air Force 
                regarding whether there will be a continuing military 
                need for any or all of the withdrawn and reserved lands 
                for the following 5 years.''; and
                    (B) by adding at the end the following new 
                subsection:
    ``(d) Public Reports.--
            ``(1) Changes in land conditions.--(A) Concurrent with each 
        review of an integrated natural resources management plan 
        developed under this section. the Secretary of the Air Force 
        and the Secretary of the Interior shall jointly prepare and 
        issue a report describing any changes in the condition of the 
        lands withdrawn and reserved by this title since the later of 
        the date of any previous report under this paragraph or the 
        date of the environmental analysis prepared to support the 
        actions that changed the condition of the lands.
            ``(B) A report under subparagraph (A) shall include a 
        summary of current military use of the lands withdrawn and 
        reserved by this title, any changes in military use of the 
        lands since the previous report, and efforts related to the 
        management of natural and cultural resources and environmental 
        remediation of the lands during the previous 5 years.
            ``(2) Combination with other reports.--A report under this 
        subsection may be combined with, or incorporate by reference, 
        any contemporary report required by any other provision of law 
        regarding the lands withdrawn and reserved by this title.
            ``(3) Public review and comment.--(A) Before the 
        finalization of a report under this subsection, the Secretary 
        of the Air Force and the Secretary of the Interior shall invite 
        interested members of the public to review and comment on the 
        report, and shall hold at least one public meeting concerning 
        the report in a location or locations reasonably accessible to 
        persons who may be affected by management of the lands 
        withdrawn and reserved by this title.
            ``(B) Each public meeting under subparagraph (A) shall be 
        announced not less than 15 days before the date of the meeting 
        by advertisements in local newspapers of general circulation, 
        notices on the internet, including the website of the Juniper 
        Butte Range (if one exists), and any other means considered 
        necessary or desirable by the Secretaries.
            ``(4) Distribution of report.--The final version of a 
        report under this subsection shall be made available to the 
        public and submitted to the Committees on Armed Services and 
        Energy and Natural Resources of the Senate and the Committees 
        on Armed Services and Natural Resources of the House of 
        Representatives.''.
    (d) Ranges Covered by Subtitle A of Military Lands Withdrawal Act 
of 1999.--
            (1) Elimination of termination date and conforming 
        amendments.--The Military Lands Withdrawal Act of 1999 (title 
        XXX of Public Law 106-65; 113 Stat. 885) is amended--
                    (A) by striking section 3015;
                    (B) by striking section 3016 and inserting the 
                following new section:

``SEC. 3016. RELINQUISHMENT.

    ``(a) Notice of Intent Regarding Relinquishment.--If the Secretary 
of the military department concerned decides to relinquish all or any 
of the lands withdrawn and reserved by section 3011, such Secretary 
shall transmit a notice of intent to relinquish such lands to the 
Secretary of the Interior.
    ``(b) Opening Date.--On the date of relinquishment of the 
withdrawal and reservation of lands withdrawn and reserved by section 
3011, such lands shall not be open to any form of appropriation under 
the public land laws, including the mineral laws and the mineral 
leasing and geothermal leasing laws, until the Secretary of the 
Interior publishes in the Federal Register an appropriate order stating 
the date upon which such lands shall be restored to the public domain 
and opened.''; and
                    (C) in section 3017--
                            (i) by striking ``section 3016(d)'' each 
                        place it appears and inserting ``section 
                        3016''; and
                            (ii) in subsection (e)--
                                    (I) by striking ``If because'' and 
                                everything that follows through 
                                ``determines that'' and inserting ``If 
                                the Secretary of the Interior declines 
                                to accept jurisdiction over lands 
                                withdrawn by this subtitle which have 
                                been proposed for relinquishment 
                                because the Secretary determines 
                                that''; and
                                    (II) in paragraph (2), by striking 
                                ``the expiration of the withdrawal of 
                                such lands under this subtitle'' and 
                                inserting ``such determination''.
            (2) Establishment of intergovernmental executive 
        committees.--Section 3014 of the Military Lands Withdrawal Act 
        of 1999 (title XXX of Public Law 106-65; 113 Stat. 890) is 
        amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(g) Intergovernmental Executive Committees.--
            ``(1) Establishment and purpose.--For the lands withdrawn 
        and reserved by section 3011, the Secretary of the military 
        department concerned and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        establish, by memorandum of understanding, an intergovernmental 
        executive committee for each range for the sole purpose of 
        exchanging views, information, and advice relating to the 
        management of the natural and cultural resources of the 
        withdrawn and reserved lands.
            ``(2) Composition.--(A) The Secretary of the military 
        department concerned and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        include representatives from interested Federal agencies as 
        members of the intergovernmental executive committee for a 
        range.
            ``(B) The Secretary of the military department concerned 
        and the Secretary of the Interior shall invite to serve as 
        members of the intergovernmental executive committee for a 
        range--
                    ``(i) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from the government of the 
                State in which the withdrawn and reserved lands are 
                located; and
                    ``(ii) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from each local government 
                and Indian tribal government in the vicinity of the 
                withdrawn and reserved lands, as determined by the 
                Secretaries.
            ``(3) Operation.--The intergovernmental executive committee 
        for a range shall operate in accordance with the terms set 
        forth in the memorandum of understanding.
            ``(4) Procedures.--The memorandum of understanding for a 
        range shall establish procedures for creating a forum for 
        exchanging views, information, and advice relating to the 
        management of natural and cultural resources on the withdrawn 
        and reserved lands, procedures for rotating the chair of the 
        intergovernmental executive committee, and procedures for 
        scheduling regular meetings, which shall occur no less 
        frequently than twice a year.
            ``(5) Coordinator.--The Secretary of the military 
        department concerned, in consultation with the Secretary of the 
        Interior, shall appoint an individual to serve as coordinator 
        of the intergovernmental executive committee for a range. The 
        duties of the coordinator shall be included in the memorandum 
        of understanding. The coordinator shall not be a member of the 
        committee.
            ``(6) Federal advisory committee act.--The Federal Advisory 
        Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) does not apply to an 
        intergovernmental executive committee established under this 
        subsection.''.
            (3) Determination of continuing military need for 
        withdrawal and reservation and public reports.--The Military 
        Lands Withdrawal Act of 1999 (title XXX of Public Law 106-65; 
        113 Stat. 885) is further amended by inserting after section 
        3014 the following new section:

``SEC. 3015. DETERMINATION OF CONTINUING MILITARY NEED FOR WITHDRAWAL 
              AND RESERVATION AND PUBLIC REPORTS.

    ``(a) Determination of Continuing Military Need.--Whenever an 
integrated natural resources management plan covering the lands 
withdrawn and reserved under section 3011 is reviewed as to operation 
and effect as required by section 101(b)(3) of the Sikes Act (16 U.S.C. 
670a(b)(2)), but not less often than every five years, the Secretary of 
the military department concerned shall include the Secretary's 
determination regarding whether there will be a continuing military 
need for any or all of the withdrawn and reserved lands for the 
following five years.
    ``(b) Public Reports.--
            ``(1) Changes in land conditions.--(A) Concurrent with each 
        review of an integrated natural resources management plan 
        described in subsection (a), the Secretary of the military 
        department concerned and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        jointly prepare and issue a report describing any changes in 
        the condition of the lands covered by the plan since the later 
        of the date of any previous report under this paragraph or the 
        date of the environmental analysis prepared to support the 
        actions that changed the condition of the lands.
            ``(B) A report under subparagraph (A) shall include a 
        summary of current military use of the lands covered by the 
        plan, any changes in military use of the lands since the 
        previous report, and efforts related to the management of 
        natural and cultural resources and environmental remediation of 
        the lands during the previous five years.
            ``(2) Combination with other reports.--A report under this 
        subsection may be combined with, or incorporate by reference, 
        any contemporary report required by any other provision of law 
        regarding the lands covered by the integrated natural resources 
        management plan.
            ``(3) Public review and comment.--(A) Before the 
        finalization of a report under this subsection, the Secretary 
        of the military department concerned and the Secretary of the 
        Interior shall invite interested members of the public to 
        review and comment on the report, and shall hold at least one 
        public meeting concerning the report in a location or locations 
        reasonably accessible to persons who may be affected by 
        management of the lands addressed by the report.
            ``(B) Each public meeting under subparagraph (A) shall be 
        announced not less than 15 days before the date of the meeting 
        by advertisements in local newspapers of general circulation, 
        notices on the internet, including the website of the affected 
        military range (if one exists), and any other means considered 
        necessary or desirable by the Secretaries.
            ``(4) Distribution of report.--The final version of a 
        report under this subsection shall be made available to the 
        public and submitted to the Committees on Armed Services and 
        Energy and Natural Resources of the Senate and the Committees 
        on Armed Services and Natural Resources of the House of 
        Representatives.''.
    (e) Barry M. Goldwater Range.--
            (1) Elimination of termination date and conforming 
        amendments.--Section 3031 of the Military Lands Withdrawal Act 
        of 1999 (title XXX of Public Law 106-65; 113 Stat. 897) is 
        amended--
                    (A) in subsection (c)--
                            (i) in paragraph (1), by striking ``, 
                        including the duration of any renewal or 
                        extension'';
                            (ii) in paragraph (2)--
                                    (I) in the paragraph heading, by 
                                striking ``or termination''; and
                                    (II) in subparagraph (C), by 
                                striking the last sentence; and
                            (iii) in paragraph (3)(A), by striking ``or 
                        termination''; and
                    (B) in subsection (d), by striking ``Duration'' and 
                all that follows through ``of the termination'' and 
                inserting ``Effect of Relinquishment on Operation of 
                General Land Laws.--On the date of relinquishment'';
                    (C) by striking subsection (e); and
                    (D) in subsection (f)--
                            (i) in the subsection heading, by striking 
                        ``Termination and'';
                            (ii) in paragraph (1), by striking ``but 
                        not later than three years before the 
                        termination of the withdrawal and 
                        reservation,'';
                            (iii) in paragraph (3), by striking 
                        ``before the termination date of the withdrawal 
                        and reservation of such lands under this 
                        section''; and
                            (iv) in paragraph (4)(A), by striking 
                        ``Notwithstanding the termination date, 
                        unless'' and inserting ``Unless''.
            (2) Determinations of continuing military need for 
        withdrawal and reservation.--Section 3031 of the Military Lands 
        Withdrawal Act of 1999 (title XXX of Public Law 106-65; 113 
        Stat. 897) is further amended by inserting after subsection (d) 
        the following new subsection:
    ``(e) Periodic Determination of Continuing Military Need.--Whenever 
an integrated natural resources management plan covering the lands 
withdrawn and reserved under this section is reviewed as to operation 
and effect as required by section 101(b)(3) of the Sikes Act (16 U.S.C. 
670a(b)(2)), but not less often than every five years, the Secretary of 
the Navy and the Secretary of the Air Force shall include the 
Secretary's determination regarding whether there will be a continuing 
military need for any or all of the withdrawn and reserved lands for 
the following five years.''.
            (3) Use of definitions.--Section 3031(c)(5) of the Military 
        Lands Withdrawal Act of 1999 (title XXX of Public Law 106-65; 
        113 Stat. 907) is amended by striking subparagraphs (A) and (B) 
        and inserting the following:
                    ``(A) The term `military munitions' has the meaning 
                given that term in section 101(e)(4) of title 10, 
                United States Code.
                    ``(B) The term `unexploded ordnance' has the 
                meaning given that term in section 101(e)(5) of such 
                title.''.
    (f) National Training Center.--
            (1) Elimination of termination date and conforming 
        amendments.--The Fort Irwin Military Land Withdrawal Act of 
        2001 (title XXIX of Public Law 107-107; 115 Stat. 1335) is 
        amended--
                    (A) in section 2910, by striking the section 
                heading and all that follows through ``At the time of 
                the termination'' and inserting the following:

``SEC. 2910. EFFECT OF RELINQUISHMENT ON OPERATION OF GENERAL LAND 
              LAWS.

    ``On the date of relinquishment'';
                    (B) by striking section 2911; and
                    (C) in section 2912--
                            (i) in the section heading, by striking 
                        ``Termination and'';
                            (ii) in subsection (a), by striking 
                        ``During the first 22 years of the withdrawal 
                        and reservation made by this title, if'' and 
                        inserting ``If'';
                            (iii) in subsection (c), by striking 
                        ``before the termination date of the withdrawal 
                        and reservation''; and
                            (iv) in subsection (d), by striking 
                        ``Notwithstanding the termination date 
                        specified in section 2910, unless'' and 
                        inserting ``Unless''.
            (2) Determination of continuing military need for 
        withdrawal and reservation and public reports.--The Fort Irwin 
        Military Land Withdrawal Act of 2001 (title XXIX of Public Law 
        107-107; 115 Stat. 1335) is further amended by inserting after 
        section 2910 the following new section:

``SEC. 2911. DETERMINATION OF CONTINUING MILITARY NEED FOR WITHDRAWAL 
              AND RESERVATION AND PUBLIC REPORTS.

    ``(a) Periodic Determination of Continuing Need.--Whenever an 
integrated natural resources management plan covering the lands 
withdrawn and reserved under this title is reviewed as to operation and 
effect as required by section 101(b)(3) of the Sikes Act (16 U.S.C. 
670a(b)(2)), but not less often than every five years, the Secretary of 
the Army shall include in the plan the Secretary's determination 
regarding whether there will be a continuing military need for any or 
all of the withdrawn and reserved lands for the following five years.
    ``(b) Public Reports.--
            ``(1) Changes in land conditions.--(A) Concurrent with each 
        review of an integrated natural resources management plan 
        described in subsection (a), the Secretary of the Army and the 
        Secretary of the Interior shall jointly prepare and issue a 
        report describing any changes in the condition of the lands 
        withdrawn and reserved by this title since the later of the 
        date of any previous report under this paragraph or the date of 
        the environmental analysis prepared to support the actions that 
        changed the condition of the lands.
            ``(B) A report under subparagraph (A) shall include a 
        summary of current military use of the lands withdrawn and 
        reserved by this title, any changes in military use of the 
        lands since the previous report, and efforts related to the 
        management of natural and cultural resources and environmental 
        remediation of the lands during the previous five years.
            ``(2) Combination with other reports.--A report under this 
        subsection may be combined with, or incorporate by reference, 
        any contemporary report required by any other provision of law 
        regarding the lands withdrawn and reserved by this title.
            ``(3) Public review and comment.--(A) Before the 
        finalization of a report under this subsection, the Secretary 
        of the Army and the Secretary of the Interior shall invite 
        interested members of the public to review and comment on the 
        report, and shall hold at least one public meeting concerning 
        the report in a location or locations reasonably accessible to 
        persons who may be affected by management of the lands 
        withdrawn and reserved by this title.
            ``(B) Each public meeting under subparagraph (A) shall be 
        announced not less than 15 days before the date of the meeting 
        by advertisements in local newspapers of general circulation, 
        notices on the internet, including the website of National 
        Training Range, and any other means considered necessary or 
        desirable by the Secretaries.
            ``(4) Distribution of report.--The final version of a 
        report under this subsection shall be made available to the 
        public and submitted to the Committees on Armed Services and 
        Energy and Natural Resources of the Senate and the Committees 
        on Armed Services and Natural Resources of the House of 
        Representatives.''.
            (3) Establishment of intergovernmental executive 
        committee.--The Fort Irwin Military Land Withdrawal Act of 2001 
        (title XXIX of Public Law 107-107; 115 Stat. 1335) is further 
        amended by adding at the end the following new section:

``SEC. 2914. INTERGOVERNMENTAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.

    ``(a) Establishment and Purpose.--The Secretary of the Army and the 
Secretary of the Interior shall establish, by memorandum of 
understanding, an intergovernmental executive committee for the sole 
purpose of exchanging views, information, and advice relating to the 
management of the natural and cultural resources of the lands withdrawn 
and reserved by this title.
    ``(b) Composition.--
            ``(1) Representatives of other federal agencies.--The 
        Secretary of the Army and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        include representatives from interested Federal agencies as 
        members of the intergovernmental executive committee.
            ``(2) Representatives of state and local governments.--The 
        Secretary of the Army and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        invite to serve as members of the intergovernmental executive 
        committee--
                    ``(A) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from the government of the 
                State of California; and
                    ``(B) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from each local government 
                and Indian tribal government in the vicinity of the 
                withdrawn and reserved lands, as determined by the 
                Secretaries.
    ``(c) Operation.--The intergovernmental executive committee shall 
operate in accordance with the terms set forth in the memorandum of 
understanding under subsection (a).
    ``(d) Procedures.--The memorandum of understanding under subsection 
(a) shall establish procedures for creating a forum for exchanging 
views, information, and advice relating to the management of natural 
and cultural resources on the lands withdrawn and reserved by this 
title, procedures for rotating the chair of the intergovernmental 
executive committee, and procedures for scheduling regular meetings, 
which shall occur no less frequently than twice a year.
    ``(e) Coordinator.--The Secretary of the Army, in consultation with 
the Secretary of the Interior, shall appoint an individual to serve as 
coordinator of the intergovernmental executive committee. The duties of 
the coordinator shall be included in the memorandum of understanding 
under subsection (a). The coordinator shall not be a member of the 
committee.
    ``(f) Federal Advisory Committee Act.--The Federal Advisory 
Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) does not apply to the intergovernmental 
executive committee.''.
    (g) Ranges Covered by Military Land Withdrawals Act of 2013.--
            (1) Elimination of termination date and conforming 
        amendments.--The Military Land Withdrawals Act of 2013 (title 
        XXIX of Public Law 113-66; 127 Stat. 1025) is amended--
                    (A) by striking sections 2919, 2920; 2936, 2946, 
                and 2979;
                    (B) in section 2921, by striking ``On the 
                termination of'' and inserting ``On the relinquishment 
                of''; and
                    (C) in section 2922(d)(3)--
                            (i) in the paragraph heading, by striking 
                        ``on termination'' and inserting ``upon 
                        relinquishment''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``or if at the expiration 
                        of the withdrawal and reservation,''.
            (2) Establishment of intergovernmental executive 
        committee.--The Military Land Withdrawals Act of 2013 (title 
        XXIX of Public Law 113-66; 127 Stat. 1025) is further amended 
        by inserting after section 2918 the following new section:

``SEC. 2919. INTERGOVERNMENTAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.

    ``(a) Establishment and Purpose.--For the lands withdrawn and 
reserved by sections 2931, 2941, and 2971, the Secretary concerned and 
the Secretary of the Interior shall establish, by memorandum of 
understanding, an intergovernmental executive committee for each 
location for the sole purpose of exchanging views, information, and 
advice relating to the management of the natural and cultural resources 
of the withdrawn and reserved lands.
    ``(b) Composition.--
            ``(1) Representatives of other federal agencies.--The 
        Secretary concerned and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        include representatives from interested Federal agencies as 
        members of the intergovernmental executive committee for a 
        location covered by subsection (a).
            ``(2) Representatives of state and local governments.--The 
        Secretary concerned and the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        invite to serve as members of the intergovernmental executive 
        committee for a location covered by subsection (a)--
                    ``(A) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from the government of the 
                State in which the withdrawn and reserved lands are 
                located; and
                    ``(B) at least one elected officer (or other 
                authorized representative) from each local government 
                and Indian tribal government in the vicinity of the 
                withdrawn and reserved lands, as determined by the 
                Secretaries.
    ``(c) Operation.--The intergovernmental executive committee for a 
location covered by subsection (a) shall operate in accordance with the 
terms set forth in the memorandum of understanding under subsection 
(a).
    ``(d) Procedures.--The memorandum of understanding under subsection 
(a) shall establish procedures for creating a forum for exchanging 
views, information, and advice relating to the management of natural 
and cultural resources on the withdrawn and reserved lands, procedures 
for rotating the chair of the intergovernmental executive committee, 
and procedures for scheduling regular meetings, which shall occur no 
less frequently than twice a year.
    ``(e) Coordinator.--The Secretary concerned, in consultation with 
the Secretary of the Interior, shall appoint an individual to serve as 
coordinator of the intergovernmental executive committee for a location 
covered by subsection (a). The duties of the coordinator shall be 
included in the memorandum of understanding under subsection (a). The 
coordinator shall not be a member of the committee.
    ``(f) Federal Advisory Committee Act.--The Federal Advisory 
Committee Act (5 U.S.C. App.) does not apply to a intergovernmental 
executive committee for a location covered by subsection (a).''.
            (3) Determination of continuing military need for 
        withdrawal and reservation and public reports.--The Military 
        Land Withdrawals Act of 2013 (title XXIX of Public Law 113-66; 
        127 Stat. 1025) is further amended by inserting after section 
        2919, as added by paragraph (2), the following new section:

``SEC. 2920. DETERMINATION OF CONTINUING MILITARY NEED FOR WITHDRAWAL 
              AND RESERVATION AND PUBLIC REPORTS.

    ``(a) Periodic Determination of Continuing Need.--Whenever an 
integrated natural resources management plan covering the lands 
withdrawn and reserved under a subtitle of this title is reviewed as to 
operation and effect as required by section 101(b)(3) of the Sikes Act 
(16 U.S.C. 670a(b)(2)), but not less often than every five years, the 
Secretary concerned shall include in the plan the Secretary's 
determination regarding whether there will be a continuing military 
need for any or all of the withdrawn and reserved lands for the 
following five years.
    ``(b) Public Reports.--
            ``(1) Changes in land conditions.--(A) Concurrent with each 
        review of an integrated natural resources management plan 
        described in subsection (a), the Secretary concerned and the 
        Secretary of the Interior shall jointly prepare and issue a 
        report describing any changes in the condition of the lands 
        covered by the plan since the later of the date of any previous 
        report under this paragraph or the date of the environmental 
        analysis prepared to support the actions that changed the 
        condition of the lands.
            ``(B) A report under subparagraph (A) shall include a 
        summary of current military use of the lands covered by the 
        plan, any changes in military use of the lands since the 
        previous report, and efforts related to the management of 
        natural and cultural resources and environmental remediation of 
        the lands during the previous five years.
            ``(2) Combination with other reports.--A report under this 
        subsection may be combined with, or incorporate by reference, 
        any contemporary report required by any other provision of law 
        regarding the lands addressed by the report.
            ``(3) Public review and comment.--(A) Before the 
        finalization of a report under this subsection, the Secretary 
        concerned and the Secretary of the Interior shall invite 
        interested members of the public to review and comment on the 
        report, and shall hold at least one public meeting concerning 
        the report in a location or locations reasonably accessible to 
        persons who may be affected by management of the lands 
        addressed by the report.
            ``(B) Each public meeting under subparagraph (A) shall be 
        announced not less than 15 days before the date of the meeting 
        by advertisements in local newspapers of general circulation, 
        notices on the internet, including the website of the affected 
        military range (if one exists), and any other means considered 
        necessary or desirable by the Secretaries.
            ``(4) Distribution of report.--The final version of a 
        report under this subsection shall be made available to the 
        public and submitted to the Committees on Armed Services and 
        Energy and Natural Resources of the Senate and the Committees 
        on Armed Services and Natural Resources of the House of 
        Representatives.''.
    (h) Effect on New Land Withdrawals and Reservations.--Nothing in 
this section or the amendments made by this section shall be construed 
as changing the requirements imposed on the Department of Defense to 
obtain a new or expanded land withdrawal and reservation.

SEC. 2832. TEMPORARY SEGREGATION FROM PUBLIC LAND LAWS OF PROPERTY 
              SUBJECT TO PROPOSED MILITARY LAND WITHDRAWAL; TEMPORARY 
              USE PERMITS AND TRANSFERS OF SMALL PARCELS OF LAND 
              BETWEEN DEPARTMENTS OF INTERIOR AND MILITARY DEPARTMENTS; 
              MORE EFFICIENT SURVEYING OF LANDS.

    (a) Temporary Segregation of Military Land From Public Land Laws 
Under Request for Withdrawal Made to Secretary of the Interior.--
Section 3 of the Act of February 28, 1958 (Public Law 85-337; 43 U.S.C. 
157), is amended--
            (1) by striking ``Any application'' and inserting ``(a) 
        Contents of Application.--Any application'';
            (2) by striking ``shall specify'' and inserting ``shall be 
        filed with the Secretary of the Interior and shall specify''; 
        and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(b) Temporary Segregation From Public Land Laws.--
            ``(1) Public notice.--Not later than 30 days after the date 
        of the receipt of an application under subsection (a) for a 
        withdrawal or reservation, the Secretary of the Interior shall 
        publish a notice in the Federal Register stating that the 
        application has been submitted, identifying the land that is 
        the subject of the application, and stating the extent to which 
        the land is to be segregated in accordance with paragraph (2).
            ``(2) Segregation from public land laws.--Upon publication 
        of a notice under paragraph (1), the land identified in the 
        notice shall be segregated from the operation of the public 
        land laws to the extent specified in the notice. The 
        segregation of such land pursuant to such notice shall 
        terminate upon the earlier of--
                    ``(A) the enactment of some or all of the 
                withdrawal or reservation by Congress; or
                    ``(B) the expiration of the 7-year period which 
                begins on the date of the publication of the notice.
            ``(3) Definition.--In this subsection, the term `public 
        land laws' includes the mining laws, the mineral leasing laws, 
        and the geothermal leasing laws.''.
    (b) Authorization of Additional Arrangements for Use and Transfer 
of Lands Under Jurisdiction of Secretary of the Interior.--Such Act (43 
U.S.C. 155 et seq.) is further amended by adding at the end the 
following new sections:

``SEC. 7. SHORT-TERM PERMITS FOR USE OF DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR LANDS 
              FOR MILITARY TRAINING AND TESTING.

    ``(a) Authority.--In addition to any other authority to grant 
permits for the use of land, the Secretary of the Interior may grant a 
permit to the Secretary of Defense to use land under the administrative 
jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior. Any such permit--
            ``(1) shall be issued consistent with section 2691 of title 
        10, United States Code;
            ``(2) shall allow the Department of Defense to use the land 
        only for purposes of training and testing that are consistent 
        with the purposes for which the Secretary of the Interior 
        manages the land; and
            ``(3) may contain such other requirements as the Secretary 
        of the Interior considers appropriate.
    ``(b) Duration of Permit.--A permit granted under this section 
shall be in effect for such period as the Secretary of the Interior may 
provide, except that such period may not exceed 30 days.

``SEC. 8. TRANSFERS OF SMALL PARCELS OF LAND BETWEEN THE DEPARTMENTS OF 
              DEFENSE AND INTERIOR.

    ``(a) Transfer Authorized.--Subject to any valid existing rights, 
upon mutual agreement, and without cost for the value of the land or 
any improvements thereon--
            ``(1) the Secretary of the Interior may transfer 
        administrative jurisdiction over land that meets the 
        requirements of subsection (b) to the Secretary of a military 
        department; and
            ``(2) the Secretary of a military department may transfer 
        administrative jurisdiction over land that meets the 
        requirements of subsection (b) to the Secretary of the 
        Interior.
    ``(b) Requirements for Land Eligible for Transfer.--The 
requirements of this subsection are as follows:
            ``(1) Contiguity.--The land is contiguous to land already 
        under the administrative jurisdiction of the Secretary to whom 
        such jurisdiction is transferred.
            ``(2) Limitation on acreage.--No single parcel of the land 
        is larger than 5,000 acres of contiguous area.
            ``(3) No recent prior transfer of contiguous land.--The 
        land is not contiguous to any other land for which 
        administrative jurisdiction has been transferred under the 
        authority of this section during the previous 5 years.
            ``(4) Prior use for defense purposes.--In the case of land 
        transferred to the Department of Defense, the land was used for 
        defense purposes immediately prior to the date of transfer.
    ``(c) Map and Legal Description.--
            ``(1) Preparation and publication.--The Secretary of the 
        Interior shall--
                    ``(A) publish in the Federal Register a notice 
                containing the legal description of any land 
                transferred under subsection (a);
                    ``(B) file maps and legal descriptions of the land 
                with--
                            ``(i) the Committees on Armed Services and 
                        Energy and Natural Resources of the Senate, and
                            ``(ii) the Committees on Armed Services and 
                        Natural Resources of the House of 
                        Representatives; and
                    ``(C) make copies of such maps and legal 
                descriptions available for public inspection in the 
                appropriate offices of the Bureau of Land Management.
            ``(2) Force of law.--For purposes of any transfer of 
        administrative jurisdiction over land under this section, the 
        legal description and map for the land shall be the legal 
        description of the land filed under paragraph (1)(B), except 
        that the Secretary of the Interior may correct clerical and 
        typographical errors in the legal description or map.
    ``(d) Treatment and Use of Land Transferred to the Secretary of a 
Military Department.--Upon a transfer of administrative jurisdiction 
over land to the Secretary of a military department under subsection 
(a)--
            ``(1) the land shall be treated as property (as defined in 
        section 102(9) of title 40, United States Code) under the 
        administrative jurisdiction of the Secretary of the military 
        department; and
            ``(2) the land shall be withdrawn from all forms of 
        appropriation under the public land laws, including the mining 
        laws, the mineral leasing laws, and the geothermal leasing 
        laws, for as long as the land is under the administrative 
        jurisdiction of a Secretary of a military department.
    ``(e) Treatment and Use of Land Transferred to the Secretary of the 
Interior.--Upon a transfer of administrative jurisdiction over land to 
the Secretary of the Interior under subsection (a)--
            ``(1) the land shall become public land; and
            ``(2) the land shall be administered for the same purposes 
        and be subject to the same conditions of use as the adjacent 
        public land.
    ``(f) Effect on Other Authorities.--The authority provided by this 
section is in addition to, and not subject to, any other authority 
relating to transfers of land.''.
    (c) Short Title.--Section 1 of such Act (43 U.S.C. 155) is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``Notwithstanding'' and inserting ``(a) 
        Withdrawal, Reservation, or Restriction of Public Lands for 
        Defense Purposes.--Notwithstanding''; and
            (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(b) Short Title.--This Act may be cited as the `Engle Act'.''.
    (d) Promoting More Efficient Surveying of Lands.--In fixing the 
original corner position in an official survey of unsurveyed land, when 
applicable and feasible, Cadastral Surveys may, instead of using 
physical monuments, use geographic coordinates correlated to the 
National Spatial Reference System geodetic datum, in accordance with 
the Manual of Surveying Instructions.

         Subtitle E--Military Memorials, Monuments, and Museums

SEC. 2841. MODIFICATION OF PROHIBITION ON TRANSFER OF VETERANS MEMORIAL 
              OBJECTS TO FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS WITHOUT SPECIFIC 
              AUTHORIZATION IN LAW.

    (a) Description of Objects.--Paragraph (2)(B)(iii) of section 
2572(e) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``from 
abroad'' and inserting ``from abroad before 1907''.
    (b) Extension of Prohibition.--Paragraph (3)(B) of section 2572(e) 
of such title is amended by striking ``September 30, 2017'' and 
inserting ``September 30, 2022''.
    (c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take 
effect October 1, 2017.

SEC. 2842. RECOGNITION OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WORLD WAR II AVIATION.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) World War II was one of the most important events in 
        the history of the Nation, a time of common purpose that 
        remains today as an inspiration to all people in the United 
        States.
            (2) The role of aviation was a critical factor in the 
        success of winning World War II and defeating the enemies 
        worldwide.
            (3) The bravery, courage, dedication, and heroism of World 
        War II aviators and support personnel were decisive in winning 
        World War II.
            (4) The National Museum of World War II Aviation in 
        Colorado Springs, Colorado, is the only museum in the United 
        States that exists to exclusively preserve and promote an 
        understanding of the role of aviation in winning World War II.
            (5) The National Museum of World War II Aviation is 
        dedicated to celebrating the spirit of the United States, 
        recognizing the teamwork, collaboration, patriotism, and 
        courage of the men and women who fought, as well as those on 
        the homefront who mobilized and supported the national aviation 
        effort.
    (b) Recognition.--The National Museum of World War II Aviation in 
Colorado Springs, Colorado, is recognized as America's National World 
War II Aviation Museum.
    (c) Effect of Recognition.--The National Museum recognized by this 
section is not a unit of the National Park System, and the recognition 
of the National Museum shall not be construed to require or permit 
Federal funds to be expended for any purpose related to the National 
Museum.

SEC. 2843. PRINCIPAL OFFICE OF AVIATION HALL OF FAME.

    Section 23107 of title 36, United States Code, is amended by 
striking ``Dayton,'' and all that follows through ``trustees'' and 
inserting ``Ohio''.

SEC. 2844. BATTLESHIP PRESERVATION GRANT PROGRAM.

    (a) Establishment.--There is hereby established within the 
Department of the Interior a grant program for the preservation of our 
nation's most historic battleships.
    (b) Use of Grants.--Amounts received through grants under this 
section shall be used for the preservation of our nation's most 
historic battleships in a manner that is self-sustaining and has an 
educational component.
    (c) Criteria for Eligibility.--To be eligible for a grant under 
this section, an entity shall--
            (1) submit an application under procedures prescribed by 
        the Secretary;
            (2) match the amount of the grant, on a 1-to-1 basis, with 
        non-Federal assets from non-Federal sources, which may include 
        cash or durable goods and materials fairly valued as determined 
        by the Secretary;
            (3) maintain records as may be reasonably necessary to 
        fully disclose--
                    (A) the amount and the disposition of the proceeds 
                of the grant;
                    (B) the total cost of the project for which the 
                grant is made; and
                    (C) other records as may be required by the 
                Secretary, including such records as will facilitate an 
                effective accounting for project funds; and
            (4) provide access to the Secretary for the purposes of any 
        required audit and examination of any books, documents, papers, 
        and records of the entity.
    (d) Most Historic Battleship Defined.--In this section, the term 
``most historic battleship'' means a battleship that is--
            (1) between 75 and 115 years old;
            (2) listed on the National Register of Historic Places; and
            (3) located within the State for which it was named.
    (e) Savings Provision.--The authorities contained in this section 
shall be in addition to, and shall not be construed to supercede or 
modify those contained in the National Historic Preservation Act (16 
U.S.C. 470-470x-6).
    (f) Private Property Protection.--
            (1) In general.--No Federal funds made available to carry 
        out this section may be used to acquire any real property, or 
        any interest in any real property, without the written consent 
        of the owner (or owners) of that property or interest in 
        property.
            (2) No designation.--The authority granted by this section 
        shall not constitute a Federal designation or have any effect 
        on private property ownership.
    (g) Sunset.--The authority to make grants under this section 
expires on September 30, 2024.

               Subtitle F--Shiloh National Military Park

SEC. 2851. SHORT TITLE.

    This subtitle may be cited as the ``Shiloh National Military Park 
Boundary Adjustment and Parker's Crossroads Battlefield Designation 
Act''.

SEC. 2852. DEFINITIONS.

    In this subtitle, the following definitions apply:
            (1) Affiliated area.--The term ``affiliated area'' means 
        the Parker's Crossroads Battlefield established as an 
        affiliated area of the National Park System under section 2854.
            (2) Park.--The term ``Park'' means Shiloh National Military 
        Park, a unit of the National Park System.
            (3) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary 
        of the Interior.

SEC. 2853. AREAS TO BE ADDED TO SHILOH NATIONAL MILITARY PARK.

    (a) Additional Areas.--The boundary of Shiloh National Military 
Park is modified to include the areas that are generally depicted on 
the map entitled ``Shiloh National Military Park, Proposed Boundary 
Adjustment'', numbered 304/80,011, and dated July 2014, as follows:
            (1) Fallen Timbers Battlefield.
            (2) Russell House Battlefield.
            (3) Davis Bridge Battlefield.
    (b) Acquisition Authority.--The Secretary may acquire lands 
described in subsection (a) by donation, purchase from willing sellers 
with donated or appropriated funds, or exchange.
    (c) Administration.--Any lands acquired under this section shall be 
administered as part of the Park.

SEC. 2854. ESTABLISHMENT OF AFFILIATED AREA.

    (a) In General.--Parker's Crossroads Battlefield in the State of 
Tennessee is hereby established as an affiliated area of the National 
Park System.
    (b) Description.--The affiliated area shall consist of the area 
generally depicted within the ``Proposed Boundary'' on the map entitled 
``Parker's Crossroads Battlefield, Proposed Boundary'', numbered 903/
80,073, and dated July 2014.
    (c) Administration.--The affiliated area shall be managed in 
accordance with this subtitle and all laws generally applicable to 
units of the National Park System.
    (d) Management Entity.--The City of Parkers Crossroads and the 
Tennessee Historical Commission shall jointly be the management entity 
for the affiliated area.
    (e) Cooperative Agreements.--The Secretary may provide technical 
assistance and enter into cooperative agreements with the management 
entity for the purpose of providing financial assistance with 
marketing, marking, interpretation, and preservation of the affiliated 
area.
    (f) Limited Role of the Secretary.--Nothing in this Act authorizes 
the Secretary to acquire property at the affiliated area or to assume 
overall financial responsibility for the operation, maintenance, or 
management of the affiliated area.
    (g) General Management Plan.--
            (1) In general.--The Secretary, in consultation with the 
        management entity, shall develop a general management plan for 
        the affiliated area. The plan shall be prepared in accordance 
        with section 100502 of title 54, United States Code.
            (2) Transmittal.--Not later than 3 years after the date 
        that funds are made available for this subtitle, the Secretary 
        shall provide a copy of the completed general management plan 
        to the Committee on Natural Resources of the House of 
        Representatives and the Committee on Energy and Natural 
        Resources of the Senate.

SEC. 2855. PRIVATE PROPERTY PROTECTION.

    (a) No Use of Condemnation.--The Secretary of the Interior may not 
acquire by condemnation any land or interests in land under this 
subtitle or for the purposes of this subtitle.
    (b) Written Consent of Owner.--No non-Federal property may be 
included in the Shiloh National Military Park without the written 
consent of the owner.
    (c) No Buffer Zone Created.--Nothing in this subtitle, the 
establishment of the Shiloh National Military Park, or the management 
plan for the Shiloh National Military Park shall be construed to create 
buffer zones outside of the Park. That activities or uses can be seen, 
heard, or detected from areas within the Shiloh National Military Park 
shall not preclude, limit, control, regulate, or determine the conduct 
or management of activities or uses outside of the Park.

                       Subtitle G--Other Matters

SEC. 2861. MODIFICATION OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE GUIDANCE ON USE OF 
              AIRFIELD PAVEMENT MARKINGS.

    (a) Modification Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall require 
such modifications of Unified Facilities Guide Specifications for 
pavement markings (UFGS 32 17 23.00 20 Pavement Markings, UFGS 32 17 
24.00 10 Pavement Markings), Air Force Engineering Technical Letter ETL 
97-18 (Guide Specification for Airfield and Roadway Marking), and any 
other Department of Defense guidance on airfield pavement markings as 
may be necessary to prohibit the use of Type I glass beads or any glass 
beads with a 1.6 refractive index or less from use on airfield markings 
on airfields under the control of the Secretary.
    (b) Effective Date.--The modifications required under subsection 
(a) shall apply with respect to procurements occurring after September 
30, 2018.

SEC. 2862. AUTHORITY OF CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER OF ARMED FORCES 
              RETIREMENT HOME TO ACQUIRE AND LEASE PROPERTY.

    (a) Acquisition of Property.--Section 1511(e) of the Armed Forces 
Retirement Home Act of 1991 (24 U.S.C. 411(e)) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (2)--
                    (A) by striking ``Secretary of Defense may 
                acquire,'' and inserting ``Chief Operating Officer may 
                acquire,''; and
                    (B) by striking ``Secretary may acquire'' and 
                inserting ``Chief Operating Officer may acquire''; and
            (2) in paragraph (3)--
                    (A) by striking ``Secretary of Defense determines'' 
                and inserting ``Chief Operating Officer determines''; 
                and
                    (B) by striking ``Secretary shall dispose'' and 
                inserting ``Chief Operating Officer shall dispose''.
    (b) Leasing of Non-excess Property.--Subsection (i) of section 1511 
of such Act (24 U.S.C. 411(i)) is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)--
                    (A) by striking ``Secretary of Defense (acting on 
                behalf of the Chief Operating Officer)'' and inserting 
                ``Chief Operating Officer''; and
                    (B) by striking ``Secretary considers'' and 
                inserting ``Chief Operating Officer considers'';
            (2) in paragraph (5), by striking ``the Secretary of 
        Defense may not enter into the lease on behalf of the Chief 
        Operating Officer'' and inserting ``the Chief Operating Officer 
        may not enter into the lease''; and
            (3) in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (6), by striking 
        ``Secretary of Defense'' and inserting ``Chief Operating 
        Officer''.

SEC. 2863. RESTRICTIONS ON REHABILITATION OF OVER-THE-HORIZON 
              BACKSCATTER RADAR STATION.

    (a) Restrictions.--Except as provided in subsection (b), the 
Secretary of the Air Force may not use any funds or resources to carry 
out the rehabilitation of the Over-the-Horizon Backscatter Radar 
Station on Modoc National Forest land in Modoc County, California.
    (b) Exception for Maintenance of Perimeter Fence.--Notwithstanding 
subsection (a), the Secretary may use funds and resources to maintain 
the perimeter fence surrounding the Over-the-Horizon Backscatter Radar 
Station.

SEC. 2864. PERMITTING MACHINE ROOM-LESS ELEVATORS IN DEPARTMENT OF 
              DEFENSE FACILITIES.

    (a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall issue modifications 
to all relevant construction and facilities specifications to ensure 
that machine room-less elevators (MRLs) are not prohibited in buildings 
and facilities throughout the Department of Defense, including 
modifications to the Unified Facilities Guide Specifications (UFGS), 
the Naval Facilities Engineering Command Interim Technical Guidance, 
and the Army Corps of Engineers Engineering and Construction Bulletin.
    (b) Conforming to Best Practices.--In addition to the modifications 
required under subsection (a), the Secretary may issue further 
modifications to conform generally with commercial best practices as 
reflected in the safety code for elevators and escalators as issued by 
the American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
    (c) Deadlines.--The Secretary shall promulgate interim MRL 
standards not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of 
this Act, and shall issue final and formal MRL specifications not later 
than 1 year after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (d) Report.--Not later than 1 year after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Secretary shall issue a report to the congressional 
defense committees on the integration and utilization of MRLs, 
including information on quantity, location, problems, and successes.

   TITLE XXIX--OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

SEC. 2901. AUTHORIZED ARMY CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION PROJECTS.

    The Secretary of the Army may acquire real property and carry out 
the military construction projects for the installations outside the 
United States, and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:

                     Army: Outside the United States
------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Country                 Installation           Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Cuba...........................  Guantanamo........  $115,000,000
Turkey..........................  Various Locations.  $6,400,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2902. AUTHORIZED NAVY CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION PROJECT.

    The Secretary of the Navy may acquire real property and carry out 
the military construction project for the installation outside the 
United States, and in the amount, set forth in the following table:

                     Navy: Outside the United States
------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Country                 Installation           Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Djibouti.......................  Camp Lemonnier....  $13,390,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2903. AUTHORIZED AIR FORCE CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION 
              PROJECTS.

    The Secretary of the Air Force may acquire real property and carry 
out the military construction projects for the installations outside 
the United States, and in the amounts, set forth in the following 
table:

                  Air Force: Outside the United States
------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Country                 Installation           Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Estonia........................  Amari Air Base....  $13,900,000
Hungary.........................  Kecskemet Air Base  $55,400,000
Iceland.........................  Keflavik..........  $14,400,000
Italy...........................  Aviano AB.........  $27,325,000
Jordan..........................  Azraq.............  $143,000,000
Latvia..........................  Lielvarde Air Base  $3,850,000
Luxembourg......................  Sanem.............  $67,400,000
Norway..........................  Rygge.............  $10,300,000
Qatar...........................  Al Udeid..........  $15,000,000
Romania.........................  Campia Turzii.....  $2,950,000
Slovakia........................  Malacky...........  $24,000,000
                                  Sliac Airport.....  $22,000,000
Turkey..........................  Incirlik Air Base.  $48,697,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2904. AUTHORIZED DEFENSE AGENCIES CONSTRUCTION AND LAND 
              ACQUISITION PROJECT.

    The Secretary of Defense may acquire real property and carry out 
the military construction project for the installation outside the 
United States, and in the amount, set forth in the following table:

               Defense Agencies: Outside the United States
------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Country                 Installation           Amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Italy...........................  Sigonella.........  $22,400,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 2905. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years 
beginning after September 30, 2017, for the military construction 
projects outside the United States authorized by this title as 
specified in the funding table in section 4602.

SEC. 2906. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATION OF CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2015 
              PROJECTS.

    (a) Extension.--Notwithstanding section 2002 of the Military 
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (division B of 
Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3669), the authorizations set forth in 
the table in subsection (b), as provided in section 2902 of that Act 
(128 Stat. 3717), shall remain in effect until October 1, 2018, or the 
date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds for military 
construction for fiscal year 2019, whichever is later.
    (b) Table.--The table referred to in subsection (a) is as follows:

                             Extension of 2015 Air Force OCO Project Authorizations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Country                         Installation                   Project                Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Italy.................................  Camp Darby................  ERI: Improve Weapons            $44,450,000
                                                                      Storage Facility.
Poland.................................   Lask Air Base............  ERI: Improve Support            $22,400,000
                                                                      Infrastructure.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 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 2018 for 
the activities of the National Nuclear Security Administration in 
carrying out programs as specified in the funding table in division D.
    (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 new plant projects for the National 
Nuclear Security Administration as follows:
            Project 18-D-150, Surplus Plutonium Disposition, Savannah 
        River Site, Aiken, South Carolina, $9,000,000.
            Project 18-D-620, Exascale Computing Facility Modernization 
        Project, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, 
        California, $3,000,000.
            Project 18-D-650, Tritium Production Capability, Savannah 
        River Site, Aiken, South Carolina, $6,800,000.
            Project 18-D-660, Fire Station, Y-12 National Security 
        Complex, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, $28,000,000.
            Project 18-D-670, Exascale Class Computer Cooling 
        Equipment, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, New 
        Mexico, $22,000,000.
            Project 18-D-680, Material Staging Facility, Pantex Plant, 
        Amarillo, Texas, $5,200,000.
            Project 18-D-920, KL Fuel Development Laboratory, Knolls 
        Atomic Power Laboratory, Schenectady, New York, $1,000,000.
            Project 18-D-921, KS Overhead Piping, Kesselring Site, West 
        Milton, New York, $6,688,000.
            Project 18-D-922, BL Component Test Complex, Bettis Atomic 
        Power Laboratory, West Mifflin, Pennsylvania, $3,000,000.

SEC. 3102. DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP.

    (a) In General.--Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to 
the Department of Energy for fiscal year 2018 for defense environmental 
cleanup activities in carrying out programs as specified in the funding 
table in division D.
    (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 new plant projects for the National 
Nuclear Security Administration as follows:
            Project 18-D-401, Saltstone Disposal Units #8 and #9, 
        Savannah River Site, Aiken, South Carolina, $500,000.
            Project 18-D-402, Emergency Operations Center Replacement, 
        Savannah River Site, Aiken, South Carolina, $500,000.
            Project 18-D-404, Modification of Waste Encapsulation and 
        Storage Facility, Hanford Site, Richland, Washington, 
        $6,500,000.

SEC. 3103. OTHER DEFENSE ACTIVITIES.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Department of 
Energy for fiscal year 2018 for other defense activities in carrying 
out programs as specified in the funding table in division D.

SEC. 3104. NUCLEAR ENERGY.

    Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Department of 
Energy for fiscal year 2018 for nuclear energy as specified in the 
funding table in division D.

   Subtitle B--Program Authorizations, Restrictions, and Limitations

SEC. 3111. NUCLEAR SECURITY ENTERPRISE INFRASTRUCTURE RECAPITALIZATION 
              AND REPAIR.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) On September 7, 2016, during testimony before the 
        Subcommittee on Strategic Forces of the Committee on Armed 
        Services of the House of Representatives--
                    (A) the Administrator for Nuclear Security, Frank 
                Klotz, said--
                            (i) ``Our infrastructure is extensive, 
                        complex, and, in many critical areas, several 
                        decades old. More than half of NNSA's 
                        approximately 6,000 real property assets are 
                        over 40 years old, and nearly 30 percent date 
                        back to the Manhattan Project era. Many of the 
                        enterprise's critical utility, safety, and 
                        support systems are failing at an increasing 
                        and unpredictable rate, which poses both 
                        programmatic and safety risk.''; and
                            (ii) ``I can think of no greater threat to 
                        the nuclear security enterprise than the state 
                        of NNSA's infrastructure.'';
                    (B) the President and Chief Executive Officer of 
                Consolidated Nuclear Security, Morgan Smith, said, 
                ``Many key facilities at both [Pantex and Y-12] were 
                constructed in the 1940s and were intended to operate 
                for as little as one decade. Many facilities and their 
                supporting infrastructure have exceeded or far exceeded 
                their expected life, and major systems within the 
                facilities are beginning to fail.''; and
                    (C) the Director of Los Alamos National Laboratory, 
                Dr. Charlie McMillan, said, ``One of the things that 
                keeps me up at night is the realization that essential 
                capabilities are held at risk by the possibility of 
                such failures; in many cases, our enterprise has a 
                single point of failure.''.
            (2) In a letter sent on December 23, 2015, by the Secretary 
        of Energy, Ernest Moniz, to the Director of the Office of 
        Management and Budget, Shaun Donovan, the Secretary said, ``A 
        majority of the National Nuclear Security Administration's 
        (NNSA) facilities and systems are well beyond end-of-life. . . 
        Infrastructure problems such as falling ceilings are increasing 
        in frequency and severity, unacceptably risking the safety and 
        security of both personnel and material at NNSA facilities, as 
        well as in some instances, potential offsite risks. The entire 
        complex could be placed at risk if there is a single failure 
        where a single point would disrupt a critical link in 
        infrastructure.''.
            (3) The Nuclear Posture Review published in April 2010 
        stated that ``In order to sustain a safe, secure, and effective 
        U.S. nuclear stockpile as long as nuclear weapons exist, the 
        United States must possess a modern physical infrastructure. . 
        . Today's nuclear complex, however, has fallen into neglect. 
        Although substantial science, technology, and engineering 
        investments were made over the last decade under the auspices 
        of the Stockpile Stewardship Program, the complex still 
        includes many oversized and costly-to maintain facilities built 
        during the 1940s and 1950s. Some facilities needed for working 
        with plutonium and uranium date back to the Manhattan Project. 
        Safety, security, and environmental issues associated with 
        these aging facilities are mounting, as are the costs of 
        addressing them.''.
            (4) In 2009, the bipartisan Congressional Commission on the 
        Strategic Posture of the United States established by section 
        1062 of the National Defense Authorization for Fiscal Year 2008 
        (Public Law 110-181; 122 Stat. 319) stated, with regards to key 
        production facilities, that ``existing facilities are genuinely 
        decrepit and are maintained in a safe and secure manner only at 
        high cost''.
            (5) Previous efforts to address the deferred maintenance 
        and repair challenges within the nuclear security enterprise, 
        such as the Facilities Infrastructure and Recapitalization 
        Program and the recent halt in the growth of backlog metrics, 
        are laudable but insufficient for the magnitude of the problem.
            (6) Recent figures provided by the Administrator for 
        Nuclear Security estimate the backlog of deferred maintenance 
        and repair needs of the nuclear security enterprise to be 
        approximately $3,700,000,000.
    (b) Facilities and Infrastructure Recapitalization and Repair 
Program.--
            (1) Establishment.--Not later than 30 days after the date 
        of the enactment of this Act, the Administrator for Nuclear 
        Security shall establish and carry out a program known as the 
        Facilities and Infrastructure Recapitalization and Repair 
        Program to reduce the backlog of deferred maintenance and 
        repair needs of the nuclear security enterprise (as defined in 
        section 4002(6) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 
        2501(6)). The Administrator shall ensure that, by not later 
        than five years after the date of the enactment of this Act, 
        the program achieves the goal of reducing such backlog of 
        deferred maintenance and repair needs by 50 percent.
            (2) Authorities.--
                    (A) Process.--
                            (i) In general.--The Secretary of Energy 
                        shall provide to the Administrator a process 
                        that will enhance or streamline the ability of 
                        the Administrator to carry out the program 
                        under paragraph (1) in an efficient and 
                        effective manner, including with respect to--
                                    (I) the demolition or construction 
                                of non-nuclear facilities of the 
                                Administration that have a total 
                                estimated project cost of less than 
                                $100,000,000; and
                                    (II) the decontamination, 
                                decommissioning, and demolition (to be 
                                performed in accordance with applicable 
                                health and safety standards used by the 
                                Defense Environmental Cleanup Program) 
                                of process-contaminated facilities of 
                                the Administration that have a total 
                                estimated project cost of less than 
                                $50,000,000.
                            (ii) Funding.--Clause (i) may be carried 
                        out using amounts authorized to be appropriated 
                        for fiscal year 2018 or any subsequent fiscal 
                        year.
                    (B) Application of certain requirements.--For 
                purposes of the Management Procedures Memorandum 2015-
                01 of the Office of Management and Budget, or such 
                successor memorandum, in carrying out the program under 
                paragraph (1), the Administrator may--
                            (i) perform new construction during a 
                        fiscal year that differs from the fiscal year 
                        of corresponding facility demolition;
                            (ii) perform demolition of different 
                        facility category codes and have that 
                        demolition credit count towards the 
                        construction of new facilities with a different 
                        facility category code; and
                            (iii) have the net reduction in 
                        infrastructure footprint for the five fiscal 
                        years prior to the date of the enactment of 
                        this Act, and the demolition during the five 
                        fiscal years following such date of enactment, 
                        considered as a factor for the purpose of 
                        meeting the intent of such memorandum.
            (3) Plan.--Together with the budget of the President 
        submitted to Congress under section 1105(a) of title 31, United 
        States Code, for fiscal year 2019, the Secretary and the 
        Administrator shall jointly submit to the Committees on Armed 
        Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate a plan 
        to carry out the program under paragraph (1) to achieve the 
        goal specified in such paragraph. Such plan shall include--
                    (A) the funding required to carry out the program 
                during the period covered by the future-years nuclear 
                security program under section 3253 of the National 
                Nuclear Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2453);
                    (B) the criteria for selecting and prioritizing 
                projects within the program under paragraph (1);
                    (C) mechanisms for ensuring the robust management 
                and oversight of such projects;
                    (D) a description of the process provided to the 
                Administrator to carry out the program pursuant to 
                paragraph (2)(A);
                    (E) a description of any legislative actions the 
                Secretary recommends to further enhance or streamline 
                authorities or processes relating to the program; and
                    (F) a certification by the Secretary that such 
                budget will enable the program to meet the goal 
                specified in paragraph (1).
            (4) Termination.--The Administrator shall terminate the 
        program under paragraph (1) on the date that is five years 
        after the date of the enactment of this Act.
    (c) Inclusion in Biennial Detailed Report.--Section 4203(d)(4) of 
the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2523) is amended--
            (1) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``; and'' and 
        inserting a semicolon;
            (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)(i) a description of--
                            ``(I) the metrics (based on industry best 
                        practices) used by the Administrator to 
                        determine the infrastructure deferred 
                        maintenance and repair needs of the nuclear 
                        security enterprise; and
                            ``(II) the percentage of replacement plant 
                        value being spent on maintenance and repair 
                        needs of the nuclear security enterprise; and
                    ``(ii) an explanation of whether the annual 
                spending on such needs complies with the recommendation 
                of the National Research Council of the National 
                Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine that 
                such spending be in an amount equal to four percent of 
                the replacement plant value, and, if not, the reasons 
                for such noncompliance and a plan for how the 
                Administrator will ensure facilities of the nuclear 
                security enterprise are being properly sustained.''.
    (d) Requirements Relating to Critical Decisions.--
            (1) In general.--Subtitle A of title XLVII of the Atomic 
        Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2741 et seq.) is amended by 
        adding at the end the following new section:

``SEC. 4715. MATTERS RELATING TO CRITICAL DECISIONS.

    ``(a) Post-critical Decision 2 Changes.--After the date on which a 
plant project specifically authorized by law achieves critical decision 
2, the Administrator may not change the requirements for such project 
if such change increases the scope, schedule, or budget of such project 
unless--
            ``(1) the Administrator submits to the congressional 
        defense committees--
                    ``(A) a certification that the Administrator, 
                without delegation, authorizes such proposed change; 
                and
                    ``(B) a cost-benefit and risk analysis of such 
                proposed change, including with respect to--
                            ``(i) the effects of such proposed change 
                        on the project cost and schedule; and
                            ``(ii) any mission risks and operational 
                        risks from making such change or not making 
                        such change; and
            ``(2) a period of 15 days elapses following the date of 
        such submission.
    ``(b) Review and Approval.--The Administrator shall ensure that 
critical decision packages are timely reviewed and either approved or 
disapproved.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents at the 
        beginning of such Act is amended by inserting after the item 
        relating to section 4714 the following new item:

``Sec. 4715. Matters relating to critical decisions.''.
    (e) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
            (1) the nuclear security enterprise, comprised of the 
        infrastructure and capabilities of the laboratories and plants 
        coupled with the dedicated and talented scientists, engineers, 
        technicians, and administrators who form the backbone of the 
        enterprise, are a central component of the nuclear deterrent of 
        the United States;
            (2) if left unaddressed, the state of the infrastructure 
        within the nuclear security enterprise represents a direct, 
        long-term threat to the credibility of the nuclear deterrent of 
        the United States;
            (3) both Congress and the President must take strong, 
        sustained action to recapitalize and repair this 
        infrastructure;
            (4) the Administrator must continue to carry out 
        expeditious demolition of old facilities of the Administration 
        to reduce long-term costs and improve safety; and
            (5) each budget of the President submitted to Congress 
        under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, for 
        fiscal year 2019 and each fiscal year thereafter during the 
        life of the program established pursuant to subsection (b)(1) 
        should include funding in an amount sufficient to carry out the 
        program to achieve the goal specified in such subsection.

SEC. 3112. INCORPORATION OF INTEGRATED SURETY ARCHITECTURE IN 
              TRANSPORTATION.

    (a) Incorporation.--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. 4222. INCORPORATION OF INTEGRATED SURETY ARCHITECTURE.

    ``(a) Shipments.--(1) The Administrator shall ensure that shipments 
described in paragraph (2) incorporate surety technologies relating to 
transportation and shipping developed by the Integrated Surety 
Architecture program of the Administration.
    ``(2) A shipment described in this paragraph is an over-the-road 
shipment of the Administration that involves any nuclear weapon planned 
to be in the active stockpile after 2025.
    ``(b) Certain Programs.--(1) The Administrator, in coordination 
with the Chairman of the Nuclear Weapons Council, shall ensure that 
each program described in paragraph (2) incorporate integrated designs 
compatible with the Integrated Surety Architecture program.
    ``(2) A program described in this subsection is a program of the 
Administration that is a warhead development program, a life extension 
program, or a warhead major alteration program.
    ``(c) Determination.--(1) If, on a case-by-case basis, the 
Administrator determines that a shipment under subsection (a) will not 
incorporate some or all of the surety technologies described in such 
subsection, or that a program under subsection (b) will not incorporate 
some or all of the integrated designs described in such subsection, the 
Administrator shall submit such determination to the congressional 
defense committees, including the results of an analysis conducted 
pursuant to paragraph (2).
    ``(2) Each determination made under paragraph (1) shall be based on 
a documented, system risk analysis that considers security risk 
reduction, operational impacts, and technical risk.
    ``(e) Termination.--The requirements of subsections (a) and (b) 
shall terminate on December 31, 2029.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents for such Act is 
amended by inserting after the item relating to section 4221 the 
following new item:

``Sec. 4222. Incorporation of integrated surety architecture.''.
    (c) Implementation of Certain Direction.--The Administrator shall 
implement the direction relating to this section contained in the 
classified annex accompanying this Act.

SEC. 3113. COST ESTIMATES FOR LIFE EXTENSION PROGRAM AND MAJOR 
              ALTERATION PROJECTS.

    Subsection (b) of section 4217 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 
U.S.C. 2537(b)) is amended to read as follows:
    ``(b) Independent Cost Estimates and Reviews.--(1) The Secretary, 
acting through the Administrator, shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees and the Nuclear Weapons Council the following:
            ``(A) An independent cost estimate of the following:
                    ``(i) Each nuclear weapon system undergoing life 
                extension at the completion of phase 6.2A, relating to 
                design definition and cost study.
                    ``(ii) Each nuclear weapon system undergoing life 
                extension at the completion of phase 6.3, relating to 
                development engineering.
                    ``(iii) Each nuclear weapon system undergoing life 
                extension at the completion of phase 6.4, relating to 
                production engineering, and before the initiation of 
                phase 6.5, relating to first production.
                    ``(iv) Each new nuclear facility within the nuclear 
                security enterprise that is estimated to cost more than 
                $500,000,000 before such facility achieves critical 
                decision 1 and before such facility achieves critical 
                decision 2 in the acquisition process.
                    ``(v) Each nuclear weapons system undergoing a 
                major alteration project (as defined in section 
                2753(a)(2) of this title).
            ``(B) An independent cost review of each nuclear weapon 
        system undergoing life extension at the completion of phase 
        6.2, relating to study of feasibility and down-select.
    ``(2) Each independent cost estimate and independent cost review 
under paragraph (1) shall include--
            ``(A) whether the cost baseline or the budget estimate for 
        the period covered by the future-years nuclear security program 
        has changed, and the rationale for any such change; and
            ``(B) any views of the Secretary or the Administrator 
        regarding such estimate or review.
    ``(3) The Administrator shall review and consider the results of 
any independent cost estimate or independent cost review of a nuclear 
weapon system or a nuclear facility, as the case may be, under this 
subsection before entering the next phase of the development process of 
such system or the acquisition process of such facility.
    ``(4) Each independent cost estimate or independent cost review of 
a nuclear weapon system or a nuclear facility, as the case may be, 
under this subsection shall be submitted not later than 30 days after 
the date on which--
            ``(A) such system completes a phase specified in paragraph 
        (1); or
            ``(B) such facility achieves critical decision 1 as 
        specified in subparagraph (A)(iv) of such paragraph.
    ``(5) Each independent cost estimate or independent cost review 
submitted under this subsection shall be submitted in unclassified 
form, but may include a classified annex if necessary.''.

SEC. 3114. BUDGET REQUESTS AND CERTIFICATION REGARDING NUCLEAR WEAPONS 
              DISMANTLEMENT.

    Section 3125 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal 
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (f); and
            (2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new 
        subsections:
    ``(d) Budget Requests.--The Administrator for Nuclear Security 
shall ensure that the budget of the President submitted to Congress 
under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, for each of 
fiscal years 2019 through 2021 includes amounts for the nuclear weapons 
dismantlement and disposition activities of the National Nuclear 
Security Administration in accordance with the limitation in subsection 
(a).
    ``(e) Certification.--Not later than February 1, 2018, the 
Administrator shall certify to the congressional defense committees 
that the Administrator is carrying out the nuclear weapons 
dismantlement and disposition activities of the Administration in 
accordance with the limitations in subsections (a) and (b).''.

SEC. 3115. IMPROVED INFORMATION RELATING TO DEFENSE NUCLEAR 
              NONPROLIFERATION RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.

    (a) Improved Information.--Title XLIII of the Atomic Energy Defense 
Act (50 U.S.C. 2563 et seq.) is amended by adding at the end the 
following new section:

``SEC. 4310. INFORMATION RELATING TO DEFENSE NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION 
              RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM AND ARMS CONTROL 
              PROGRAM.

    ``(a) Technologies and Capabilities.--The Administrator shall 
document, for efforts that are not focused on basic research, the 
technologies and capabilities of the defense nuclear nonproliferation 
research and development program--
            ``(1) that are transitioned to end users for further 
        development or deployment; and
            ``(2) that are deployed.
    ``(b) Assessments of Status.--(1) In assessing projects under the 
defense nuclear nonproliferation research and development program or 
the defense nuclear nonproliferation and arms control program, the 
Administrator shall compare the status of each such project, including 
with respect to the final results of such project, to the baseline 
targets and goals established in the initial project plan of such 
project.
    ``(2) The Administrator may carry out paragraph (1) using a common 
template or such other means as the Administrator determines 
appropriate.''.
    (b) Inclusion in Plan.--Section 4309(b) of such Act (50 U.S.C. 
2575(b)) is amended--
            (1) by redesignating paragraph (16) as paragraph (18); and
            (2) by inserting after paragraph (15) the following new 
        paragraphs:
            ``(16) A summary of the technologies and capabilities 
        documented under section 4310(a).
            ``(17) A summary of the assessments conducted under section 
        4310(b)(1).''.

SEC. 3116. RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF ADVANCED NAVAL REACTOR FUEL 
              BASED ON LOW-ENRICHED URANIUM.

    (a) Prohibition on Availability of Funds for Fiscal Year 2018.--
            (1) Research and development.--Except as provided by 
        paragraph (2), none of the funds authorized to be appropriated 
        by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 
        for the Department of Energy or the Department of Defense may 
        be obligated or expended to plan or carry out research and 
        development of an advanced naval nuclear fuel system based on 
        low-enriched uranium.
            (2) Exception.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated 
        by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 
        for defense nuclear nonproliferation, as specified in the 
        funding table in division D--
                    (A) $5,000,000 shall be made available to the 
                Deputy Administrator for Naval Reactors of the National 
                Nuclear Security Administration for low-enriched 
                uranium activities (including downblending of high-
                enriched uranium fuel into low-enriched uranium fuel, 
                research and development using low-enriched uranium 
                fuel, or the modification or procurement of equipment 
                and infrastructure related to such activities) to 
                develop an advanced naval nuclear fuel system based on 
                low-enriched uranium; and
                    (B) if the Secretary of Energy and the Secretary of 
                the Navy determine under section 3118(c)(1) of the 
                National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 
                (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1196) that such low-
                enriched uranium activities and research and 
                development should continue, an additional $30,000,000 
                may be made available to the Deputy Administrator for 
                such purpose.
    (b) Prohibition on Availability of Funds Regarding Certain Accounts 
and Purposes.--
            (1) Research and development and procurement.--Chapter 633 
        of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the 
        end the following new section:
``Sec. 7319. Requirements for availability of funds relating to 
              advanced naval nuclear fuel systems based on low-enriched 
              uranium
    ``(a) Authorization.--Low-enriched uranium activities may only be 
carried out using funds authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made 
available for the Department of Energy for atomic energy defense 
activities for defense nuclear nonproliferation.
    ``(b) Prohibition Regarding Certain Accounts.--(1) None of the 
funds described in paragraph (2) may be obligated or expended to carry 
out low-enriched uranium activities.
    ``(2) The funds described in this paragraph are funds authorized to 
be appropriated or otherwise made available for any fiscal year for any 
of the following accounts:
            ``(A) Shipbuilding and conversion, Navy, or any other 
        account of the Department of Defense.
            ``(B) Any account within the atomic energy defense 
        activities of the Department of Energy other than defense 
        nuclear nonproliferation, as specified in subsection (a).
    ``(3) The prohibition in paragraph (1) may not be superseded except 
by a provision of law that specifically supersedes, repeals, or 
modifies this section. A provision of law, including a table 
incorporated into an Act, that appropriates funds described in 
paragraph (2) for low-enriched uranium activities may not be treated as 
specifically superseding this section unless such provision 
specifically cites to this section.
    ``(c) Low-enriched Uranium Activities Defined.--In this section, 
the term `low-enriched uranium activities' means the following:
            ``(1) Planning or carrying out research and development of 
        an advanced naval nuclear fuel system based on low-enriched 
        uranium.
            ``(2) Procuring ships that use low-enriched uranium in 
        naval nuclear propulsion reactors.''.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the 
        beginning of such chapter is amended by adding at the end the 
        following new item:

``7319. Requirements for availability of funds relating to advanced 
                            naval nuclear fuel systems based on low-
                            enriched uranium''.
    (c) Reports.--
            (1) SSN(x) submarine.--Not later than 180 days after the 
        date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy 
        and the Deputy Administrator for Naval Reactors shall jointly 
        submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of 
        Representatives and the Senate a report on the cost and 
        timeline required to assess the feasibility, costs, and 
        requirements for a design of the Virginia-class replacement 
        nuclear attack submarine that would allow for the use of a low-
        enriched uranium fueled reactor, if technically feasible, 
        without changing the diameter of the submarine.
            (2) Research and development.--Not later than 60 days after 
        the date of the enactment of this Act, the Deputy Administrator 
        for Naval Reactors shall submit to the Committees on Armed 
        Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate a 
        report on--
                    (A) the planned research and development activities 
                on low-enriched uranium and highly enriched uranium 
                fuel that could apply to the development of a low-
                enriched uranium fuel or an advanced highly enriched 
                uranium fuel; and
                    (B) with respect to such activities for each such 
                fuel--
                            (i) the costs associated with such 
                        activities; and
                            (ii) a detailed proposal for funding such 
                        activities.

SEC. 3117. PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR PROGRAMS IN RUSSIAN 
              FEDERATION.

    (a) Prohibition.--None of the funds authorized to be appropriated 
by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for atomic 
energy defense activities may be obligated or expended to enter into a 
contract with, or otherwise provide assistance to, the Russian 
Federation.
    (b) Waiver.--The Secretary of Energy, without delegation, may waive 
the prohibition in subsection (a) only if--
            (1) the Secretary determines, in writing, that a nuclear-
        related threat arising in the Russian Federation must be 
        addressed urgently and it is necessary to waive the prohibition 
        to address that threat;
            (2) the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense 
        concur in the determination under paragraph (1);
            (3) the Secretary of Energy submits to the appropriate 
        congressional committees a report containing--
                    (A) a notification that the waiver is in the 
                national security interest of the United States;
                    (B) justification for the waiver, including the 
                determination under paragraph (1); and
                    (C) a description of the activities to be carried 
                out pursuant to the waiver, including the expected cost 
                and timeframe for such activities; and
            (4) a period of seven days elapses following the date on 
        which the Secretary submits the report under paragraph (3).
    (c) Exception.--The prohibition under subsection (a) and the 
requirements under subsection (b) to waive that prohibition shall not 
apply to an amount, not to exceed $3,000,000, that the Secretary may 
make available for the Department of Energy Russian Health Studies 
Program.
    (d) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means the following:
            (1) The congressional defense committees.
            (2) The Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and 
        the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives.

SEC. 3118. NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION PAY AND PERFORMANCE 
              SYSTEM.

    (a) Pay Banding and Performance-Based Pay Adjustment Demonstration 
Project.--
            (1) Extension.--The Administrator for Nuclear Security 
        shall carry out the demonstration project until the date that 
        is five years after the date of the enactment of this Act. The 
        Administrator shall carry out such project in accordance with 
        the demonstration project plan, including with respect to the 
        authority of the Administrator to modify such system pursuant 
        to such plan and waiving certain authorities or requirements 
        under such plan.
            (2) Naval nuclear propulsion program.--The Deputy 
        Administrator for Naval Reactors may carry out the 
        demonstration project with respect to the employees of the 
        Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program in positions in the 
        competitive service.
            (3) Rotations.--In carrying out the demonstration project, 
        the Administrator shall authorize, and establish incentives 
        for, employees of the National Nuclear Security Administration 
        to have rotational assignments among different programs of the 
        Administration, the headquarters and field offices of the 
        Administration, and the management and operating contractors of 
        the Administration.
            (4) Requirements for senior-level positions.--The 
        Administrator shall establish requirements for employees of the 
        Administration who are in the demonstration project to be 
        promoted to senior-level positions in the Administration, 
        including requirements with respect to--
                    (A) professional training and continuing education; 
                and
                    (B) a certain number and types of rotational 
                assignments under paragraph (3), as determined by the 
                Administrator.
            (5) Definitions.--In this subsection:
                    (A) The term ``demonstration project'' means the 
                National Nuclear Security Administration Pay Banding 
                and Performance-Based Pay Adjustment Demonstration 
                Project that is carried out--
                            (i) pursuant to section 4703 of title 5, 
                        United States Code; and
                            (ii) in accordance with the demonstration 
                        project plan and this subsection.
                    (B) The term ``demonstration project plan'' means 
                the demonstration project plan published in the Federal 
                Register on December 21, 2007 (72 Fed. Reg. 72,776).
    (b) Rotations for Certain Contractors.--
            (1) Increased use.--The Administrator for Nuclear Security 
        shall increase the use of rotational assignments of employees 
        of the management and operating contractors of the National 
        Nuclear Security Administration to the headquarters of the 
        Administration, the Department of Defense and the military 
        departments, the intelligence community, and other departments 
        and agencies of the Federal Government.
            (2) Methods.--The Administrator shall carry out paragraph 
        (1) by--
                    (A) establishing incentives for--
                            (i) the management and operating 
                        contractors of the Administration and the 
                        employees of such contractors to participate in 
                        rotational assignments; and
                            (ii) the departments and agencies of the 
                        Federal Government specified in such paragraph 
                        to facilitate such assignments;
                    (B) providing professional and leadership 
                development opportunities during such assignments;
                    (C) using details and other applicable authorities 
                and programs, including the mobility program under 
                subchapter VI of chapter 33 of title 5, United States 
                Code (commonly referred to as the ``Intergovernmental 
                Personnel Act Mobility Program''); and
                    (D) taking such other actions as the Administrator 
                determines appropriate to increase the use of such 
                rotational assignments.
    (c) Red-team Analysis.--
            (1) Analysis.--The Director for Cost Estimating and Program 
        Evaluation of the National Nuclear Security Administration 
        shall carry out a red-team analysis of the Federal employee 
        staffing structure of the Administration with respect to the 
        Administrator for Nuclear Security meeting the authorized 
        personnel levels under section 3241A of the National Nuclear 
        Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 22441a).
            (2) Matters included.--The analysis under paragraph (1) 
        shall include assessments of--
                    (A) the number of Federal employees within each 
                program of the Administration, and whether such numbers 
                are appropriately balanced with respect to the size, 
                scope, functions, budgets, and risks, of the program; 
                and
                    (B) the number of Senior Executive Service 
                positions within the Administration, including a 
                comparison of such number to other comparable 
                departments and agencies of the Federal Government, and 
                whether such number is appropriate.
    (d) Briefings.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of 
        the enactment of this Act--
                    (A) the Administrator for Nuclear Security shall 
                provide a briefing to the appropriate congressional 
                committees on the implementation of--
                            (i) section 3248 of the National Nuclear 
                        Security Administration Act, as added by 
                        subsection (a); and
                            (ii) subsection (b); and
                    (B) the Director for Cost Estimating and Program 
                Evaluation shall provide to such committees a briefing 
                on the analysis under subsection (c).
            (2) Appropriate congressional committees defined.--In this 
        subsection, the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the Committees on Armed Services of the House 
                of Representatives and the Senate;
                    (B) the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the 
                House of Representatives;
                    (C) the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources 
                of the Senate; and
                    (D) the Committee on Oversight and Government 
                Reform of the House of Representatives.

SEC. 3119. DISPOSITION OF WEAPONS-USABLE PLUTONIUM.

    (a) In General.--Subject to subsection (b), the Secretary of Energy 
shall carry out construction and project support activities relating to 
the MOX facility using funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act 
or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the National 
Nuclear Security Administration for the MOX facility for construction 
and project support activities.
    (b) Waiver.--The Secretary of Energy may waive the requirement in 
subsection (a) if the Secretary submits to the Committees on Armed 
Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate the following:
            (1) The matters required by section 3116(b)(3) of the 
        National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public 
        Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2761).
            (2) Notification that the Secretary has sought to enter 
        into consultations with any relevant State necessary to pursue 
        an alternative option for carrying out the plutonium 
        disposition program.
            (3) Notification that the Secretary has been unable to 
        enter into a fixed-price contract with the prime contractor of 
        the MOX facility (for construction and project support 
        activities under subsection (a)) that the Secretary determines 
        sufficiently minimizes risk and cost to the Department of 
        Energy.
            (4) Certification that--
                    (A) an alternative option for carrying out the 
                plutonium disposition program exists;
                    (B) the total lifecycle cost of such alternative 
                option would be less than approximately half of the 
                estimated remaining total lifecycle cost of the mixed-
                oxide fuel program; and
                    (C) pursuing such alternative option is in the best 
                interest of the Federal Government.
            (5) The commitment of the Secretary to--
                    (A) remove plutonium from South Carolina; and
                    (B) ensure a sustainable future for the Savannah 
                River Site.
    (c) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``MOX facility'' means the mixed-oxide fuel 
        fabrication facility at the Savannah River Site, Aiken, South 
        Carolina.
            (2) The term ``project support activities'' means 
        activities that support the design, long-lead equipment 
        procurement, and site preparation of the MOX facility.

SEC. 3120. MODIFICATION OF MINOR CONSTRUCTION THRESHOLD FOR PLANT 
              PROJECTS.

    Section 4701 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2741) is 
amended--
            (1) by striking ``In this subtitle:'' and inserting the 
        following:
    ``(a) In General.--In this subtitle:'';
            (2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``$10,000,000'' and 
        inserting ``$20,000,000, subject to adjustment under subsection 
        (b)''; and
            (3) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
    ``(b) Adjustment of Minor Construction Threshold for Inflation.--
(1) The Secretary of Energy shall adjust the amount of the minor 
construction threshold on October 1, 2017, and at the beginning of each 
fiscal year thereafter, to reflect the percentage (if any) of the 
increase in the average of the Consumer Price Index for the preceding 
12-month period compared to the Consumer Price Index for fiscal year 
2016.
    ``(2) In adjusting the amount of the minor construction threshold 
under paragraph (1), the Secretary--
            ``(A) shall round the amount of any increase in the 
        Consumer Price Index to the nearest dollar; and
            ``(B) may ignore any such increase of less than 1 percent.
    ``(3) For purposes of this subsection, the term `Consumer Price 
Index' means the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published 
by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the Department of Labor.''.

SEC. 3121. DESIGN COMPETITION.

    (a) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
            (1) In January 2016, the co-chairs of a congressionally-
        mandated study panel from the National Academies of Science 
        testified before the House Committee on Armed Services that:
                    (A) ``The National Nuclear Security Administration 
                (NNSA) complex must engage in robust design 
                competitions in order to exercise the design and 
                production skills that underpin stockpile stewardship 
                and are necessary to meet evolving threats.''
                    (B) ``To exercise the full set of design skills 
                necessary for an effective nuclear deterrent, the NNSA 
                should develop and conduct the first in what the 
                committee envisions to be a series of design 
                competitions that integrate the full end-to-end process 
                from novel design conception through engineering, 
                building, and non-nuclear testing of a prototype.''
            (2) In March 2016 testimony before the House Committee on 
        Armed Services regarding a December 2016 Defense Science Board 
        (DSB) report titled, ``Seven Defense Priorities for the New 
        Administration'', members of the DSB said:
                    (A) ``A key contributor to nuclear deterrence is 
                the continuous, adaptable exercise of the development, 
                design, and production functions for nuclear weapons in 
                both the DOD and DOE... Yet the DOE laboratories and 
                DOD contractor community have done little integrated 
                design and development work outside of life extension 
                for 25 years, let alone concept development that could 
                serve as a hedge to surprise.''
                    (B) ``The Defense Science Board believes that the 
                triad's complementary features remain robust tenets for 
                the design of a future force. Replacing our current, 
                aging force is essential, but not sufficient in the 
                more complex nuclear environment we now face to provide 
                the adaptability or flexibility to confidently hold at 
                risk what adversaries value. In particular, if the 
                threat evolves in ways that favorably change the cost/
                benefit calculus in the view of an adversary's 
                leadership, then we should be in a position to quickly 
                restore a credible deterrence posture.''
            (3) In a memorandum dated May 9, 2014, then-Secretary of 
        Energy Ernie Moniz said:
                    (A) ``If nuclear military capabilities are to 
                provide deterrence for the nation they need to be 
                relevant to the emerging global strategic environment. 
                The current stockpile was designed to meet the needs of 
                a bipolar world with roots in the Cold War era. A more 
                complex, chaotic, and dynamic security environment is 
                emerging. In order to uphold the Department's mission 
                to ensure an effective nuclear deterrent... we must 
                ensure our nuclear capabilities meet the challenges of 
                known and potential geopolitical and technological 
                trends. Therefore we must look ahead, using the 
                expertise of our laboratories, to how the capabilities 
                that may be employed by other nations could impact 
                deterrence over the next several decades.''
                    (B) ``We must challenge our thinking about our 
                programs of record in order to permit foresighted 
                actions that may reduce, in the coming decades, the 
                chances for surprise and that buttress deterrence.''
    (b) Design Competition.--
            (1) In general.--In accordance with paragraph (2), the 
        Administrator for Nuclear Security, in coordination with the 
        Chairman of the Nuclear Weapons Council, shall carry out a new 
        and comprehensive design competition for a nuclear warhead that 
        could be employed on ballistic missiles of the United States by 
        2030. Such competition shall--
                    (A) examine options for warhead design and related 
                delivery system requirements in the 2030s, including--
                            (i) life extension of existing weapons;
                            (ii) new capabilities; and
                            (iii) such other concepts that the 
                        Administrator and Chairman determine necessary 
                        to fully exercise and create responsive design 
                        capabilities in the enterprise and ensure a 
                        robust nuclear deterrent into the 2030s;
                    (B) assess how the capabilities and defenses that 
                may be employed by other nations could impact 
                deterrence in 2030 and beyond and how such threats 
                could be addressed or mitigated in the warhead and 
                related delivery systems;
                    (C) exercise the full set of design skills 
                necessary for an effective nuclear deterrent and 
                responsive enterprise through production of conceptual 
                designs and, as the Administrator determines 
                appropriate, production of non-nuclear prototypes of 
                components or subsystems; and
                    (D) examine and recommend actions for significantly 
                shortening timelines and significantly reducing costs 
                associated with design, development, certification, and 
                production of the warhead, without reducing worker or 
                public health and safety.
            (2) Timing.--The Administrator shall--
                    (A) during fiscal year 2018 develop a plan to carry 
                out paragraph (1); and
                    (B) during fiscal year 2019 implement such plan.
    (c) Briefing.--Not later than March 1, 2018, the Administrator, in 
coordination with the Chairman of the Nuclear Weapons Council, shall 
provide a briefing to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate 
and House of Representatives on the plan of the Administrator to carry 
out the warhead design competition under subsection (b). Such briefing 
shall include an assessment of the costs, benefits, risks, and 
opportunities of such plan, particularly impacts to ongoing life 
extension programs and infrastructure projects.

SEC. 3122. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY COUNTERINTELLIGENCE POLYGRAPH PROGRAM.

    Section 4504(b) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 
2654(b)) is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
    ``(4) The regulations prescribed under paragraph (1) shall ensure 
that the persons subject to the counterintelligence polygraph program 
required by subsection (a) include any person who is--
            ``(A) a United States national who also has the nationality 
        of a foreign state; and
            ``(B) seeking employment with the National Nuclear Security 
        Administration.''.

SEC. 3123. SECURITY CLEARANCE FOR DUAL-NATIONALS EMPLOYED BY NATIONAL 
              NUCLEAR SECURITY AGENCY.

    (a) In General.--The National Nuclear Security Administration Act 
(50 U.S.C. 2401 et seq.) is amended by inserting after section 3236 the 
following new section:

``SEC. 3237. SECURITY CLEARANCE FOR DUAL NATIONALS OF HIGH THREAT 
              FOREIGN STATES.

    ``(a) In General.--In the case of an individual who is a United 
States national who also has the nationality of a foreign state that is 
on the list maintained by the Secretary of Energy under subsection (a) 
and who is appointed to or hired for a position designated by the 
Office of Personnel Management as critical sensitive or special 
sensitive, the Secretary shall provide additional review before 
approving a security clearance for such individual.
    ``(b) Waiver.--
            ``(1) Waiver authority.--In the case of a person who is a 
        United States national who also has the nationality of a 
        foreign state identified under paragraph (2), the Secretary may 
        waive the requirement under subsection (a).
            ``(2) Foreign states.--The Director of National 
        Intelligence shall identify foreign states that permit citizens 
        or nationals of the United States to serve in positions of 
        trust equivalent to positions identified by the Office of 
        Personnel Management as critical sensitive or special 
        sensitive.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents at the beginning of 
such Act is amended by inserting after the item relating to section 
3236 the following new item:

``Sec. 3237. Security clearance for dual nationals of high threat 
                            foreign states.''.

SEC. 3124. ANNUAL REPORTS ON UNFUNDED PRIORITIES OF THE NATIONAL 
              NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.

    (a) Annual Reports.--Not later than 10 days after the date on which 
the budget of the President for a fiscal year is submitted to Congress 
pursuant to section 1105 of title 31, the Administrator for Nuclear 
Security shall submit to the Secretary of Energy and the congressional 
defense committees a report on the unfunded priorities of the National 
Nuclear Security Administration.
    (b) Elements.--
            (1) In general.--Each report under subsection (a) shall 
        specify, for each unfunded priority covered by such report, the 
        following:
                    (A) A summary description of such priority, 
                including the objectives to be achieved if such 
                priority is funded (whether in whole or in part).
                    (B) The additional amount of funds recommended in 
                connection with the objectives under subparagraph (A).
                    (C) Account information with respect to such 
                priority.
            (2) Prioritization of priorities.--Each report shall 
        present the unfunded priorities covered by such report in order 
        of urgency of priority.
    (c) Unfunded Priority Defined.--In this section, the term 
``unfunded priority'', in the case of a fiscal year, means a program, 
activity, or mission requirement that--
            (1) is not funded in the budget of the President for the 
        fiscal year as submitted to Congress pursuant to section 1105 
        of title 31;
            (2) is necessary to fulfill a requirement associated with 
        the National Nuclear Security Administration; and
            (3) would have been recommended for funding through the 
        budget referred to in paragraph (1) by the Administrator in 
        connection with the budget if--
                    (A) additional resources had been available for the 
                budget to fund the program, activity, or mission 
                requirement; or
                    (B) the program, activity, or mission requirement 
                has emerged since the budget was formulated.

SEC. 3125. PLUTONIUM CAPABILITIES.

    (a) Report.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the enactment 
of this Act, the Administrator for Nuclear Security shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees, the Secretary of Defense, and the 
Comptroller General of the United States a report on the recommended 
alternative endorsed by the Administrator for recapitalization of 
plutonium science and production capabilities of the nuclear security 
enterprise. The report shall identify the recommended alternative 
endorsed by the Administrator and contain the analysis of alternatives, 
including costs, upon which the Administrator relied in making such 
endorsement.
    (b) Certification.--Not later than 60 days after the date on which 
the Secretary of Defense receives the notification under subsection 
(a), the Chairman of the Nuclear Weapons Council shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees the written certification of the 
Chairman regarding whether the recommended alternative endorsed by the 
Administrator--
            (1) is acceptable to the Secretary of Defense and the 
        Nuclear Weapons Council and meets the requirements of the 
        Secretary for plutonium pit production capacity and capability;
            (2) is likely to meet the pit production timelines and 
        milestones required by section 4219 of the Atomic Energy 
        Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2538a);
            (3) is likely to meet pit production timelines and 
        requirements responsive to military requirements;
            (4) is cost effective and has reasonable near-term and 
        lifecycle costs that are minimized, to the extent practicable, 
        as compared to other alternatives, and has tested and 
        documented the sensitivity of the cost estimates for each 
        alternative to risks and changes in key assumptions;
            (5) contains minimized and manageable risks as compared to 
        other alternatives;
            (6) can be acceptably reconciled with any differences in 
        the conclusions made by the Office of Cost Assessment and 
        Program Evaluation of the Department of Defense in the business 
        case analysis of plutonium pit production capability issued in 
        2013; and
            (7) has documented the assumptions and constraints used in 
        the analysis of alternatives.
    (c) Failure to Certify.--If the Chairman is unable to submit the 
certification under subsection (b), the Chairman shall submit to the 
congressional defense committees and the Administrator written 
notification describing why the Chairman is unable to make such 
certification and what steps the Administrator should take to improve 
the plan of the Administrator to recapitalize plutonium pit production 
capacity and capability to enable certification.
    (d) Assessment.--Not later than 120 days after the date on which 
the Comptroller General receives the notification under subsection (a), 
the Comptroller General shall provide to the congressional defense 
committees a briefing containing the assessment of the Comptroller 
General of the analysis of alternatives conducted by the Administrator 
to select a preferred alternative for recapitalizing plutonium science 
and production capabilities.

SEC. 3126. PLAN FOR VERIFICATION, DETECTION, AND MONITORING OF NUCLEAR 
              WEAPONS AND FISSILE MATERIAL.

    (a) Findings and Sense of Congress.--
            (1) Findings.--Congress finds the following:
                    (A) A January 2014 Defense Science Board report 
                found that ``The nuclear future will not be a linear 
                extrapolation of the past. . . [and] [t]he technologies 
                and processes designed for current treaty verification 
                and inspections are inadequate to future monitoring 
                realities''.
                    (B) Section 3133 of the Carl Levin and Howard P. 
                ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for 
                Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291) required an 
                interagency plan for nuclear monitoring of nuclear 
                weapons and fissile material, and section 3132 of the 
                National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 
                (Public Law 114-328) required an update of such plan. 
                In both instances, the reports submitted failed to 
                answer the congressional requirements, and instead 
                provided only a brief summary of the National Security 
                Council structure and processes.
            (2) Sense of congress.--It is the sense of Congress that 
        verification, detection, and monitoring of nuclear weapons and 
        fissile material should be a priority for national security, 
        and that the reports submitted to date do not reflect this 
        priority, or the current and planned initiatives related to 
        nuclear verification and detection.
    (b) Plan.--The President, in consultation with the Secretary of 
State, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of Energy, the Secretary 
of Homeland Security, and the Director of National Intelligence, shall 
develop a plan for verification and monitoring relating to the 
potential proliferation of nuclear weapons, components of such weapons, 
and fissile material.
    (c) Elements.--The plan developed under subsection (b) shall 
include the following:
            (1) A plan and road map for verification, detection and 
        monitoring, with respect to policy, operations, and research, 
        development, testing, and evaluation, including--
                    (A) identifying requirements;
                    (B) costs and funding requirements over 10 years 
                for such nuclear verification, detection and 
                monitoring; and
                    (C) identifying and integrating roles, 
                responsibilities, and planning for such nuclear 
                verification, detection and monitoring.
            (2) A detailed international engagement plan for building 
        cooperation and transparency, including bilateral and 
        multilateral efforts, to improve inspections, detection, and 
        monitoring.
            (3) A detailed description of--
                    (A) current and planned research and development 
                efforts to improve monitoring, detection, and in-field 
                inspection and analysis capabilities, including 
                persistent surveillance, remote monitoring, and rapid 
                analysis of large data sets, including open-source 
                data; and
                    (B) measures to coordinate technical and 
                operational requirements early in the process.
            (4) Engagement of relevant departments and agencies of the 
        Federal Government and the military departments (including the 
        Open Source Center and the United States Atomic Energy 
        Detection System), national laboratories, industry, and 
        academia.
    (d) Designation of DOE.--The President shall designate the 
Department of Energy as the lead agency for development of the plan 
under subsection (b).
    (e) Briefing.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Energy, acting through the 
Administrator for Nuclear Security, shall provide to the appropriate 
congressional committees an interim briefing on the plan under 
subsection (b).
    (f) Limitation.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this 
Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the Department 
of Defense for supporting the Executive Office of the President, 
$10,000,000 may not be obligated or expended until the date on which 
the President submits to the appropriate congressional committees the 
plan under subsection (g)(1).
    (g) Submission.--
            (1) Deadline.--Not later than April 15, 2018, the President 
        shall submit to the appropriate congressional committees the 
        plan developed under subsection (b).
            (2) Form.--The plan under subsection (b) shall be 
        transmitted in unclassified form, but, consistent with the 
        protection of intelligence sources and methods, may include a 
        classified annex.
    (h) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section, 
the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means the following:
            (1) The congressional defense committees.
            (2) The Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate and 
        the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House of 
        Representatives.
            (3) The Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and 
        the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of 
        Representatives.
            (4) The Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
        Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on Homeland Security of 
        the House of Representatives.
            (5) The Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation 
        of the Senate and the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the 
        House of Representatives.

                     Subtitle C--Plans and Reports

SEC. 3131. MODIFICATION OF CERTAIN REPORTING REQUIREMENTS.

    (a) Status of Nuclear Materials Protection, Control, and Accounting 
Program.--
            (1) Repeal.--Section 4303 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act 
        (50 U.S.C. 2563) is repealed.
            (2) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for the 
        Atomic Energy Defense Act is amended by striking the item 
        relating to section 4303.
    (b) Status of Security of Atomic Energy Defense Facilities.--
Section 4506 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2657) is 
amended by striking ``of each year'' each place it appears and 
inserting ``of each even-numbered year''.
    (c) Security Risks Posed to Nuclear Weapons Complex.--
            (1) Included in ssmp.--Section 4203 of the Atomic Energy 
        Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2523) is amended--
                    (A) in subsection (c)--
                            (i) by redesignating paragraph (7) as 
                        paragraph (8); and
                            (ii) by inserting after paragraph (6) the 
                        following new paragraph (7):
            ``(7) A summary of the status of the plan regarding the 
        research and development, deployment, and lifecycle sustainment 
        of technologies described in subsection (d)(7).''; and
                    (B) in subsection (d)--
                            (i) by redesignating paragraph (7) as 
                        paragraph (8); and
                            (ii) by inserting after paragraph (6) the 
                        following new paragraph (7):
            ``(7) A plan for the research and development, deployment, 
        and lifecycle sustainment of the technologies employed within 
        the nuclear security enterprise to address physical and 
        cybersecurity threats during the five-fiscal-year period 
        following the date of the plan, together with--
                    ``(A) for each site in the nuclear security 
                enterprise, a description of the technologies deployed 
                to address the physical and cybersecurity threats posed 
                to that site;
                    ``(B) for each site and for the nuclear security 
                enterprise, the methods used by the Administration to 
                establish priorities among investments in physical and 
                cybersecurity technologies; and
                    ``(C) a detailed description of how the funds 
                identified for each program element specified pursuant 
                to paragraph (1) in the budget for the Administration 
                for each fiscal year during that five-fiscal-year 
                period will help carry out that plan.''.
            (2) Conforming amendment.--Section 3253(b) of the National 
        Nuclear Security Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2453) is amended 
        by striking paragraph (5).
    (d) Selected Acquisition Reports.--Section 4217(a) of the Atomic 
Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2537(a)) is amended by striking ``fiscal-
year quarter'' each place it appears and inserting ``fiscal year''.
    (e) Long-term Plan for Meeting National Security Requirements for 
Unencumbered Uranium.--Section 4221(a) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act 
(50 U.S.C. 2538c(a)) is amended by striking ``Concurrent with the 
submission to Congress of the budget of the President under section 
1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, in'' and inserting ``Not later 
than December 31 of''.
    (f) Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Management Plan.--Section 4309 
of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2575) is amended--
            (1) in subsection (a), by striking ``In General.--
        Concurrent with the submission to Congress of the budget of the 
        President under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States 
        Code, in each fiscal year'' and inserting ``Plan.--Not later 
        than March 31 of each odd-numbered year'';
            (2) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d);
            (3) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new 
        subsection (c):
    ``(c) Updated Summary.--Not later than March 31 of each even-
numbered year, the Administrator shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees an updated summary of the plan submitted under 
subsection (a) during the previous year.''; and
            (4) in subsection (d), as so redesignated, by inserting 
        ``and the updated summary required by subsection (c)'' before 
        ``shall be submitted''.

SEC. 3132. ASSESSMENT OF MANAGEMENT AND OPERATING CONTRACTS OF NATIONAL 
              SECURITY LABORATORIES.

    (a) Assessment.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Administrator for Nuclear Security shall 
seek to enter into a contract with a federally funded research and 
development center to conduct an assessment of the benefits, costs, 
challenges, risks, efficiency, and effectiveness of the strategy of the 
Administrator with respect to management and operating contracts for 
national security laboratories. The Administrator may not award such 
contract to a federally funded research and development center for 
which the Department of Energy or the National Nuclear Security 
Administration is the primary sponsor.
    (b) Cooperation.--The Administrator, and the director of each 
national security laboratory, shall provide to the federally funded 
research and development center conducting the assessment under 
subsection (a) the information the center requires to conduct such 
assessment.
    (c) Submission.--
            (1) NNSA.--Not later than 90 days after the date on which 
        the Administrator and a federally funded research and 
        development center enter into the contract under subsection 
        (a), the center shall submit to the Administrator a report on 
        the assessment conducted under such subsection. Such report 
        shall include the following:
                    (A) An assessment of the acquisition strategy and 
                the contract oversight process of the Administrator, 
                and of the use of for-profit management and operating 
                contractors at national security laboratories, and 
                whether such strategy, process, and contractors provide 
                the best outcomes to the Federal Government with 
                respect to performance, cost, efficiency, and 
                effectiveness.
                    (B) An assessment of the total costs, for each 
                national security laboratory, that are incurred because 
                of using a for-profit model for the management and 
                operating contract that would not be incurred under a 
                nonprofit model, and whether performance, costs, 
                efficiency, and effectiveness would be expected to 
                increase or decrease under a nonprofit model.
                    (C) An assessment of whether the Administrator is 
                appropriately using, managing, and overseeing the 
                national security laboratories with respect to the 
                nature of the laboratories as federally funded research 
                and development centers.
            (2) Congress.--Not later than 30 days after the date on 
        which the Administrator receives the report under paragraph 
        (1), the Administrator shall submit to the Committees on Armed 
        Services of the House of Representatives and the Senate such 
        report, without change, together with any comments the 
        Administrator determines appropriate.
            (3) Limitation.--
                    (A) Award or extension of contract.--None of the 
                funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or 
                otherwise made available for fiscal year 2018 for the 
                National Nuclear Security Administration may be 
                obligated or expended to award, or to extend, a 
                management and operating contract for a national 
                security laboratory until the date on which the 
                Administrator submits to the congressional defense 
                committees the report under paragraph (2).
                    (B) Waiver for extension.--The Secretary of Energy 
                may waive the limitation in subparagraph (A) with 
                respect to the extension of a management and operating 
                contract for a national security laboratory if the 
                Secretary--
                            (i) determines such waiver is required in 
                        the interest of national security; and
                            (ii) notifies the Committees on Armed 
                        Services of the House of Representatives and 
                        the Senate of such determination.
    (d) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that nothing in 
this section should be construed to mandate or encourage an extension 
of an existing management and operating contract for a national 
security laboratory.
    (e) National Security Laboratory Defined.--In this section, the 
term ``national security laboratory'' has the meaning given that term 
in section 4002(7) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 
2501(7)).

SEC. 3133. EVALUATION OF CLASSIFICATION OF CERTAIN DEFENSE NUCLEAR 
              WASTE.

    (a) Evaluation.--The Secretary of Energy shall conduct an 
evaluation of the feasibility, costs, and cost savings of classifying 
certain defense nuclear waste as other than high-level radioactive 
waste, without decreasing environmental, health, or public safety 
requirements.
    (b) Matters Included.--In conducting the evaluation under 
subsection (a), the Secretary shall consider--
            (1) the estimated quantities and locations of certain 
        defense nuclear waste;
            (2) the potential disposal path for such waste;
            (3) the estimated disposal timeline for such waste;
            (4) the estimated costs for disposal of such waste, and 
        potential cost savings;
            (5) the potential effect on existing consent orders, 
        permits, and agreements;
            (6) the basis by which the Secretary would make a decision 
        on whether to reclassify such waste; and
            (7) any such other matters relating to defense nuclear 
        waste that the Secretary determines appropriate.
    (c) Report.--Not later than February 1, 2018, the Secretary shall 
submit to the appropriate congressional committees a report on the 
evaluation under subsection (a), including a description of--
            (1) the consideration by the Secretary of the matters under 
        subsection (b);
            (2) any actions the Secretary has taken or plans to take to 
        change the processes, rules, regulations, orders, or 
        directives, relating to defense nuclear waste, as appropriate;
            (3) any recommendations for legislative action the 
        Secretary determines appropriate; and
            (4) the assessment of the Secretary regarding the benefits 
        and risks of the actions and recommendations of the Secretary 
        under paragraphs (1) and (2).
    (d) Definitions.--In this section:
            (1) The term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means 
        the following:
                    (A) The congressional defense committees.
                    (B) The Committee on Energy and Commerce of the 
                House of Representatives.
                    (C) The Committee on Energy and Natural Resources 
                of the Senate.
            (2) The term ``certain defense nuclear waste'' means 
        radioactive waste that--
                    (A) resulted from the reprocessing of spent nuclear 
                fuel that was generated from atomic energy defense 
                activities; and
                    (B) contains more than 100 nCi/g of alpha-emitting 
                transuranic isotopes with half-lives greater than 20 
                years.

SEC. 3134. REPORT ON CRITICAL DECISION-1 ON MATERIAL STAGING FACILITY 
              PROJECT.

    Not later than October 31, 2017, the Administrator for Nuclear 
Security shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report 
containing the following:
            (1) The decision memorandum of the Administrator with 
        respect to Critical Decision-1 on the Material Staging Facility 
        project at the Pantex Plant.
            (2) The preferred alternative approved by the Administrator 
        for such Critical Decision-1.
            (3) The cost-range estimates, including a description of 
        the costs saved or avoided from not carrying out 
        recapitalization and sustainment of Area 4 at the Pantex Plant.
            (4) The schedule-range estimates that include completion of 
        the Material Staging Facility by 2024.
            (5) The risk factors and risk mitigation and management 
        options relating to the Material Staging Facility.
            (6) The expected improvements to operations and security 
        provided by the Material Staging Facility, once operational, 
        including the potential annual cost savings.
            (7) Such other matters as the Administrator considers 
        appropriate.

SEC. 3135. MODIFICATION TO STOCKPILE STEWARDSHIP, MANAGEMENT, AND 
              RESPONSIVENESS PLAN.

    Section 4203 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2523), as 
amended by section 3131, is further amended--
            (1) in subsection (c)--
                    (A) by redesignating paragraph (8) as paragraph 
                (9); and
                    (B) by inserting after paragraph (7) the following 
                new paragraph (8):
            ``(8) A summary of the assessment under subsection (d)(8) 
        regarding the execution of the programs with current and 
        projected budgets and any associated risks.''; and
            (2) in subsection (d)--
                    (A) by redesignating paragraph (8) as paragraph 
                (9); and
                    (B) by inserting after paragraph (7) the following 
                new paragraph (8):
            ``(8) An assessment of whether the programs described by 
        the report can be executed with current and projected budgets 
        and any associated risks.''.

SEC. 3136. IMPROVED REPORTING FOR ANTI-SMUGGLING RADIATION DETECTION 
              SYSTEMS.

    (a) Annual Report.--Together with the submission to Congress of the 
budget of the President under section 1105(a) of title 31, United 
States Code, for each of fiscal years 2019 through 2021, the 
Administrator for Nuclear Security shall submit to the congressional 
defense committees a report regarding any anti-smuggling radiation 
detection systems that the Administrator proposes to deploy during the 
fiscal year covered by the budget.
    (b) Matters Included.--Each report under subsection (a) shall 
include the following:
            (1) The probability of detection for the anti-smuggling 
        radiation detection systems covered by the report against 
        realistic potential smuggling threats, including shielded and 
        unshielded uranium, plutonium, and other special nuclear 
        material.
            (2) The costs associated with the deployments of such 
        systems, including costs to the United States and costs to any 
        host nation.
            (3) Options for technological advances that would make 
        radiation detection less expensive or more effective.
            (4) The benefits to the national security of the United 
        States resulting from the deployments of such systems.

SEC. 3137. ANNUAL SELECTED ACQUISITION REPORTS ON CERTAIN HARDWARE 
              RELATING TO DEFENSE NUCLEAR NONPROLIFERATION.

    (a) Annual Selected Acquisition Reports.--
            (1) In general.--At the end of each fiscal year, the 
        Administrator for Nuclear Security shall submit to the 
        congressional defense committees a report on each covered 
        hardware project. The reports shall be known as Selected 
        Acquisition Reports for the covered hardware program concerned.
            (2) Matters included.--The information contained in the 
        Selected Acquisition Report for a fiscal year for a covered 
        hardware project shall be the information contained in the 
        Selected Acquisition Report for such fiscal year for a major 
        defense acquisition program under section 2432 of title 10, 
        United States Code, expressed in terms of the covered hardware 
        project.
    (b) Covered Hardware Project Defined.--In this section, the term 
``covered hardware project'' means projects carried out under the 
defense nuclear nonproliferation research and development program 
that--
            (1) are focused on the production and deployment of 
        hardware, including with respect to the development and 
        deployment of satellites or satellite payloads; and
            (2) exceed $500,000,000 in total program cost over the 
        course of five years.

SEC. 3138. ASSESSMENT OF DESIGN TRADE OPTIONS OF W80-4 WARHEAD.

    (a) Assessment.--The Director for Cost Estimating and Program 
Evaluation shall conduct an assessment of the design trade options, and 
the associated cost and benefit analyses for each such option, for the 
W80-4 warhead relating to the down-select options to be contained in 
the final Phase 6.2 study report. Such assessment shall include a 
review of the cost and schedule estimates of each such option.
    (b) Assessment and Briefing.--
            (1) NNSA.--Not later than 60 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Director shall submit to the 
        Administrator for Nuclear Security the assessment under 
        subsection (a).
            (2) Congress.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the 
        enactment of this Act, the Administrator shall provide to the 
        congressional defense committees a briefing containing a copy 
        of the hassessment under subsection (a), without change, and 
        any views of the Administrator.
            (3) Form.--The assessment submitted under paragraph (2) 
        shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a 
        classified annex.

SEC. 3139. SENSE OF CONGRESS REGARDING URANIUM MINING AND NUCLEAR 
              TESTING.

    It is the sense of Congress that the United States should 
compensate and recognize all of the miners, workers, downwinders, and 
others suffering from the effects of uranium mining and nuclear testing 
carried out during the Cold War.

SEC. 3140. PLAN TO FURTHER MINIMIZE THE USE OF HIGHLY ENRICHED URANIUM 
              FOR MEDICAL ISOTOPES.

    (a) Plan.--The Secretary of Energy, in consultation with the 
Secretary of State, shall develop and assess a plan, including with 
respect to the benefits, risks, costs, and opportunities of the plan, 
to--
            (1) take additional actions to promote the wider 
        utilization of molybdenum-99 and technetium-99m produced 
        without the use of highly enriched uranium targets, such as, at 
        a minimum, by--
                    (A) eliminating the availability of highly enriched 
                uranium for Mo-99 by buying back U.S.-origin highly 
                enriched uranium in raw or target form from global Mo-
                99 suppliers; and
                    (B) restricting or placing financial penalties on 
                the import of Mo-99 produced with highly enriched 
                uranium targets;
            (2) work with global molybdenum suppliers and regulators to 
        reduce the proliferation hazard from reprocessing waste from 
        medical isotope production containing U.S.-origin highly 
        enriched uranium; and
            (3) ensure an adequate supply of molybdenum-99 and 
        technetium-99 at all times, and both assess and mitigate any 
        risks to such supply during a transition to production without 
        the use of highly enriched uranium.
    (b) Submission.--
            (1) In general.--Not later than April 1, 2018, the 
        Secretary of Energy shall submit to the appropriate 
        congressional committees a report containing the plan and 
        assessment under subsection (a).
            (2) Form.--The report under paragraph (1) shall be 
        submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified 
        annex.
            (3) Appropriate congressional committees defined.--In this 
        section, the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' 
        means--
                    (A) the congressional defense committees;
                    (B) the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the 
                Committee on Energy and Commerce of the House of 
                Representatives; and
                    (C) the Committee on Foreign Relations and the 
                Committee on Energy and Natural Resources of the 
                Senate.

          TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD

SEC. 3201. AUTHORIZATION.

    There are authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2018, 
$30,600,000 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 XXXIV--NAVAL PETROLEUM RESERVES

SEC. 3401. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.

    (a) Amount.--There are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the 
Secretary of Energy $4,900,000 for fiscal year 2018 for the purpose of 
carrying out activities under chapter 641 of title 10, United States 
Code, relating to the naval petroleum reserves.
    (b) Period of Availability.--Funds appropriated pursuant to the 
authorization of appropriations in subsection (a) shall remain 
available until expended.

                  TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION

SEC. 3501. AUTHORIZATION OF THE MARITIME ADMINISTRATION.

    There are authorized to be appropriated to the Department of 
Transportation for fiscal year 2018, to be available without fiscal 
year limitation if so provided in appropriations Acts, for programs 
associated with maintaining the United States merchant marine, the 
following amounts:
            (1) For expenses necessary for operations of the United 
        States Merchant Marine Academy, $84,400,000, of which--
                    (A) $66,400,000 shall be for Academy operations; 
                and
                    (B) $18,000,000 shall remain available until 
                expended for capital asset management at the Academy.
            (2) For expenses necessary to support the State maritime 
        academies, $27,400,000, of which--
                    (A) $2,400,000 shall remain available until 
                September 30, 2019, for the Student Incentive Program;
                    (B) $3,000,000 shall remain available until 
                expended for direct payments to such academies; and
                    (C) $22,000,000 shall remain available until 
                expended for maintenance and repair of State maritime 
                academy training vessels.
            (3) For expenses necessary to support the National Security 
        Multi-Mission Vessel Program, $36,000,000, which shall remain 
        available until expended.
            (4) For expenses necessary to support Maritime 
        Administration operations and programs, $60,020,000.
            (5) For expenses necessary to maintain and preserve a 
        United States flag merchant marine to serve the national 
        security needs of the United States under chapter 531 of title 
        46, United States Code, $300,000,000.
            (6) For expenses necessary to provide assistance for small 
        shipyards and maritime communities under section 54101 of title 
        46, United States Code, $30,000,000, which shall remain 
        available until expended for capital and related improvements.
            (7) For the cost (as defined in section 502(5) of the 
        Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (2 U.S.C. 661a(5))) of loan 
        guarantees under the program authorized by chapter 537 of title 
        46, United States Code, $40,000,000.

SEC. 3502. MERCHANT SHIP SALES ACT OF 1946.

    (a) Amendments.--The Merchant Ship Sales Act of 1946 (50 U.S.C. 
4401 et seq.) is amended by--
            (1) repealing the first section and sections 2, 3, 5, 12, 
        and 14;
            (2) in section 8, redesignating subsection (d) as section 
        56308 of title 46, United States Code, transferring it to 
        appear after section 56307 of such title; and
            (3) redesignating section 11 as section 57100 of title 46, 
        United States Code, and transferring it to appear before 
        section 57101 of such title.
    (b) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
            (1) Section 2218 of title 10, United States Code, is 
        amended by striking ``section 11 of the Merchant Ship Sales Act 
        of 1946 (50 U.S.C. App. 1744)'' each place it appears and 
        inserting ``section 57100 of title 46''.
            (2) Section 3134 of title 40, United States Code, is 
        amended--
                    (A) by striking ``31,'' and inserting ``31 or''; 
                and
                    (B) by striking ``or the Merchant Ship Sales Act of 
                1946 (50 App. U.S.C. 1735 et seq.),''.
            (3) Section 3703a(b)(6) of title 46, United States Code, is 
        amended by striking ``section 11 of the Merchant Ship Sales Act 
        of 1946 (50 App. U.S.C. 1744)'' and inserting ``section 
        57100''.
            (4) Section 52101(c)(1)(A)(i) of title 46, United States 
        Code, is amended by striking ``section 11 of the Merchant Ship 
        Sales Act of 1946 (50 App. U.S.C. 1744)'' and inserting 
        ``section 57100''.
            (5) Section 56308 of title 46, United States Code, as 
        redesignated and transferred by subsection (a)(2) of this 
        section, is amended--
                    (A) by striking so much as precedes ``vessel 
                constructed'' and inserting the following:
``Sec. 56308. Transfer of substitute vessels
    ``In the case of any'';
                    (B) by inserting ``of Transportation'' after 
                ``Secretary''; and
                    (C) by striking ``adjustments with respect to the 
                retained vessels as provided for in section 9, and''.
            (6) Section 57100 of title 46, United States Code, as 
        redesignated and transferred by subsection (a)(3) of this 
        section, is amended--
                    (A) by striking so much as precedes the text of 
                subsection (a) and inserting the following:
``Sec. 57100. National Defense Reserve Fleet
    ``(a) Fleet Components.--'';
                    (B) in subsection (b), by inserting before the 
                first sentence the following: ``Permitted Uses.--''; 
                and
                    (C) in subsection (e)--
                            (i) by inserting before the first sentence 
                        the following: ``Exemption From Tank Vessel 
                        Construction Standards.--''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``of title 46, United 
                        States Code''.
            (7) Section 57101 of title 46, United States Code, is 
        amended by striking ``maintained under section 11 of the 
        Merchant Ship Sales Act of 1946 (50 App. 1744)''.
            (8) The analysis for chapter 563 of title 46, United States 
        Code, is amended by inserting after the item relating to 
        section 56307 the following:

``56308. Transfer of substitute vessels.''.
            (9) The analysis for chapter 571 of title 46, United States 
        Code, is amended by inserting before the item relating to 
        section 57101 the following:

``57100. National Defense Reserve Fleet.''.

SEC. 3503. MARITIME SECURITY FLEET PROGRAM; RESTRICTION ON OPERATION 
              FOR NEW ENTRANTS.

    (a) Restriction.--Section 53105(a) of title 46, United States Code, 
is amended--
            (1) in paragraph (1)(A), by inserting ``, except as 
        provided in paragraph (2),'' after ``in the foreign commerce 
        or'';
            (2) in paragraph (1)(B), by striking ``and'' after the 
        semicolon at the end;
            (3) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph (3); and
            (4) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following:
            ``(2) in the case of a vessel, other than a replacement 
        vessel under subsection (f), first covered by an operating 
        agreement after the date of the enactment of the National 
        Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018, the vessel 
        shall not be operated in the transportation of cargo between 
        points in the United States and its territories either directly 
        or via a foreign port; and''.
    (b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 53106 of title 46, United 
States Code, is amended--
            (1) in subsection (b), by striking ``section 53105(a)(1)'' 
        and inserting ``paragraph (1) and (2) of section 53105(a), as 
        otherwise applicable with respect to such vessel,''; and
            (2) in subsection (d)(3), by striking ``section 
        53105(a)(1)'' and inserting ``paragraph (1) and (2) of section 
        53105(a), as otherwise applicable with respect to such 
        vessel''.

SEC. 3504. CODIFICATION OF SECTIONS RELATING TO ACQUISITION, CHARTER, 
              AND REQUISITION OF VESSELS.

    (a) Emergency Foreign Vessel Acquisition; Purchase or Requisition 
of Vessels Lying Idle in United States Waters.--The first section of 
the Act of August 9, 1954 (ch. 659; 50 U.S.C. 196)--
            (1) is redesignated as section 56309 of title 46, United 
        States Code, and transferred to appear at the end of chapter 
        563 of such title, as otherwise amended by this title; and
            (2) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``That during'' and inserting the 
                following:
``Sec. 56309. Emergency foreign vessel acquisition; purchase or 
              requisition of vessels lying idle in United States waters
    ``During'';
                    (B) by striking ``section 902 of the Merchant 
                Marine Act, 1936, as amended'' each place it appears 
                and inserting ``this chapter''; and
                    (C) by striking ``the second paragraph of 
                subsection (d) of such section 902, as amended'' and 
                inserting ``section 56305''.
    (b) Voluntary Purchase or Charter Agreements.--Section 2 of such 
Act (50 U.S.C. 197)--
            (1) is redesignated as section 56310 of title 46, United 
        States Code, and transferred to appear after section 56309 of 
        such title (as amended by subsection (a)); and
            (2) is amended--
                    (A) by striking so much as proceeds ``During'' and 
                inserting the following:
``Sec. 56310. Voluntary purchase or charter agreements''; and
                    (B) by striking ``section 902 of the Merchant 
                Marine Act, 1936,'' and inserting ``this chapter''.
    (c) Requisitioned Vessels.--Section 3 of such Act (50 U.S.C. 198)--
            (1) is redesignated as section 56311 of title 46, United 
        States Code, and transferred to appear after section 56310 of 
        such title (as amended by subsections (a) and (b));
            (2) is amended by striking so much as precedes subsection 
        (a) and inserting the following:
``Sec. 56311. Requisitioned vessels''; and
            (3) is amended--
                    (A) except as provided in subparagraphs (B) and 
                (C), by striking ``this Act'' each place it appears and 
                inserting ``section 56309 or 56310, as applicable'';
                    (B) in subsection (c)--
                            (i) in the first sentence, by striking 
                        ``this Act'' and inserting ``section 56309 or 
                        56310, as applicable,''; and
                            (ii) by striking ``The second paragraph of 
                        section 9 of the Shipping Act, 1916, as 
                        amended,'' and inserting ``Section 57109''; and
                    (C) in subsection (d)--
                            (i) in the first sentence by striking 
                        ``provisions of section 3709 of the Revised 
                        Statutes'' and inserting ``section 6101 of 
                        title 41'';
                            (ii) in the second sentence--
                                    (I) by striking ``this Act'' and 
                                inserting ``section 56309 or 56310, as 
                                applicable,''; and
                                    (II) by striking ``said section 
                                3709'' and inserting ``section 6101 of 
                                title 41'';
                            (iii) by striking ``title VII of the 
                        Merchant Marine Act, 1936'' and inserting 
                        ``chapter 575''; and
                            (iv) by striking subsection (f).
    (d) Documented Defined.--Chapter 563 of title 46, United States 
Code, as amended by this section, is further amended by adding at the 
end the following:
``Sec. 56312. Documented defined
    ``In sections 56309 through 56311, the term `documented' means, 
with respect to a vessel, that a certificate of documentation has been 
issued for the vessel under chapter 121.''.
    (e) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 563 of title 46, 
United States Code, as otherwise amended by this title, is further 
amended by adding at the end the following:

``56309. Emergency foreign vessel acquisition; purchase or requisition 
                            of vessels lying idle in United States 
                            waters
``56310. Voluntary purchase or charter agreements
``56311. Requisitioned vessels
``56312. Documented defined''.
    (f) References.--Any reference in a law, regulation, document, 
paper, or other record of the United States to a section that is 
redesignated and transferred by this section is deemed to refer to such 
section as so redesignated and transferred.

SEC. 3505. ASSISTANCE FOR SMALL SHIPYARDS.

    (a) In General.--Section 54101 of title 46, United States Code, is 
amended--
            (1) in the section heading, by striking ``and maritime 
        communities'';
            (2) in subsection (a)(2), by striking ``in communities'' 
        and all that follows through the period and inserting 
        ``relating to shipbuilding, ship repair, and associated 
        industries.'';
            (3) in subsection (b), by amending paragraph (1) to read as 
        follows:
            ``(1) consider projects that foster--
                    ``(A) efficiency, competitive operations, and 
                quality ship construction, repair, and reconfiguration; 
                and
                    ``(B) employee skills and enhanced productivity 
                related to shipbuilding, ship repair, and associated 
                industries; and'';
            (4) in subsection (c)(1)--
                    (A) by inserting ``to'' after ``may be used''; and
                    (B) by striking subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) and 
                inserting the following:
                    ``(A) make capital and related improvements in 
                small shipyards; and
                    ``(B) provide training for workers in shipbuilding, 
                ship repair, and associated industries.'';
            (5) in subsection (d), by striking ``unless'' and all that 
        follows before the period;
            (6) in subsection (e)--
                    (A) by striking paragraph (2);
                    (B) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph 
                (2); and
                    (C) in paragraph (1) by striking ``Except as 
                provided in paragraph (2),''; and
            (7) in subsection (i), by striking ``2015'' and all that 
        follows before the period and inserting ``2018 and 2019 to 
        carry out this section $30,000,000''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 541 of title 46, 
United States Code, is amended by striking the item relating to section 
54101 and inserting the following:

``54101. Assistance for small shipyards.''.

SEC. 3506. REPORT ON SEXUAL ASSAULT VICTIM RECOVERY IN THE COAST GUARD.

    (a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the 
enactment of this Act, the Commandant of the Coast Guard shall submit 
to the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure of the House of 
Representatives and the Committee on Commerce, Science, and 
Transportation of the Senate a report on sexual assault prevention and 
response policies of the Coast Guard and strategic goals related to 
sexual assault victim recovery.
    (b) Contents.--The report shall--
            (1) describe Coast Guard strategic goals relating to sexual 
        assault climate, prevention, response, and accountability, and 
        actions taken by the Coast Guard to promote sexual assault 
        victim recovery;
            (2) explain how victim recovery is being incorporated into 
        Coast Guard strategic and programmatic guidance related to 
        sexual assault prevention and response;
            (3) examine current Coast Guard sexual assault prevention 
        and response policy with respect to--
                    (A) Coast Guard criteria for what comprises sexual 
                assault victim recovery;
                    (B) alignment of Coast Guard personnel policies to 
                enhance--
                            (i) an approach to sexual assault response 
                        that gives priority to victim recovery;
                            (ii) upholding individual privacy and 
                        dignity; and
                            (iii) the opportunity for the continuation 
                        of Coast Guard service by sexual assault 
                        victims; and
                    (C) sexual harassment response, including a 
                description of the circumstances under which sexual 
                harassment is considered a criminal offense; and
            (4) to ensure victims and supervisors understand the full 
        scope of resources available to aid in long-term recovery, 
        explain how the Coast Guard informs its workforce about changes 
        to sexual assault prevention and response policies related to 
        victim recovery.

SEC. 3507. CENTERS OF EXCELLENCE.

    (a) In General.--Chapter 541 of title 46, United States Code, is 
amended by adding at the end the following:
``Sec. 54102. Centers of excellence for domestic maritime workforce 
              training and education
    ``(a) Designation.--The Secretary of Transportation may designate 
as a center of excellence for domestic maritime workforce training and 
education a covered training entity located in a State that borders on 
the--
            ``(1) Gulf of Mexico;
            ``(2) Atlantic Ocean;
            ``(3) Long Island Sound;
            ``(4) Pacific Ocean;
            ``(5) Great Lakes; or
            ``(6) Mississippi River System.
    ``(b) Assistance.--The Secretary may enter into a cooperative 
agreement (as that term is used in section 6305 of title 31) with a 
center of excellence designated under subsection (a) to support 
maritime workforce training and education at the center of excellence, 
including efforts of the center of excellence to--
            ``(1) admit additional students;
            ``(2) recruit and train faculty;
            ``(3) expand facilities;
            ``(4) create new maritime career pathways; or
            ``(5) award students credit for prior experience, including 
        military service.
    ``(c) Covered Training Entity Defined.--In this section, the term 
`covered training entity' means an entity that is--
            ``(1) a community or technical college; or
            ``(2) a maritime training center--
                    ``(A) operated by, or under the supervision of, a 
                State; and
                    ``(B) with a maritime training program in operation 
                on the date of enactment of this section.''.
    (b) Clerical Amendment.--The analysis for chapter 541 of title 46, 
United States Code, is amended by inserting after the item relating to 
section 54101 the following:

``54102. Centers of excellence for domestic maritime workforce training 
                            and education.''.

SEC. 3508. FOREIGN SPILL PROTECTION.

    (a) Short Title.--This section may be cited as the ``Foreign Spill 
Protection Act of 2017''.
    (b) Liability of Owners and Operators of Foreign Facilities.--
            (1) Oil pollution control act amendments.--
                    (A) Definitions.--Section 1001 of the Oil Pollution 
                Act of 1990 (33 U.S.C. 2701) is amended--
                            (i) in paragraph (26)(A)--
                                    (I) in clause (ii), by striking 
                                ``onshore or offshore facility, any 
                                person'' and inserting ``onshore 
                                facility, offshore facility, or foreign 
                                offshore unit or other facility located 
                                seaward of the exclusive economic zone, 
                                any person or entity''; and
                                    (II) in clause (iii), by striking 
                                ``offshore facility, the person who'' 
                                and inserting ``offshore facility or 
                                foreign offshore unit or other facility 
                                located seaward of the exclusive 
                                economic zone, the person or entity 
                                that''; and
                            (ii) in paragraph (32)--
                                    (I) by redesignating subparagraphs 
                                (D) through (F) as subparagraphs (E) 
                                through (G), respectively;
                                    (II) by inserting after 
                                subparagraph (C) the following:
                    ``(D) Foreign facilities.--In the case of a foreign 
                offshore unit or other facility located seaward of the 
                exclusive economic zone, any person or other entity 
                owning or operating the facility, and any leaseholder, 
                permit holder, assignee, or holder of a right of use 
                and easement granted under applicable foreign law for 
                the area in which the facility is located.''; and
                                    (III) in subparagraph (G), as so 
                                redesignated, by striking ``or offshore 
                                facility, the persons who'' and 
                                inserting ``, offshore facility, or 
                                foreign offshore unit or other facility 
                                located seaward of the exclusive 
                                economic zone, the persons or entities 
                                that''.
                    (B) Actions on behalf of fund.--Section 1015(c) of 
                the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (33 U.S.C. 2715(c)) is 
                amended, in the third sentence, by adding before the 
                period at the end the following: ``or other facility 
                located seaward of the exclusive economic zone''.
            (2) Federal water pollution control act amendments.--
        Section 311(a)(11) of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act 
        (33 U.S.C. 1321(a)(11)) is amended--
                    (A) by striking ``and any facility'' and inserting 
                ``any facility''; and
                    (B) by inserting ``, and, for the purposes of 
                applying subsections (b), (c), (e), and (o), any 
                foreign offshore unit (as defined in section 1001 of 
                the Oil Pollution Act) or any other facility located 
                seaward of the exclusive economic zone'' after ``public 
                vessel''.
    (c) Continuation Pay.--For providing continuation pay under section 
356 of title 37, United States Code, there is appropriated, out of any 
money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to the ``Retired 
Pay'' account under the heading ``Department of Homeland Security-Coast 
Guard'' in the applicable appropriations Acts for the Department of 
Homeland Security--
            (1) $3,286,277 for fiscal year 2018; and
            (2) $3,713,232 for fiscal year 2019.

SEC. 3509. APPLICATION OF LAW.

    Section 4301 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following:
    ``(d) For purposes of any Federal law except the Federal Water 
Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.), any vessel, including a 
foreign vessel, being repaired or dismantled is deemed to be a 
recreational vessel, as defined under section 2101(25), during such 
repair or dismantling, if that vessel--
            ``(1) shares elements of design and construction of 
        traditional recreational vessels (as so defined); and
            ``(2) when operating is not normally engaged in a military, 
        commercial, or traditionally commercial undertaking.''.

SEC. 3510. RECOURSE FOR NON-U.S. SEAMEN.

    Section 57103 of title 46, United States Code, is amended by adding 
at the end the following:
    ``(g) Restriction.--(1) Notwithstanding section 30104, a claim for 
damages or expenses relating to personal injury, illness, or death of a 
seaman who is a citizen of a foreign nation, arising during or from the 
engagement of the seaman by or for a passenger vessel duly registered 
under the laws of a foreign nation or a vessel identified as obsolete 
under subsection (a) or acquired under chapter 563, may not be brought 
under the laws of the United States if--
                    ``(A) such seaman was not a legal permanent 
                resident of the United States at the time the claim 
                arose;
                    ``(B) the injury, illness, or death arose outside 
                the territorial waters of the United States; and
                    ``(C) the seaman or the seaman's personal 
                representative has or had a right to seek compensation 
                for the injury, illness, or death in, or under the laws 
                of--
                            ``(i) the nation in which the vessel was 
                        registered at the time the claim arose; or
                            ``(ii) the nation in which the seaman 
                        maintained citizenship or residency at the time 
                        the claim arose.
            ``(2) Compensation defined.--As used in paragraph (1), the 
        term `compensation' means--
                    ``(A) a statutory workers' compensation remedy that 
                complies with Standard A4.2 of Regulation 4.2 of the 
                Maritime Labour Convention, 2006; or
                    ``(B) in the absence of the remedy described in 
                paragraph (1), a legal remedy that complies with 
                Standard A4.2 of Regulation 4.2 of the Maritime Labour 
                Convention, 2006, that permits recovery for lost wages, 
                pain and suffering, and future medical expenses.''.

                       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.--A decision 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--
            (1) be based on merit-based selection procedures in 
        accordance with the requirements of sections 2304(k) and 2374 
        of title 10, United States Code, or on competitive procedures; 
        and
            (2) comply with 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 or section 1512 of this Act or any other provision of law, 
unless such transfer or reprogramming would move funds between 
appropriation accounts.
    (d) Applicability to Classified Annex.--This section applies to any 
classified annex that accompanies this Act.
    (e) Oral and Written Communications.--No oral or written 
communication concerning any amount specified in the funding tables in 
this division shall supersede the requirements of this section.

                         TITLE XLI--PROCUREMENT

SEC. 4101. PROCUREMENT.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
            SEC. 4101. PROCUREMENT (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             FY 2018          House
      Line                 Item              Request        Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
                   ARMY
                  FIXED WING
002               UTILITY F/W AIRCRAFT.          75,115          75,115
004               MQ-1 UAV.............          30,206          90,206
                      Unfunded                                  [60,000]
                      requirement.
                  ROTARY
005               HELICOPTER, LIGHT             108,383         108,383
                   UTILITY (LUH).
006               AH-64 APACHE BLOCK            725,976         725,976
                   IIIA REMAN.
007                  ADVANCE                    170,910         170,910
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
008               AH-64 APACHE BLOCK            374,100         648,500
                   IIIB NEW BUILD.
                      Unfunded                                 [274,400]
                      requirement.
009                  ADVANCE                     71,900          71,900
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
010               UH-60 BLACKHAWK M             938,308       1,224,710
                   MODEL (MYP).
                      Unfunded                                 [100,000]
                      requirement--addi
                      tional 5 for ARNG.
                      Unfunded                                 [186,402]
                      requirement--UH-6
                      0M ECPs.
011                  ADVANCE                     86,295          86,295
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
012               UH-60 BLACK HAWK A             76,516          93,216
                   AND L MODELS.
                      Unfunded                                  [16,700]
                      requirement--UH-6
                      0Vs.
013               CH-47 HELICOPTER.....         202,576         557,076
                      Emergent                                 [108,000]
                      requirements--add
                      itional 4 CH-47F
                      Block I.
                      Unfunded                                 [246,500]
                      requirement--addi
                      tional 4 MH-47Gs.
014                  ADVANCE                     17,820          17,820
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   AIRCRAFT
015               MQ-1 PAYLOAD (MIP)...           5,910          29,910
                      Realign European                           [8,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [16,000]
                      requirement.
016               UNIVERSAL GROUND               15,000          15,000
                   CONTROL EQUIPMENT
                   (UAS).
017               GRAY EAGLE MODS2.....          74,291          74,291
018               MULTI SENSOR ABN               68,812         127,762
                   RECON (MIP).
                      Realign European                          [29,475]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [29,475]
                      requirement.
019               AH-64 MODS...........         238,141         382,941
                      Unfunded                                 [144,800]
                      requirement.
020               CH-47 CARGO                    20,166          81,166
                   HELICOPTER MODS
                   (MYP).
                      Unfunded                                  [61,000]
                      requirement.
021               GRCS SEMA MODS (MIP).           5,514           5,514
022               ARL SEMA MODS (MIP)..          11,650          11,650
023               EMARSS SEMA MODS               15,279          15,279
                   (MIP).
024               UTILITY/CARGO                  57,737          57,737
                   AIRPLANE MODS.
025               UTILITY HELICOPTER              5,900           5,900
                   MODS.
026               NETWORK AND MISSION           142,102         142,102
                   PLAN.
027               COMMS, NAV                    166,050         207,630
                   SURVEILLANCE.
                      Unfunded                                  [41,580]
                      requirement--ARC-
                      201D encrypted
                      radios.
028               GATM ROLLUP..........          37,403          37,403
029               RQ-7 UAV MODS........          83,160         194,160
                      Unfunded                                 [111,000]
                      requirement.
030               UAS MODS.............          26,109          26,429
                      Unfunded                                     [320]
                      requirement.
                  GROUND SUPPORT
                   AVIONICS
031               AIRCRAFT                       70,913          70,913
                   SURVIVABILITY
                   EQUIPMENT.
032               SURVIVABILITY CM.....           5,884           5,884
033               CMWS.................          26,825          26,825
034               COMMON INFRARED                 6,337           6,337
                   COUNTERMEASURES
                   (CIRCM).
                  OTHER SUPPORT
035               AVIONICS SUPPORT                7,038           7,038
                   EQUIPMENT.
036               COMMON GROUND                  47,404          56,304
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Unfunded                                   [1,800]
                      requirement--grow
                      the Army.
                      Unfunded                                   [7,100]
                      requirement--Non
                      destructive test
                      equip.
037               AIRCREW INTEGRATED             47,066          47,066
                   SYSTEMS.
038               AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL..          83,790          84,905
                      Unfunded                                   [1,115]
                      requirement.
039               INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES           1,397           1,397
040               LAUNCHER, 2.75 ROCKET           1,911           1,911
                       TOTAL AIRCRAFT         4,149,894       5,593,561
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       ARMY.
 
                  MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
                   ARMY
                  SURFACE-TO-AIR
                   MISSILE SYSTEM
001               LOWER TIER AIR AND            140,826         140,826
                   MISSILE DEFENSE
                   (AMD).
002               MSE MISSILE..........         459,040         459,040
003               INDIRECT FIRE                  57,742          57,742
                   PROTECTION
                   CAPABILITY INC 2-I.
                  AIR-TO-SURFACE
                   MISSILE SYSTEM
005               HELLFIRE SYS SUMMARY.          94,790          94,790
006               JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND           178,432         173,432
                   MSLS (JAGM).
                      Program decrease.                         [-5,000]
                  ANTI-TANK/ASSAULT
                   MISSILE SYS
008               JAVELIN (AAWS-M)              110,123         118,235
                   SYSTEM SUMMARY.
                      Realign European                           [8,112]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
009               TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY.          85,851          89,758
                      Realign European                           [3,907]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
010                  ADVANCE                     19,949          19,949
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
011               GUIDED MLRS ROCKET            595,182         593,882
                   (GMLRS).
                      Program                                   [-2,800]
                      reduction--unit
                      cost savings.
                      Unfunded                                   [1,500]
                      requirement--trai
                      ning devices.
012               MLRS REDUCED RANGE             28,321          28,321
                   PRACTICE ROCKETS
                   (RRPR).
013               HIGH MOBILITY                                 476,728
                   ARTILLERY ROCKET
                   SYSTEM (HIMARS.
                      Realign European                          [41,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                 [197,000]
                      requirement--ERI.
                      Unfunded                                 [238,728]
                      requirement--grow
                      the Army.
                  MODIFICATIONS
015               PATRIOT MODS.........         329,073         329,073
016               ATACMS MODS..........         116,040         116,040
017               GMLRS MOD............             531             531
018               STINGER MODS.........          63,090          91,090
                      Realign European                          [28,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
019               AVENGER MODS.........          62,931          62,931
020               ITAS/TOW MODS........           3,500           3,500
021               MLRS MODS............         138,235         187,035
                      Unfunded                                  [48,800]
                      requirement.
022               HIMARS MODIFICATIONS.           9,566           9,566
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
023               SPARES AND REPAIR              18,915          18,915
                   PARTS.
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
                   FACILITIES
024               AIR DEFENSE TARGETS..           5,728           5,728
026               PRODUCTION BASE                 1,189           1,189
                   SUPPORT.
                       TOTAL MISSILE          2,519,054       3,078,301
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       ARMY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV,
                   ARMY
                  TRACKED COMBAT
                   VEHICLES
001               BRADLEY PROGRAM......                         200,000
                      Realign European                         [200,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
002               ARMORED MULTI PURPOSE         193,715         447,618
                   VEHICLE (AMPV).
                      Realign European                         [253,903]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   TRACKED COMBAT
                   VEHICLES
004               STRYKER (MOD)........          97,552          97,552
005               STRYKER UPGRADE......                         348,000
                      Unfunded                                 [348,000]
                      requirement -
                      completes 4th DVH
                      SBCT.
006               BRADLEY PROGRAM (MOD)         444,851         585,851
                      Realign European                          [30,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                 [111,000]
                      requirement.
007               M109 FOV                       64,230          64,230
                   MODIFICATIONS.
008               PALADIN INTEGRATED            646,413         772,149
                   MANAGEMENT (PIM).
                      Realign European                         [125,736]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
009               IMPROVED RECOVERY              72,402         194,402
                   VEHICLE (M88A2
                   HERCULES).
                      Unfunded                                 [122,000]
                      requirement.
010               ASSAULT BRIDGE (MOD).           5,855           5,855
011               ASSAULT BREACHER               34,221          64,221
                   VEHICLE.
                      Unfunded                                  [30,000]
                      requirement.
012               M88 FOV MODS.........           4,826           4,826
013               JOINT ASSAULT BRIDGE.         128,350         128,350
014               M1 ABRAMS TANK (MOD).         248,826         558,526
                      Realign European                         [138,700]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                 [171,000]
                      requirement.
015               ABRAMS UPGRADE                275,000       1,092,800
                   PROGRAM.
                      Realign European                         [442,800]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                 [375,000]
                      requirement.
                  WEAPONS & OTHER
                   COMBAT VEHICLES
018               M240 MEDIUM MACHINE             1,992           3,292
                   GUN (7.62MM).
                      Unfunded                                   [1,300]
                      requirement.
019               MULTI-ROLE ANTI-ARMOR           6,520          58,520
                   ANTI-PERSONNEL
                   WEAPON S.
                      Unfunded                                  [52,000]
                      requirement.
020               MORTAR SYSTEMS.......          21,452          34,552
                      Unfunded                                  [13,100]
                      requirement--120m
                      m mortars.
021               XM320 GRENADE                   4,524           5,324
                   LAUNCHER MODULE
                   (GLM).
                      Unfunded                                     [800]
                      requirement.
023               CARBINE..............          43,150          51,150
                      Unfunded                                   [5,000]
                      requirement.
                      Unfunded                                   [3,000]
                      requirement--grow
                      the Army.
024               COMMON REMOTELY                   750          10,750
                   OPERATED WEAPONS
                   STATION.
                      Unfunded                                  [10,000]
                      requirement--modi
                      fications.
025               HANDGUN..............           8,326           8,726
                      Unfunded                                     [400]
                      requirement.
                  MOD OF WEAPONS AND
                   OTHER COMBAT VEH
026               MK-19 GRENADE MACHINE           2,000           2,000
                   GUN MODS.
027               M777 MODS............           3,985          89,785
                      Unfunded                                  [85,800]
                      requirement.
028               M4 CARBINE MODS......          31,315          31,315
029               M2 50 CAL MACHINE GUN          47,414          52,414
                   MODS.
                      Unfunded                                   [2,600]
                      requirement--acce
                      ssories.
                      Unfunded                                   [2,400]
                      requirement--M2A1
                      machine guns.
030               M249 SAW MACHINE GUN            3,339           3,339
                   MODS.
031               M240 MEDIUM MACHINE             4,577          11,177
                   GUN MODS.
                      Unfunded                                   [1,000]
                      requirement--acce
                      ssories.
                      Unfunded                                   [5,600]
                      requirement--M240
                      Ls.
032               SNIPER RIFLES                   1,488           1,488
                   MODIFICATIONS.
033               M119 MODIFICATIONS...          12,678          12,678
034               MORTAR MODIFICATION..           3,998           3,998
035               MODIFICATIONS LESS              2,219           2,219
                   THAN $5.0M (WOCV-
                   WTCV).
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
                   FACILITIES
036               ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M           5,075           7,775
                   (WOCV-WTCV).
                      Unfunded                                   [2,700]
                      requirement.
037               PRODUCTION BASE                   992             992
                   SUPPORT (WOCV-WTCV).
039               SMALL ARMS EQUIPMENT            1,573           1,573
                   (SOLDIER ENH PROG).
                  UNDISTRIBUTED
042               UNDISTRIBUTED........                           1,200
                      Security Force                             [1,200]
                      Assistance
                      Brigade.
                       TOTAL                  2,423,608       4,958,647
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       W&TCV, ARMY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF
                   AMMUNITION, ARMY
                  SMALL/MEDIUM CAL
                   AMMUNITION
001               CTG, 5.56MM, ALL               39,767          39,767
                   TYPES.
002               CTG, 7.62MM, ALL               46,804          46,804
                   TYPES.
003               CTG, HANDGUN, ALL              10,413          10,418
                   TYPES.
                      Realign European                               [5]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
004               CTG, .50 CAL, ALL              62,837          62,958
                   TYPES.
                      Realign European                             [121]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
005               CTG, 20MM, ALL TYPES.           8,208           8,208
006               CTG, 25MM, ALL TYPES.           8,640           8,640
007               CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES.          76,850         101,850
                      Realign European                          [25,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
008               CTG, 40MM, ALL TYPES.         108,189         108,189
                  MORTAR AMMUNITION
009               60MM MORTAR, ALL               57,359          57,359
                   TYPES.
010               81MM MORTAR, ALL               49,471          49,471
                   TYPES.
011               120MM MORTAR, ALL              91,528          91,528
                   TYPES.
                  TANK AMMUNITION
012               CARTRIDGES, TANK,             133,500         133,500
                   105MM AND 120MM, ALL
                   TYPES.
                  ARTILLERY AMMUNITION
013               ARTILLERY CARTRIDGES,          44,200          44,200
                   75MM & 105MM, ALL
                   TYPES.
014               ARTILLERY PROJECTILE,         187,149         187,149
                   155MM, ALL TYPES.
015               PROJ 155MM EXTENDED            49,000         251,545
                   RANGE M982.
                      Realign European                          [19,045]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                 [183,500]
                      requirement.
016               ARTILLERY                      83,046          99,724
                   PROPELLANTS, FUZES
                   AND PRIMERS, ALL.
                      Realign European                          [16,678]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  MINES
017               MINES & CLEARING                3,942          15,557
                   CHARGES, ALL TYPES.
                      Realign European                          [11,615]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  ROCKETS
019               SHOULDER LAUNCHED               5,000           5,000
                   MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES.
020               ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL         161,155         161,155
                   TYPES.
                  OTHER AMMUNITION
021               CAD/PAD, ALL TYPES...           7,441           7,441
022               DEMOLITION MUNITIONS,          19,345          19,345
                   ALL TYPES.
023               GRENADES, ALL TYPES..          22,759          22,759
024               SIGNALS, ALL TYPES...           2,583           2,583
025               SIMULATORS, ALL TYPES          13,084          13,084
                  MISCELLANEOUS
026               AMMO COMPONENTS, ALL           12,237          12,237
                   TYPES.
027               NON-LETHAL                      1,500           1,500
                   AMMUNITION, ALL
                   TYPES.
028               ITEMS LESS THAN $5             10,730          10,730
                   MILLION (AMMO).
029               AMMUNITION PECULIAR            16,425          16,425
                   EQUIPMENT.
030               FIRST DESTINATION              15,221          15,221
                   TRANSPORTATION
                   (AMMO).
                  PRODUCTION BASE
                   SUPPORT
032               INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES         329,356         429,356
                      Unfunded                                 [100,000]
                      requirement.
033               CONVENTIONAL                  197,825         197,825
                   MUNITIONS
                   DEMILITARIZATION.
034               ARMS INITIATIVE......           3,719           3,719
                       TOTAL                  1,879,283       2,235,247
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       AMMUNITION, ARMY.
 
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT,
                   ARMY
                  TACTICAL VEHICLES
001               TACTICAL TRAILERS/              9,716           9,716
                   DOLLY SETS.
002               SEMITRAILERS,                  14,151          36,151
                   FLATBED:.
                      Unfunded                                  [22,000]
                      requirement--addi
                      tional M872s.
003               AMBULANCE, 4 LITTER,           53,000          87,792
                   5/4 TON, 4X4.
                      Unfunded                                  [34,792]
                      requirement.
004               GROUND MOBILITY                40,935          40,935
                   VEHICLES (GMV).
006               JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL          804,440         804,440
                   VEHICLE.
007               TRUCK, DUMP, 20T                  967             967
                   (CCE).
008               FAMILY OF MEDIUM               78,650         241,944
                   TACTICAL VEH (FMTV).
                      Unfunded                                 [154,100]
                      requirement--FMTV
                      s.
                      Unfunded                                   [9,194]
                      requirement--trai
                      lers.
009               FIRETRUCKS &                   19,404          19,404
                   ASSOCIATED
                   FIREFIGHTING EQUIP.
010               FAMILY OF HEAVY                81,656         114,658
                   TACTICAL VEHICLES
                   (FHTV).
                      Realign European                          [25,874]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                   [7,128]
                      requirement--forw
                      ard repair
                      systems.
011               PLS ESP..............           7,129          59,729
                      Unfunded                                  [52,600]
                      requirement.
012               HVY EXPANDED MOBILE                           150,878
                   TACTICAL TRUCK EXT
                   SERV.
                      Realign European                          [38,628]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                 [112,250]
                      requirement.
013               TACTICAL WHEELED               43,040          43,040
                   VEHICLE PROTECTION
                   KITS.
014               MODIFICATION OF IN             83,940          89,470
                   SVC EQUIP.
                      Realign European                           [2,599]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                   [2,931]
                      requirement--CTE
                      equipment.
                  NON-TACTICAL VEHICLES
016               HEAVY ARMORED SEDAN..             269             269
017               PASSENGER CARRYING              1,320           1,320
                   VEHICLES.
018               NONTACTICAL VEHICLES,           6,964           6,964
                   OTHER.
                  COMM--JOINT
                   COMMUNICATIONS
019               WIN-T--GROUND FORCES          420,492         420,492
                   TACTICAL NETWORK.
020               SIGNAL MODERNIZATION           92,718          92,718
                   PROGRAM.
021               TACTICAL NETWORK              150,497         227,997
                   TECHNOLOGY MOD IN
                   SVC.
                      Program reduction                        [-10,000]
                      Unfunded                                  [87,500]
                      requirement.
022               JOINT INCIDENT SITE             6,065           6,065
                   COMMUNICATIONS
                   CAPABILITY.
023               JCSE EQUIPMENT                  5,051           5,051
                   (USREDCOM).
                  COMM--SATELLITE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
024               DEFENSE ENTERPRISE            161,383         161,383
                   WIDEBAND SATCOM
                   SYSTEMS.
025               TRANSPORTABLE                  62,600          62,600
                   TACTICAL COMMAND
                   COMMUNICATIONS.
026               SHF TERM.............          11,622          11,622
028               SMART-T (SPACE)......           6,799           6,799
029               GLOBAL BRDCST SVC--             7,065           7,065
                   GBS.
031               ENROUTE MISSION                21,667          21,667
                   COMMAND (EMC).
                  COMM--COMBAT SUPPORT
                   COMM
033               MOD-IN-SERVICE                     70              70
                   PROFILER.
                  COMM--C3 SYSTEM
034               ARMY GLOBAL CMD &               2,658           2,658
                   CONTROL SYS (AGCCS).
                  COMM--COMBAT
                   COMMUNICATIONS
036               HANDHELD MANPACK              355,351         363,760
                   SMALL FORM FIT (HMS).
                      Unfunded                                   [8,409]
                      requirement.
037               MID-TIER NETWORKING            25,100          25,100
                   VEHICULAR RADIO
                   (MNVR).
038               RADIO TERMINAL SET,            11,160          11,160
                   MIDS LVT(2).
040               TRACTOR DESK.........           2,041           2,041
041               TRACTOR RIDE.........           5,534          13,734
                      Unfunded                                   [8,200]
                      requirement.
042               SPIDER APLA REMOTE                996             996
                   CONTROL UNIT.
043               SPIDER FAMILY OF                4,500           6,858
                   NETWORKED MUNITIONS
                   INCR.
                      Unfunded                                   [2,358]
                      requirement.
045               TACTICAL                        4,411           4,411
                   COMMUNICATIONS AND
                   PROTECTIVE SYSTEM.
046               UNIFIED COMMAND SUITE          15,275          15,275
047               FAMILY OF MED COMM             15,964          16,725
                   FOR COMBAT CASUALTY
                   CARE.
                      Unfunded                                     [761]
                      requirement.
                  COMM--INTELLIGENCE
                   COMM
049               CI AUTOMATION                   9,560           9,560
                   ARCHITECTURE.
050               DEFENSE MILITARY                4,030           4,030
                   DECEPTION INITIATIVE.
                  INFORMATION SECURITY
054               COMMUNICATIONS                107,804         130,667
                   SECURITY (COMSEC).
                      Unfunded                                  [22,863]
                      Requirement.
055               DEFENSIVE CYBER                53,436          61,436
                   OPERATIONS.
                      Unfunded                                   [8,000]
                      Requirement.
056               INSIDER THREAT                    690             690
                   PROGRAM--UNIT
                   ACTIVITY MONITO.
057               PERSISTENT CYBER                4,000           4,000
                   TRAINING ENVIRONMENT.
                  COMM--LONG HAUL
                   COMMUNICATIONS
058               BASE SUPPORT                   43,751          51,290
                   COMMUNICATIONS.
                      Unfunded                                   [7,539]
                      requirement--firs
                      t responder
                      communication
                      equipment.
                  COMM--BASE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
059               INFORMATION SYSTEMS..         118,101         118,101
060               EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT            4,490           4,490
                   MODERNIZATION
                   PROGRAM.
061               HOME STATION MISSION           20,050          20,050
                   COMMAND CENTERS
                   (HSMCC).
062               INSTALLATION INFO             186,251         188,751
                   INFRASTRUCTURE MOD
                   PROGRAM.
                      Realign European                           [2,500]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  ELECT EQUIP--TACT INT
                   REL ACT (TIARA)
065               JTT/CIBS-M...........          12,154          19,754
                      Unfunded                                   [7,600]
                      requirement.
068               DCGS-A (MIP).........         274,782         295,494
                      Unfunded                                  [20,712]
                      requirement.
070               TROJAN (MIP).........          16,052          35,212
                      Realign European                           [6,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [13,160]
                      requirement.
071               MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP            51,034          51,034
                   (INTEL SPT) (MIP).
072               CI HUMINT AUTO                  7,815           7,815
                   REPRTING AND
                   COLL(CHARCS).
073               CLOSE ACCESS TARGET             8,050           8,050
                   RECONNAISSANCE
                   (CATR).
074               MACHINE FOREIGN                   567             567
                   LANGUAGE TRANSLATION
                   SYSTEM-M.
                  ELECT EQUIP--
                   ELECTRONIC WARFARE
                   (EW)
076               LIGHTWEIGHT COUNTER            20,459          20,459
                   MORTAR RADAR.
077               EW PLANNING &                   5,805           5,805
                   MANAGEMENT TOOLS
                   (EWPMT).
078               AIR VIGILANCE (AV)...           5,348           5,348
081               COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/              469           6,369
                   SECURITY
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
                      Realign European                           [5,900]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
082               CI MODERNIZATION.....             285             285
                  ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
                   SURV. (TAC SURV)
083               SENTINEL MODS........          28,491         100,491
                      Unfunded                                  [72,000]
                      requirement.
084               NIGHT VISION DEVICES.         166,493         229,389
                      Unfunded                                  [47,147]
                      requirement--grow
                      the Army.
                      Unfunded                                  [15,749]
                      requirement--LTLM
                      enhancement.
085               SMALL TACTICAL                 13,947          13,947
                   OPTICAL RIFLE
                   MOUNTED MLRF.
087               INDIRECT FIRE                  21,380         456,003
                   PROTECTION FAMILY OF
                   SYSTEMS.
                      Unfunded                                 [434,623]
                      requirement--Air
                      and Missile
                      Defense (SHORAD).
088               FAMILY OF WEAPON               59,105          59,105
                   SIGHTS (FWS).
089               ARTILLERY ACCURACY              2,129           2,129
                   EQUIP.
091               JOINT BATTLE COMMAND--        282,549         344,949
                   PLATFORM (JBC-P).
                      Realign European                           [2,300]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [60,100]
                      requirement.
092               JOINT EFFECTS                  48,664          48,664
                   TARGETING SYSTEM
                   (JETS).
093               MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP             5,198           9,172
                   (LLDR).
                      Realign European                           [3,974]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
094               COMPUTER BALLISTICS:            8,117           8,117
                   LHMBC XM32.
095               MORTAR FIRE CONTROL            31,813          47,588
                   SYSTEM.
                      Realign European                              [75]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [15,700]
                      requirement.
096               COUNTERFIRE RADARS...         329,057         393,257
                      Unfunded                                  [64,200]
                      requirement.
                  ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
                   C2 SYSTEMS
097               FIRE SUPPORT C2                 8,700          13,458
                   FAMILY.
                      Unfunded                                   [4,758]
                      requirement.
098               AIR & MSL DEFENSE              26,635         132,713
                   PLANNING & CONTROL
                   SYS.
                      Realign European                           [9,100]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [96,978]
                      requirement.
100               LIFE CYCLE SOFTWARE             1,992           1,992
                   SUPPORT (LCSS).
101               NETWORK MANAGEMENT             15,179          15,179
                   INITIALIZATION AND
                   SERVICE.
102               MANEUVER CONTROL              132,572         137,174
                   SYSTEM (MCS).
                      Unfunded                                   [4,602]
                      requirement.
103               GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT          37,201          37,201
                   SYSTEM-ARMY (GCSS-A).
104               INTEGRATED PERSONNEL           16,140          16,140
                   AND PAY SYSTEM-ARMY
                   (IPP.
105               RECONNAISSANCE AND              6,093          20,848
                   SURVEYING INSTRUMENT
                   SET.
                      Unfunded                                  [14,755]
                      requirement.
106               MOD OF IN-SVC                   1,134           1,134
                   EQUIPMENT (ENFIRE).
                  ELECT EQUIP--
                   AUTOMATION
107               ARMY TRAINING                  11,575          11,575
                   MODERNIZATION.
108               AUTOMATED DATA                 91,983          91,983
                   PROCESSING EQUIP.
109               GENERAL FUND                    4,465           4,465
                   ENTERPRISE BUSINESS
                   SYSTEMS FAM.
110               HIGH PERF COMPUTING            66,363          66,363
                   MOD PGM (HPCMP).
111               CONTRACT WRITING                1,001           1,001
                   SYSTEM.
112               RESERVE COMPONENT              26,183          26,183
                   AUTOMATION SYS
                   (RCAS).
                  ELECT EQUIP--AUDIO
                   VISUAL SYS (A/V)
113               TACTICAL DIGITAL                4,441           4,441
                   MEDIA.
114               ITEMS LESS THAN $5M             3,414          16,414
                   (SURVEYING
                   EQUIPMENT).
                      Unfunded                                  [10,000]
                      requirement.
                      Unfunded                                   [3,000]
                      requirement--glob
                      al positioning
                      system.
                  ELECT EQUIP--SUPPORT
115               PRODUCTION BASE                   499             499
                   SUPPORT (C-E).
116               BCT EMERGING                   25,050          25,050
                   TECHNOLOGIES.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
116A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..           4,819           4,819
                  CHEMICAL DEFENSIVE
                   EQUIPMENT
117               PROTECTIVE SYSTEMS...           1,613           1,613
118               FAMILY OF NON-LETHAL            9,696          23,696
                   EQUIPMENT (FNLE).
                      Unfunded                                  [14,000]
                      Requirement.
120               CBRN DEFENSE.........          11,110          11,110
                  BRIDGING EQUIPMENT
121               TACTICAL BRIDGING....          16,610          16,610
122               TACTICAL BRIDGE,               21,761          43,761
                   FLOAT-RIBBON.
                      Unfunded                                  [22,000]
                      requirement.
124               COMMON BRIDGE                  21,046          61,446
                   TRANSPORTER (CBT)
                   RECAP.
                      Unfunded                                  [40,400]
                      requirement.
                  ENGINEER (NON-
                   CONSTRUCTION)
                   EQUIPMENT
125               HANDHELD STANDOFF               5,000          17,800
                   MINEFIELD DETECTION
                   SYS-HST.
                      Unfunded                                   [5,600]
                      requirement--grow
                      the Army.
                      Unfunded                                   [7,200]
                      requirement--PSS-
                      14Cs.
126               GRND STANDOFF MINE             32,442          32,442
                   DETECTN SYSM
                   (GSTAMIDS).
127               AREA MINE DETECTION            10,571          10,571
                   SYSTEM (AMDS).
128               HUSKY MOUNTED                  21,695          21,695
                   DETECTION SYSTEM
                   (HMDS).
129               ROBOTIC COMBAT                  4,516          19,616
                   SUPPORT SYSTEM
                   (RCSS).
                      Unfunded                                  [15,100]
                      requirement--M160
                      s.
130               EOD ROBOTICS SYSTEMS           10,073          15,073
                   RECAPITALIZATION.
                      Unfunded                                   [5,000]
                      requiremet.
131               ROBOTICS AND APPLIQUE           3,000           3,000
                   SYSTEMS.
133               REMOTE DEMOLITION               5,847           7,039
                   SYSTEMS.
                      Unfunded                                   [1,192]
                      requirement--radi
                      o frequency
                      remote activated
                      munitions.
134               < $5M, COUNTERMINE              1,530           1,530
                   EQUIPMENT.
135               FAMILY OF BOATS AND             4,302          12,302
                   MOTORS.
                      Unfunded                                   [8,000]
                      requirement.
                  COMBAT SERVICE
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
136               HEATERS AND ECU'S....           7,405          16,461
                      Unfunded                                   [9,056]
                      requirement.
137               SOLDIER ENHANCEMENT..           1,095           1,095
138               PERSONNEL RECOVERY              5,390           5,390
                   SUPPORT SYSTEM
                   (PRSS).
139               GROUND SOLDIER SYSTEM          38,219          42,808
                      Unfunded                                   [4,589]
                      requirement.
140               MOBILE SOLDIER POWER.          10,456          12,018
                      Unfunded                                   [1,562]
                      requirement.
141               FORCE PROVIDER.......                          13,850
                      Unfunded                                  [13,850]
                      requirement.
142               FIELD FEEDING                  15,340          29,740
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Unfunded                                  [14,400]
                      requirement.
143               CARGO AERIAL DEL &             30,607          30,607
                   PERSONNEL PARACHUTE
                   SYSTEM.
144               FAMILY OF ENGR COMBAT          10,426          18,900
                   AND CONSTRUCTION
                   SETS.
                      Unfunded                                   [8,474]
                      requirement.
                  PETROLEUM EQUIPMENT
146               QUALITY SURVEILLANCE            6,903           6,903
                   EQUIPMENT.
147               DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS,          47,597          47,597
                   PETROLEUM & WATER.
                  MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
148               COMBAT SUPPORT                 43,343          66,262
                   MEDICAL.
                      Realign European                          [21,122]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                   [1,797]
                      requirement.
                  MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT
149               MOBILE MAINTENANCE             33,774          48,194
                   EQUIPMENT SYSTEMS.
                      Realign European                           [1,124]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [13,296]
                      requirement--meta
                      l working and
                      machine shop sets.
150               ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M           2,728           3,682
                   (MAINT EQ).
                      Unfunded                                     [954]
                      requirement.
                  CONSTRUCTION
                   EQUIPMENT
151               GRADER, ROAD MTZD,                989          15,719
                   HVY, 6X4 (CCE).
                      Unfunded                                  [14,730]
                      requirement.
152               SCRAPERS, EARTHMOVING          11,180          11,180
154               TRACTOR, FULL TRACKED                          48,679
                      Unfunded                                  [48,679]
                      requirement--T9
                      Dozers.
155               ALL TERRAIN CRANES...           8,935          11,935
                      Unfunded                                   [3,000]
                      requiremnt.
157               HIGH MOBILITY                  64,339          84,899
                   ENGINEER EXCAVATOR
                   (HMEE).
                      Unfunded                                  [20,560]
                      requirement.
158               ENHANCED RAPID                  2,563           2,563
                   AIRFIELD
                   CONSTRUCTION CAPAP.
160               CONST EQUIP ESP......          19,032          26,032
                      Unfunded                                   [7,000]
                      requirement--Engi
                      neer Mission
                      Modules and
                      Vibratory Rollers.
161               ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M           6,899          11,911
                   (CONST EQUIP).
                      Unfunded                                   [5,012]
                      requirement--wate
                      r well drill
                      systems.
                  RAIL FLOAT
                   CONTAINERIZATION
                   EQUIPMENT
162               ARMY WATERCRAFT ESP..          20,110          20,110
163               ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M           2,877           2,877
                   (FLOAT/RAIL).
                  GENERATORS
164               GENERATORS AND                115,635         132,845
                   ASSOCIATED EQUIP.
                      Unfunded                                  [17,210]
                      requirement.
165               TACTICAL ELECTRIC               7,436           7,436
                   POWER
                   RECAPITALIZATION.
                  MATERIAL HANDLING
                   EQUIPMENT
166               FAMILY OF FORKLIFTS..           9,000          10,635
                      Unfunded                                   [1,635]
                      requirement.
                  TRAINING EQUIPMENT
167               COMBAT TRAINING                88,888         126,638
                   CENTERS SUPPORT.
                      Unfunded                                  [37,750]
                      requirement.
168               TRAINING DEVICES,             285,989         288,689
                   NONSYSTEM.
                      Realign European                           [2,700]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
169               CLOSE COMBAT TACTICAL          45,718          45,718
                   TRAINER.
170               AVIATION COMBINED              30,568          30,568
                   ARMS TACTICAL
                   TRAINER.
171               GAMING TECHNOLOGY IN            5,406          16,906
                   SUPPORT OF ARMY
                   TRAINING.
                      Unfunded                                  [11,500]
                      requirement--SVCT
                      systems.
                  TEST MEASURE AND DIG
                   EQUIPMENT (TMD)
172               CALIBRATION SETS                5,564           5,564
                   EQUIPMENT.
173               INTEGRATED FAMILY OF           30,144          37,644
                   TEST EQUIPMENT
                   (IFTE).
                      Realign European                           [7,500]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
174               TEST EQUIPMENT                  7,771           7,771
                   MODERNIZATION
                   (TEMOD).
                  OTHER SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
175               M25 STABILIZED                  3,956           3,956
                   BINOCULAR.
176               RAPID EQUIPPING                 5,000           5,000
                   SOLDIER SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT.
177               PHYSICAL SECURITY              60,047          60,047
                   SYSTEMS (OPA3).
178               BASE LEVEL COMMON              13,239          13,239
                   EQUIPMENT.
179               MODIFICATION OF IN-            60,192          99,432
                   SVC EQUIPMENT (OPA-
                   3).
                      Unfunded                                  [29,240]
                      requirement--EOD
                      Technician Tool
                      Kits.
                      Unfunded                                   [2,000]
                      requirement--Rapi
                      dly Emplaced
                      Bridge System
                      Arctic Kit
                      Technical Manual
                      (TM) update.
                      Unfunded                                   [8,000]
                      requirement--Serv
                      ice Life
                      Extension Program
                      for the VOLCANO
                      system.
180               PRODUCTION BASE                 2,271           2,271
                   SUPPORT (OTH).
181               SPECIAL EQUIPMENT FOR           5,319           5,319
                   USER TESTING.
182               TRACTOR YARD.........           5,935           5,935
                  OPA2
184               INITIAL SPARES--C&E..          38,269          38,269
                  UNDISTRIBUTED
185               UNDISTRIBUTED........                          56,000
                      Security Force                            [56,000]
                      Assistance
                      Brigade.
                       TOTAL OTHER            6,469,331       8,463,222
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       ARMY.
 
                  JOINT IMPROVISED
                   EXPLOSIVE DEVICE
                   DEFEAT FUND
                  NETWORK ATTACK
001               RAPID ACQUISITION AND          14,442          14,442
                   THREAT RESPONSE.
                       TOTAL JOINT               14,442          14,442
                       IMPROVISED-
                       THREAT DEFEAT
                       FUND.
 
                  AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
                   NAVY
                  COMBAT AIRCRAFT
002               F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER)         1,200,146       1,791,346
                   HORNET.
                      Unfunded                                 [591,200]
                      Requirement.
003                  ADVANCE                     52,971          52,971
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
004               JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER          582,324       1,102,324
                   CV.
                      Unfunded                                 [260,000]
                      Requirement--Mari
                      ne Corps.
                      Unfunded                                 [260,000]
                      Requirement--Navy.
005                  ADVANCE                    263,112         263,112
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
006               JSF STOVL............       2,398,139       2,860,739
                      Unfunded                                 [462,600]
                      Requirement.
007                  ADVANCE                    413,450         413,450
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
008               CH-53K (HEAVY LIFT)..         567,605         567,605
009                  ADVANCE                    147,046         147,046
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
010               V-22 (MEDIUM LIFT)...         677,404       1,028,904
                      Multiyear                                [-25,000]
                      procurement
                      contract savings.
                      Unfunded                                 [376,500]
                      Requirement.
011                  ADVANCE                     27,422          27,422
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
012               H-1 UPGRADES (UH-1Y/          678,429         829,429
                   AH-1Z).
                      Unfunded                                 [157,500]
                      requirement -
                      additional AH-1Zs.
                      Unit cost savings                         [-6,500]
013                  ADVANCE                     42,082          42,082
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
016               P-8A POSEIDON........       1,245,251       1,751,751
                      P-8A.............                        [506,500]
017                  ADVANCE                    140,333         123,333
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                      Excess to need...                        [-17,000]
018               E-2D ADV HAWKEYE.....         733,910         925,710
                      E-2D.............                        [201,800]
                      Excessive growth.                        [-10,000]
019                  ADVANCE                    102,026         102,026
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                  OTHER AIRCRAFT
022               KC-130J..............         129,577         484,877
                      KC-130J..........                        [355,300]
023                  ADVANCE                     25,497          25,497
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
024               MQ-4 TRITON..........         522,126         517,126
                      Excess cost                               [-5,000]
                      growth.
025                  ADVANCE                     57,266          57,266
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
026               MQ-8 UAV.............          49,472          49,472
027               STUASL0 UAV..........             880             880
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   AIRCRAFT
030               AEA SYSTEMS..........          52,960          52,960
031               AV-8 SERIES..........          43,555          43,555
032               ADVERSARY............           2,565           2,565
033               F-18 SERIES..........       1,043,661       1,076,211
                      Unfunded                                  [32,550]
                      requirement--ALQ-
                      214 Retrofits.
034               H-53 SERIES..........          38,712          38,712
035               SH-60 SERIES.........          95,333          95,333
036               H-1 SERIES...........         101,886         101,886
037               EP-3 SERIES..........           7,231           7,231
038               P-3 SERIES...........             700             700
039               E-2 SERIES...........          97,563          97,563
040               TRAINER A/C SERIES...           8,184           8,184
041               C-2A.................          18,673          18,673
042               C-130 SERIES.........          83,541          83,541
043               FEWSG................             630             630
044               CARGO/TRANSPORT A/C            10,075          10,075
                   SERIES.
045               E-6 SERIES...........         223,508         223,508
046               EXECUTIVE HELICOPTERS          38,787          38,787
                   SERIES.
047               SPECIAL PROJECT                 8,304           8,304
                   AIRCRAFT.
048               T-45 SERIES..........         148,071         148,071
049               POWER PLANT CHANGES..          19,827          19,827
050               JPATS SERIES.........          27,007          27,007
051               COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT.         146,642         146,642
052               COMMON AVIONICS               123,507         123,507
                   CHANGES.
053               COMMON DEFENSIVE                2,317           2,317
                   WEAPON SYSTEM.
054               ID SYSTEMS...........          49,524          49,524
055               P-8 SERIES...........          18,665          18,665
056               MAGTF EW FOR AVIATION          10,111          10,111
057               MQ-8 SERIES..........          32,361          32,361
059               V-22 (TILT/ROTOR              228,321         228,321
                   ACFT) OSPREY.
060               F-35 STOVL SERIES....          34,963          34,963
061               F-35 CV SERIES.......          31,689          31,689
062               QRC..................          24,766          24,766
063               MQ-4 SERIES..........          39,996          39,996
                  AIRCRAFT SPARES AND
                   REPAIR PARTS
064               SPARES AND REPAIR           1,681,914       1,882,514
                   PARTS.
                      Additional F-35                           [32,600]
                      Initial Spares.
                      Unfunded                                 [168,000]
                      requirement.
                  AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
                   EQUIP & FACILITIES
065               COMMON GROUND                 388,052         405,552
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Unfunded                                  [17,500]
                      requirement--F-18
                      C/D H12C Training
                      Systems for USMC.
066               AIRCRAFT INDUSTRIAL            24,613          24,613
                   FACILITIES.
067               WAR CONSUMABLES......          39,614          39,614
068               OTHER PRODUCTION                1,463           1,463
                   CHARGES.
069               SPECIAL SUPPORT                48,500          48,500
                   EQUIPMENT.
070               FIRST DESTINATION               1,976           1,976
                   TRANSPORTATION.
                       TOTAL AIRCRAFT        15,056,235      18,414,785
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       NAVY.
 
                  WEAPONS PROCUREMENT,
                   NAVY
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   MISSILES
001               TRIDENT II MODS......       1,143,595       1,143,595
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
                   FACILITIES
002               MISSILE INDUSTRIAL              7,086           7,086
                   FACILITIES.
                  STRATEGIC MISSILES
003               TOMAHAWK.............         134,375         134,375
                  TACTICAL MISSILES
004               AMRAAM...............         197,109         197,109
005               SIDEWINDER...........          79,692          79,692
006               JSOW.................           5,487           5,487
007               STANDARD MISSILE.....         510,875         510,875
008               SMALL DIAMETER BOMB            20,968          20,968
                   II.
009               RAM..................          58,587         106,587
                      RAM BLK II.......                         [48,000]
010               JOINT AIR GROUND                3,789           3,789
                   MISSILE (JAGM).
013               STAND OFF PRECISION             3,122           3,122
                   GUIDED MUNITIONS
                   (SOPGM).
014               AERIAL TARGETS.......         124,757         124,757
015               OTHER MISSILE SUPPORT           3,420           3,420
016               LRASM................          74,733          74,733
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   MISSILES
017               ESSM.................          74,524          74,524
019               HARPOON MODS.........          17,300          17,300
020               HARM MODS............         183,368         183,368
021               STANDARD MISSILES              11,729          11,729
                   MODS.
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT &
                   FACILITIES
022               WEAPONS INDUSTRIAL              4,021           4,021
                   FACILITIES.
023               FLEET SATELLITE COMM           46,357          46,357
                   FOLLOW-ON.
                  ORDNANCE SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
025               ORDNANCE SUPPORT               47,159          47,159
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  TORPEDOES AND RELATED
                   EQUIP
026               SSTD.................           5,240           5,240
027               MK-48 TORPEDO........          44,771          70,971
                      MK 48 HWT........                         [26,200]
028               ASW TARGETS..........          12,399          12,399
                  MOD OF TORPEDOES AND
                   RELATED EQUIP
029               MK-54 TORPEDO MODS...         104,044         104,044
030               MK-48 TORPEDO ADCAP            38,954          38,954
                   MODS.
031               QUICKSTRIKE MINE.....          10,337          10,337
                  SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
032               TORPEDO SUPPORT                70,383          70,383
                   EQUIPMENT.
033               ASW RANGE SUPPORT....           3,864           3,864
                  DESTINATION
                   TRANSPORTATION
034               FIRST DESTINATION               3,961           3,961
                   TRANSPORTATION.
                  GUNS AND GUN MOUNTS
035               SMALL ARMS AND                 11,332          11,332
                   WEAPONS.
                  MODIFICATION OF GUNS
                   AND GUN MOUNTS
036               CIWS MODS............          72,698          72,698
037               COAST GUARD WEAPONS..          38,931          38,931
038               GUN MOUNT MODS.......          76,025          76,025
039               LCS MODULE WEAPONS...          13,110          13,110
040               CRUISER MODERNIZATION          34,825          34,825
                   WEAPONS.
041               AIRBORNE MINE                  16,925          16,925
                   NEUTRALIZATION
                   SYSTEMS.
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
043               SPARES AND REPAIR             110,255         110,255
                   PARTS.
                       TOTAL WEAPONS          3,420,107       3,494,307
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       NAVY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF AMMO,
                   NAVY & MC
                  NAVY AMMUNITION
001               GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS          34,882          34,882
002               JDAM.................          57,343          57,343
003               AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL          79,318          79,318
                   TYPES.
004               MACHINE GUN                    14,112          14,112
                   AMMUNITION.
005               PRACTICE BOMBS.......          47,027          47,027
006               CARTRIDGES & CART              57,718          57,718
                   ACTUATED DEVICES.
007               AIR EXPENDABLE                 65,908          65,908
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
008               JATOS................           2,895           2,895
010               5 INCH/54 GUN                  22,112          22,112
                   AMMUNITION.
011               INTERMEDIATE CALIBER           12,804          12,804
                   GUN AMMUNITION.
012               OTHER SHIP GUN                 41,594          41,594
                   AMMUNITION.
013               SMALL ARMS & LANDING           49,401          49,401
                   PARTY AMMO.
014               PYROTECHNIC AND                 9,495           9,495
                   DEMOLITION.
016               AMMUNITION LESS THAN            3,080           3,080
                   $5 MILLION.
                  MARINE CORPS
                   AMMUNITION
020               MORTARS..............          24,118          24,118
023               DIRECT SUPPORT                 64,045          64,045
                   MUNITIONS.
024               INFANTRY WEAPONS               91,456          91,456
                   AMMUNITION.
029               COMBAT SUPPORT                 11,788          11,788
                   MUNITIONS.
032               AMMO MODERNIZATION...          17,862          17,862
033               ARTILLERY MUNITIONS..          79,427          79,427
034               ITEMS LESS THAN $5              5,960           5,960
                   MILLION.
                       TOTAL                    792,345         792,345
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       AMMO, NAVY & MC.
 
                  SHIPBUILDING AND
                   CONVERSION, NAVY
                  FLEET BALLISTIC
                   MISSILE SHIPS
001                  ADVANCE                    842,853         842,853
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                  OTHER WARSHIPS
002               CARRIER REPLACEMENT         4,441,772       3,741,772
                   PROGRAM.
                      Early to need....                       [-700,000]
004               VIRGINIA CLASS              3,305,315       3,305,315
                   SUBMARINE.
005                  ADVANCE                  1,920,596       2,863,596
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                      VA Class AP......                        [693,000]
                      VA Class EOQ.....                        [250,000]
006               CVN REFUELING               1,604,890       1,181,590
                   OVERHAULS.
                      CVN 73 MQ-25                              [26,700]
                      integration.
                      Early to need....                       [-450,000]
007                  ADVANCE                     75,897          75,897
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
008               DDG 1000.............         223,968         223,968
009               DDG-51...............       3,499,079       3,499,079
010                  ADVANCE                     90,336          90,336
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
011               LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP.         636,146         636,146
                  AMPHIBIOUS SHIPS
015               LHA REPLACEMENT......       1,710,927       1,210,927
                      Early to need....                       [-500,000]
                  AUXILIARIES, CRAFT
                   AND PRIOR YR PROGRAM
                   COST
018               TAO FLEET OILER......         465,988         465,988
019                  ADVANCE                     75,068          75,068
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
020               TOWING, SALVAGE, AND           76,204          76,204
                   RESCUE SHIP (ATS).
023               LCU 1700.............          31,850          31,850
024               OUTFITTING...........         548,703         548,703
025               SHIP TO SHORE                 212,554         212,554
                   CONNECTOR.
026               SERVICE CRAFT........          23,994          23,994
029               COMPLETION OF PY              117,542         117,542
                   SHIPBUILDING
                   PROGRAMS.
                       TOTAL                 19,903,682      19,223,382
                       SHIPBUILDING AND
                       CONVERSION, NAVY.
 
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT,
                   NAVY
                  SHIP PROPULSION
                   EQUIPMENT
003               SURFACE POWER                  41,910          41,910
                   EQUIPMENT.
004               HYBRID ELECTRIC DRIVE           6,331           6,331
                   (HED).
                  GENERATORS
005               SURFACE COMBATANT              27,392          27,392
                   HM&E.
                  NAVIGATION EQUIPMENT
006               OTHER NAVIGATION               65,943          65,943
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  PERISCOPES
007               SUB PERISCOPES &                               76,000
                   IMAGING EQUIP.
                      Submarine Warfare                         [76,000]
                      Federated Tactial
                      Systems.
                  OTHER SHIPBOARD
                   EQUIPMENT
008               SUB PERISCOPE,                151,240         151,240
                   IMAGING AND SUPT
                   EQUIP PROG.
009               DDG MOD..............         603,355         702,355
                      CEC IFF Mode 5                             [4,000]
                      Acceleration.
                      Destroyer                                 [65,000]
                      modernization.
                      SPY-1                                     [30,000]
                      refurbishment.
010               FIREFIGHTING                   15,887          15,887
                   EQUIPMENT.
011               COMMAND AND CONTROL             2,240           2,240
                   SWITCHBOARD.
012               LHA/LHD MIDLIFE......          30,287          30,287
014               POLLUTION CONTROL              17,293          17,293
                   EQUIPMENT.
015               SUBMARINE SUPPORT              27,990          27,990
                   EQUIPMENT.
016               VIRGINIA CLASS                 46,610          46,610
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
017               LCS CLASS SUPPORT              47,955          47,955
                   EQUIPMENT.
018               SUBMARINE BATTERIES..          17,594          17,594
019               LPD CLASS SUPPORT              61,908          61,908
                   EQUIPMENT.
021               STRATEGIC PLATFORM             15,812          15,812
                   SUPPORT EQUIP.
022               DSSP EQUIPMENT.......           4,178           4,178
023               CG MODERNIZATION.....         306,050         306,050
024               LCAC.................           5,507           5,507
025               UNDERWATER EOD                 55,922          59,938
                   PROGRAMS.
                      Realign European                           [4,016]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
026               ITEMS LESS THAN $5             96,909          96,909
                   MILLION.
027               CHEMICAL WARFARE                3,036           3,036
                   DETECTORS.
028               SUBMARINE LIFE                 10,364          10,364
                   SUPPORT SYSTEM.
                  REACTOR PLANT
                   EQUIPMENT
029               REACTOR POWER UNITS..         324,925         324,925
030               REACTOR COMPONENTS...         534,468         534,468
                  OCEAN ENGINEERING
031               DIVING AND SALVAGE             10,619          10,619
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  SMALL BOATS
032               STANDARD BOATS.......          46,094          46,094
                  PRODUCTION FACILITIES
                   EQUIPMENT
034               OPERATING FORCES IPE.         191,541         191,541
                  OTHER SHIP SUPPORT
036               LCS COMMON MISSION             34,666          68,666
                   MODULES EQUIPMENT.
                      MCM-USV..........                         [34,000]
037               LCS MCM MISSION                55,870          55,870
                   MODULES.
039               LCS SUW MISSION                52,960          52,960
                   MODULES.
040               LCS IN-SERVICE                 74,426         158,426
                   MODERNIZATION.
                      LCS Modernization                         [84,000]
                  LOGISTIC SUPPORT
042               LSD MIDLIFE &                  89,536          89,536
                   MODERNIZATION.
                  SHIP SONARS
043               SPQ-9B RADAR.........          30,086          30,086
044               AN/SQQ-89 SURF ASW            102,222         102,222
                   COMBAT SYSTEM.
046               SSN ACOUSTIC                  287,553         331,053
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Realign European                          [43,500]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
047               UNDERSEA WARFARE               13,653          13,653
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
                  ASW ELECTRONIC
                   EQUIPMENT
049               SUBMARINE ACOUSTIC             21,449          21,449
                   WARFARE SYSTEM.
050               SSTD.................          12,867          12,867
051               FIXED SURVEILLANCE            300,102         300,102
                   SYSTEM.
052               SURTASS..............          30,180          40,180
                      SURTASS Array....                         [10,000]
                  ELECTRONIC WARFARE
                   EQUIPMENT
054               AN/SLQ-32............         240,433         240,433
                  RECONNAISSANCE
                   EQUIPMENT
055               SHIPBOARD IW EXPLOIT.         187,007         227,007
                      Ship Signal                               [40,000]
                      Exploitation
                      Equipment.
056               AUTOMATED                         510             510
                   IDENTIFICATION
                   SYSTEM (AIS).
                  OTHER SHIP ELECTRONIC
                   EQUIPMENT
058               COOPERATIVE                    23,892          23,892
                   ENGAGEMENT
                   CAPABILITY.
060               NAVAL TACTICAL                 10,741          10,741
                   COMMAND SUPPORT
                   SYSTEM (NTCSS).
061               ATDLS................          38,016          38,016
062               NAVY COMMAND AND                4,512           4,512
                   CONTROL SYSTEM
                   (NCCS).
063               MINESWEEPING SYSTEM            31,531          31,531
                   REPLACEMENT.
064               SHALLOW WATER MCM....           8,796           8,796
065               NAVSTAR GPS RECEIVERS          15,923          15,923
                   (SPACE).
066               AMERICAN FORCES RADIO           2,730           2,730
                   AND TV SERVICE.
067               STRATEGIC PLATFORM              6,889           6,889
                   SUPPORT EQUIP.
                  AVIATION ELECTRONIC
                   EQUIPMENT
070               ASHORE ATC EQUIPMENT.          71,882          71,882
071               AFLOAT ATC EQUIPMENT.          44,611          44,611
077               ID SYSTEMS...........          21,239          21,239
078               NAVAL MISSION                  11,976          11,976
                   PLANNING SYSTEMS.
                  OTHER SHORE
                   ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
080               TACTICAL/MOBILE C4I            32,425          40,325
                   SYSTEMS.
                      Realign European                           [7,900]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
081               DCGS-N...............          13,790          15,690
                      Realign European                           [1,900]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
082               CANES................         322,754         322,754
083               RADIAC...............          10,718          10,718
084               CANES-INTELL.........          48,028          48,028
085               GPETE................           6,861           6,861
086               MASF.................           8,081           8,081
087               INTEG COMBAT SYSTEM             5,019           5,019
                   TEST FACILITY.
088               EMI CONTROL                     4,188           4,188
                   INSTRUMENTATION.
089               ITEMS LESS THAN $5            105,292         105,292
                   MILLION.
                  SHIPBOARD
                   COMMUNICATIONS
090               SHIPBOARD TACTICAL             23,695          23,695
                   COMMUNICATIONS.
091               SHIP COMMUNICATIONS           103,990         103,990
                   AUTOMATION.
092               COMMUNICATIONS ITEMS           18,577          18,577
                   UNDER $5M.
                  SUBMARINE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
093               SUBMARINE BROADCAST            29,669          29,669
                   SUPPORT.
094               SUBMARINE                      86,204          86,204
                   COMMUNICATION
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  SATELLITE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
095               SATELLITE                      14,654          14,654
                   COMMUNICATIONS
                   SYSTEMS.
096               NAVY MULTIBAND                 69,764          69,764
                   TERMINAL (NMT).
                  SHORE COMMUNICATIONS
097               JOINT COMMUNICATIONS            4,256           4,256
                   SUPPORT ELEMENT
                   (JCSE).
                  CRYPTOGRAPHIC
                   EQUIPMENT
099               INFO SYSTEMS SECURITY          89,663          89,663
                   PROGRAM (ISSP).
100               MIO INTEL                         961             961
                   EXPLOITATION TEAM.
                  CRYPTOLOGIC EQUIPMENT
101               CRYPTOLOGIC                    11,287          11,287
                   COMMUNICATIONS EQUIP.
                  OTHER ELECTRONIC
                   SUPPORT
110               COAST GUARD EQUIPMENT          36,584          36,584
                  SONOBUOYS
112               SONOBUOYS--ALL TYPES.         173,616         198,516
                      Sonobuoys........                         [24,900]
                  AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
113               WEAPONS RANGE SUPPORT          72,110          72,110
                   EQUIPMENT.
114               AIRCRAFT SUPPORT              108,482         115,982
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      EMALS initial                              [7,500]
                      spares.
115               ADVANCED ARRESTING             10,900          10,900
                   GEAR (AAG).
116               METEOROLOGICAL                 21,137          21,137
                   EQUIPMENT.
117               DCRS/DPL.............             660             660
118               AIRBORNE MINE                  20,605          20,605
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
119               AVIATION SUPPORT               34,032          34,032
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  SHIP GUN SYSTEM
                   EQUIPMENT
120               SHIP GUN SYSTEMS                5,277           5,277
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  SHIP MISSILE SYSTEMS
                   EQUIPMENT
121               SHIP MISSILE SUPPORT          272,359         272,359
                   EQUIPMENT.
122               TOMAHAWK SUPPORT               73,184          73,184
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  FBM SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
123               STRATEGIC MISSILE             246,221         246,221
                   SYSTEMS EQUIP.
                  ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
124               SSN COMBAT CONTROL            129,972         129,972
                   SYSTEMS.
125               ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT          23,209          23,209
                  OTHER ORDNANCE
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
126               EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE             15,596          15,596
                   DISPOSAL EQUIP.
127               ITEMS LESS THAN $5              5,981           5,981
                   MILLION.
                  OTHER EXPENDABLE
                   ORDNANCE
128               SUBMARINE TRAINING             74,550          74,550
                   DEVICE MODS.
130               SURFACE TRAINING               83,022          83,022
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  CIVIL ENGINEERING
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
131               PASSENGER CARRYING              5,299           5,299
                   VEHICLES.
132               GENERAL PURPOSE                 2,946           3,052
                   TRUCKS.
                      Realign European                             [106]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
133               CONSTRUCTION &                 34,970          34,970
                   MAINTENANCE EQUIP.
134               FIRE FIGHTING                   2,541           2,541
                   EQUIPMENT.
135               TACTICAL VEHICLES....          19,699          19,699
136               AMPHIBIOUS EQUIPMENT.          12,162          12,162
137               POLLUTION CONTROL               2,748           2,748
                   EQUIPMENT.
138               ITEMS UNDER $5                 18,084          18,084
                   MILLION.
139               PHYSICAL SECURITY               1,170           1,170
                   VEHICLES.
                  SUPPLY SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
141               SUPPLY EQUIPMENT.....          21,797          21,961
                      Realign European                             [164]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
143               FIRST DESTINATION               5,572           5,572
                   TRANSPORTATION.
144               SPECIAL PURPOSE               482,916         482,916
                   SUPPLY SYSTEMS.
                  TRAINING DEVICES
146               TRAINING AND                   25,624          25,624
                   EDUCATION EQUIPMENT.
                  COMMAND SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
147               COMMAND SUPPORT                59,076          59,076
                   EQUIPMENT.
149               MEDICAL SUPPORT                 4,383           4,383
                   EQUIPMENT.
151               NAVAL MIP SUPPORT               2,030           2,030
                   EQUIPMENT.
152               OPERATING FORCES                7,500           7,500
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
153               C4ISR EQUIPMENT......           4,010           4,010
154               ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT          23,644          24,644
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Realign European                           [1,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
155               PHYSICAL SECURITY             101,982         101,982
                   EQUIPMENT.
156               ENTERPRISE                     19,789          19,789
                   INFORMATION
                   TECHNOLOGY.
                  OTHER
160               NEXT GENERATION               104,584         104,584
                   ENTERPRISE SERVICE.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
161A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..          23,707          23,707
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
161               SPARES AND REPAIR             278,565         290,565
                   PARTS.
                      E-2D AHE.........                         [12,000]
                       TOTAL OTHER            8,277,789       8,723,775
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       NAVY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT, MARINE
                   CORPS
                  TRACKED COMBAT
                   VEHICLES
001               AAV7A1 PIP...........         107,665         107,665
002               AMPHIBIOUS COMBAT             161,511         161,511
                   VEHICLE 1.1.
003               LAV PIP..............          17,244          17,244
                  ARTILLERY AND OTHER
                   WEAPONS
004               EXPEDITIONARY FIRE                626             626
                   SUPPORT SYSTEM.
005               155MM LIGHTWEIGHT              20,259          20,259
                   TOWED HOWITZER.
006               HIGH MOBILITY                  59,943          59,943
                   ARTILLERY ROCKET
                   SYSTEM.
007               WEAPONS AND COMBAT             19,616          19,616
                   VEHICLES UNDER $5
                   MILLION.
                  OTHER SUPPORT
008               MODIFICATION KITS....          17,778          17,778
                  GUIDED MISSILES
010               GROUND BASED AIR                9,432           9,432
                   DEFENSE.
011               JAVELIN..............          41,159          41,159
012               FOLLOW ON TO SMAW....          25,125          25,125
013               ANTI-ARMOR WEAPONS             51,553          51,553
                   SYSTEM-HEAVY (AAWS-
                   H).
                  COMMAND AND CONTROL
                   SYSTEMS
016               COMMON AVIATION                44,928          44,928
                   COMMAND AND CONTROL
                   SYSTEM (C.
                  REPAIR AND TEST
                   EQUIPMENT
017               REPAIR AND TEST                33,056          33,056
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  COMMAND AND CONTROL
                   SYSTEM (NON-TEL)
020               ITEMS UNDER $5                 17,644          17,644
                   MILLION (COMM &
                   ELEC).
021               AIR OPERATIONS C2              18,393          18,393
                   SYSTEMS.
                  RADAR + EQUIPMENT
                   (NON-TEL)
022               RADAR SYSTEMS........          12,411          12,411
023               GROUND/AIR TASK               139,167         139,167
                   ORIENTED RADAR (G/
                   ATOR).
024               RQ-21 UAS............          77,841          77,841
                  INTELL/COMM EQUIPMENT
                   (NON-TEL)
025               GCSS-MC..............           1,990           1,990
026               FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM..          22,260          22,260
027               INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT           55,759          55,759
                   EQUIPMENT.
029               UNMANNED AIR SYSTEMS           10,154          10,154
                   (INTEL).
030               DCGS-MC..............          13,462          13,462
031               UAS PAYLOADS.........          14,193          14,193
                  OTHER SUPPORT (NON-
                   TEL)
035               NEXT GENERATION                98,511          98,511
                   ENTERPRISE NETWORK
                   (NGEN).
036               COMMON COMPUTER                66,894          66,894
                   RESOURCES.
037               COMMAND POST SYSTEMS.         186,912         186,912
038               RADIO SYSTEMS........          34,361          34,361
039               COMM SWITCHING &               54,615          54,615
                   CONTROL SYSTEMS.
040               COMM & ELEC                    44,455          44,455
                   INFRASTRUCTURE
                   SUPPORT.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
040A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..           4,214           4,214
                  ADMINISTRATIVE
                   VEHICLES
042               COMMERCIAL CARGO               66,951          66,951
                   VEHICLES.
                  TACTICAL VEHICLES
043               MOTOR TRANSPORT                21,824          21,824
                   MODIFICATIONS.
044               JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL          233,639         233,639
                   VEHICLE.
045               FAMILY OF TACTICAL              1,938           1,938
                   TRAILERS.
046               TRAILERS.............          10,282          10,282
                  ENGINEER AND OTHER
                   EQUIPMENT
048               ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL           1,405           1,405
                   EQUIP ASSORT.
050               TACTICAL FUEL SYSTEMS           1,788           1,788
051               POWER EQUIPMENT                 9,910           9,910
                   ASSORTED.
052               AMPHIBIOUS SUPPORT              5,830           5,830
                   EQUIPMENT.
053               EOD SYSTEMS..........          27,240          27,240
                  MATERIALS HANDLING
                   EQUIPMENT
054               PHYSICAL SECURITY              53,477          53,477
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  GENERAL PROPERTY
056               TRAINING DEVICES.....          76,185          85,064
                      Unfunded                                   [8,879]
                      requirement.
058               FAMILY OF                      26,286          26,286
                   CONSTRUCTION
                   EQUIPMENT.
059               FAMILY OF INTERNALLY            1,583           1,583
                   TRANSPORTABLE VEH
                   (ITV).
                  OTHER SUPPORT
060               ITEMS LESS THAN $5              7,716           7,716
                   MILLION.
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
062               SPARES AND REPAIR              35,640          35,640
                   PARTS.
                       TOTAL                  2,064,825       2,073,704
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       MARINE CORPS.
 
                  AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  TACTICAL FORCES
001               F-35.................       4,544,684       5,804,684
                      Additional                                [60,000]
                      Tooling in
                      Support of
                      Unfunded Priority.
                      Unfunded                               [1,200,000]
                      requirement.
002                  ADVANCE                    780,300         780,300
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                  TACTICAL AIRLIFT
003               KC-46A TANKER........       2,545,674       2,945,674
                      KC-46A...........                        [400,000]
                  OTHER AIRLIFT
004               C-130J...............          57,708          57,708
006               HC-130J..............         198,502         298,502
                      HC-130J..........                        [100,000]
008               MC-130J..............         379,373         979,373
                      MC-130J..........                        [600,000]
009                  ADVANCE                     30,000          30,000
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                  MISSION SUPPORT
                   AIRCRAFT
012               CIVIL AIR PATROL A/C.           2,695           2,695
                  OTHER AIRCRAFT
014               TARGET DRONES........         109,841         109,841
017               MQ-9.................         117,141         117,141
                  STRATEGIC AIRCRAFT
018               B-2A.................          96,727         105,727
                      B-2 Rotary                                 [9,000]
                      Launcher assembly.
019               B-1B.................         155,634         121,634
                      Duplicate funding                        [-34,000]
                      of F101 engine
                      kits.
020               B-52.................         109,295         109,295
021               LARGE AIRCRAFT                  4,046         122,991
                   INFRARED
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
                      C-130 LAIRCM.....                         [18,900]
                      C-17 LAIRCM......                         [76,145]
                      C-5 LAIRCM.......                         [23,900]
                  TACTICAL AIRCRAFT
022               A-10.................           6,010         109,010
                      Unfunded                                 [103,000]
                      Requirement.
023               F-15.................         417,193         417,193
024               F-16.................         203,864         203,864
025               F-22A................         161,630         161,630
026                  ADVANCE                     15,000          15,000
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
027               F-35 MODIFICATIONS...          68,270          68,270
028               INCREMENT 3.2B.......         105,756         105,756
030               KC-46A TANKER........           6,213           6,213
                  AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT
031               C-5..................          36,592          36,592
032               C-5M.................           6,817           6,817
033               C-17A................         125,522         125,522
034               C-21.................          13,253          13,253
035               C-32A................          79,449          79,449
036               C-37A................          15,423          15,423
037               C-130J...............          10,727          10,727
                  TRAINER AIRCRAFT
038               GLIDER MODS..........             136             136
039               T-6..................          35,706          35,706
040               T-1..................          21,477          21,477
041               T-38.................          51,641          51,641
                  OTHER AIRCRAFT
042               U-2 MODS.............          36,406          36,406
043               KC-10A (ATCA)........           4,243           4,243
044               C-12.................           5,846          70,846
                      MC-12W upgrades                           [65,000]
                      for Air National
                      Guard.
045               VC-25A MOD...........          52,107          52,107
046               C-40.................          31,119          31,119
047               C-130................          66,310         213,310
                      C-130H Inflight                           [18,000]
                      rebalance system.
                      C-130H NP2000                             [55,000]
                      Prop.
                      C-130H T56 3.5...                         [74,000]
048               C-130J MODS..........         171,230         171,230
049               C-135................          69,428          69,428
050               OC-135B..............          23,091          23,091
051               COMPASS CALL MODS....         166,541         166,541
052               COMBAT FLIGHT                     495             495
                   INSPECTION (CFIN).
053               RC-135...............         201,559         201,559
054               E-3..................         189,772         189,772
055               E-4..................          30,493          30,493
056               E-8..................          13,232          13,232
057               AIRBORNE WARNING AND          164,786         164,786
                   CONTROL SYSTEM.
058               FAMILY OF BEYOND LINE-         24,716          24,716
                   OF-SIGHT TERMINALS.
059               H-1..................           3,730           3,730
060               H-60.................          75,989          92,089
                      Unfunded                                  [16,100]
                      requirement.
061               RQ-4 MODS............          43,968          62,268
                      HA-ISR Payload                            [18,300]
                      Adapters.
062               HC/MC-130                      67,674          67,674
                   MODIFICATIONS.
063               OTHER AIRCRAFT.......          59,068          59,068
065               MQ-9 MODS............         264,740         269,940
                      FY17 10th Pod Set                          [5,200]
                      Procurement
                      Shortfall.
066               CV-22 MODS...........          60,990          60,990
                  AIRCRAFT SPARES AND
                   REPAIR PARTS
067               INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR       1,041,569       1,121,169
                   PARTS.
                      Additional F-35                           [79,600]
                      Initial Spares.
                  COMMON SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
068               AIRCRAFT REPLACEMENT           75,846         101,263
                   SUPPORT EQUIP.
                      Realign European                          [25,417]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
069               OTHER PRODUCTION                8,524           8,524
                   CHARGES.
071               T-53A TRAINER........             501             501
                  POST PRODUCTION
                   SUPPORT
072               B-2A.................             447             447
073               B-2A.................          38,509          38,509
074               B-52.................             199             199
075               C-17A................          12,028          12,028
078               RC-135...............          29,700          29,700
079               F-15.................          20,000          20,000
080               F-15.................           2,524           2,524
081               F-16.................          18,051           5,651
                      Program reduction                        [-12,400]
082               F-22A................         119,566         119,566
083               OTHER AIRCRAFT.......          85,000          85,000
085               RQ-4 POST PRODUCTION           86,695          86,695
                   CHARGES.
086               CV-22 MODS...........           4,500           4,500
                  INDUSTRIAL
                   PREPAREDNESS
087               INDUSTRIAL                     14,739          30,739
                   RESPONSIVENESS.
                      Program increase.                         [16,000]
088               C-130J...............         102,000         102,000
                  WAR CONSUMABLES
089               WAR CONSUMABLES......          37,647          37,647
                  OTHER PRODUCTION
                   CHARGES
090               OTHER PRODUCTION            1,339,160       1,339,160
                   CHARGES.
092               OTHER AIRCRAFT.......             600             600
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
092A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..          53,212          53,212
                       TOTAL AIRCRAFT        15,430,849      18,348,011
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  MISSILE REPLACEMENT
                   EQUIPMENT--BALLISTIC
001               MISSILE REPLACEMENT            99,098          99,098
                   EQ-BALLISTIC.
                  TACTICAL
002               JOINT AIR-SURFACE             441,367         441,367
                   STANDOFF MISSILE.
003               LRASM0...............          44,728          61,728
                      LRASM............                         [17,000]
004               SIDEWINDER (AIM-9X)..         125,350         125,350
005               AMRAAM...............         304,327         304,327
006               PREDATOR HELLFIRE              34,867          34,867
                   MISSILE.
007               SMALL DIAMETER BOMB..         266,030         266,030
                  INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES
008               INDUSTR'L PREPAREDNS/             926             926
                   POL PREVENTION.
                  CLASS IV
009               ICBM FUZE MOD........           6,334           6,334
010               MM III MODIFICATIONS.          80,109          80,109
011               AGM-65D MAVERICK.....             289             289
013               AIR LAUNCH CRUISE              36,425          36,425
                   MISSILE (ALCM).
014               SMALL DIAMETER BOMB..          14,086          14,086
                  MISSILE SPARES AND
                   REPAIR PARTS
015               INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR         101,153         101,153
                   PARTS.
                  SPECIAL PROGRAMS
020               SPECIAL UPDATE                 32,917          32,917
                   PROGRAMS.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
020A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..         708,176         708,176
                       TOTAL MISSILE          2,296,182       2,313,182
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  SPACE PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  SPACE PROGRAMS
001               ADVANCED EHF.........          56,974          56,974
002               AF SATELLITE COMM              57,516          57,516
                   SYSTEM.
003               COUNTERSPACE SYSTEMS.          28,798          28,798
004               FAMILY OF BEYOND LINE-        146,972         146,972
                   OF-SIGHT TERMINALS.
005               WIDEBAND GAPFILLER             80,849         180,849
                   SATELLITES(SPACE).
                      Long-lead                                [100,000]
                      procurement for
                      protecting supply
                      chain and
                      schedule for WGS
                      communications.
006               GPS III SPACE SEGMENT          85,894          85,894
007               GLOBAL POSTIONING               2,198           2,198
                   (SPACE).
008               SPACEBORNE EQUIP               25,048          25,048
                   (COMSEC).
010               MILSATCOM............          33,033          33,033
011               EVOLVED EXPENDABLE            957,420         957,420
                   LAUNCH CAPABILITY.
012               EVOLVED EXPENDABLE            606,488         606,488
                   LAUNCH VEH(SPACE).
013               SBIR HIGH (SPACE)....         981,009       1,057,359
                      AF UPL--fully                             [44,900]
                      fund emerging
                      cyber security
                      requirement.
                      AF UPL--procure                           [15,450]
                      commercially
                      available antenna.
                      AF UPL upgrades                           [16,000]
                      ground antenna.
014                  ADVANCE                    132,420         132,420
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
015               NUDET DETECTION                 6,370           6,370
                   SYSTEM.
016               SPACE MODS...........          37,203          37,203
017               SPACELIFT RANGE               113,874         113,874
                   SYSTEM SPACE.
                  SSPARES
018               INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR          18,709          18,709
                   PARTS.
                       TOTAL SPACE            3,370,775       3,547,125
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF
                   AMMUNITION, AIR
                   FORCE
                  ROCKETS
001               ROCKETS..............         147,454         147,454
                  CARTRIDGES
002               CARTRIDGES...........         161,744         161,744
                  BOMBS
003               PRACTICE BOMBS.......          28,509          28,509
004               GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS         329,501         329,501
005               MASSIVE ORDNANCE               38,382          38,382
                   PENETRATOR (MOP).
006               JOINT DIRECT ATTACK           319,525         319,525
                   MUNITION.
007               B61..................          77,068          77,068
008                  ADVANCE                     11,239          11,239
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                  OTHER ITEMS
009               CAD/PAD..............          53,469          53,469
010               EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE              5,921           5,921
                   DISPOSAL (EOD).
011               SPARES AND REPAIR                 678             678
                   PARTS.
012               MODIFICATIONS........           1,409           1,409
013               ITEMS LESS THAN $5              5,047           5,047
                   MILLION.
                  FLARES
015               FLARES...............         143,983         143,983
                  FUZES
016               FUZES................          24,062          24,062
                  SMALL ARMS
017               SMALL ARMS...........          28,611          28,611
                       TOTAL                  1,376,602       1,376,602
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       AMMUNITION, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  PASSENGER CARRYING
                   VEHICLES
001               PASSENGER CARRYING             15,651          17,001
                   VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                           [1,350]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  CARGO AND UTILITY
                   VEHICLES
002               MEDIUM TACTICAL                54,607          54,607
                   VEHICLE.
003               CAP VEHICLES.........           1,011           1,011
004               CARGO AND UTILITY              28,670          28,670
                   VEHICLES.
                  SPECIAL PURPOSE
                   VEHICLES
005               SECURITY AND TACTICAL          59,398          59,398
                   VEHICLES.
006               SPECIAL PURPOSE                19,784          51,605
                   VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                          [31,821]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  FIRE FIGHTING
                   EQUIPMENT
007               FIRE FIGHTING/CRASH            14,768          37,351
                   RESCUE VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                          [22,583]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  MATERIALS HANDLING
                   EQUIPMENT
008               MATERIALS HANDLING             13,561          17,587
                   VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                           [4,026]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  BASE MAINTENANCE
                   SUPPORT
009               RUNWAY SNOW REMOV &             3,429          12,590
                   CLEANING EQUIP.
                      Realign European                           [9,161]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
010               BASE MAINTENANCE               60,075          99,767
                   SUPPORT VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                          [39,692]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  COMM SECURITY
                   EQUIPMENT(COMSEC)
011               COMSEC EQUIPMENT.....         115,000         123,000
                      Unfunded                                   [8,000]
                      requirement.
                  INTELLIGENCE PROGRAMS
013               INTERNATIONAL INTEL            22,335          22,335
                   TECH & ARCHITECTURES.
014               INTELLIGENCE TRAINING           5,892           5,892
                   EQUIPMENT.
015               INTELLIGENCE COMM              34,072          34,072
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  ELECTRONICS PROGRAMS
016               AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL &          66,143          66,143
                   LANDING SYS.
017               NATIONAL AIRSPACE              12,641          12,641
                   SYSTEM.
018               BATTLE CONTROL                  6,415           6,415
                   SYSTEM--FIXED.
019               THEATER AIR CONTROL            23,233          23,233
                   SYS IMPROVEMENTS.
020               WEATHER OBSERVATION            40,116          40,116
                   FORECAST.
021               STRATEGIC COMMAND AND          72,810          72,810
                   CONTROL.
022               CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN               9,864           9,864
                   COMPLEX.
023               MISSION PLANNING               15,486          15,486
                   SYSTEMS.
025               INTEGRATED STRAT PLAN           9,187           9,187
                   & ANALY NETWORK
                   (ISPAN).
                  SPCL COMM-ELECTRONICS
                   PROJECTS
026               GENERAL INFORMATION            51,826          51,826
                   TECHNOLOGY.
027               AF GLOBAL COMMAND &             3,634           3,634
                   CONTROL SYS.
028               MOBILITY COMMAND AND           10,083          10,083
                   CONTROL.
029               AIR FORCE PHYSICAL            201,866         201,866
                   SECURITY SYSTEM.
030               COMBAT TRAINING               115,198         115,198
                   RANGES.
031               MINIMUM ESSENTIAL                 292             292
                   EMERGENCY COMM N.
032               WIDE AREA                      62,087          62,087
                   SURVEILLANCE (WAS).
033               C3 COUNTERMEASURES...          37,764          37,764
034               GCSS-AF FOS..........           2,826           2,826
035               DEFENSE ENTERPRISE              1,514           1,514
                   ACCOUNTING AND MGMT
                   SYSTEM.
036               THEATER BATTLE MGT C2           9,646           9,646
                   SYSTEM.
037               AIR & SPACE                    25,533          25,533
                   OPERATIONS CTR-WPN
                   SYS.
                  AIR FORCE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
040               BASE INFORMATION               28,159          28,159
                   TRANSPT INFRAST
                   (BITI) WIRED.
041               AFNET................         160,820         186,820
                      Unfunded                                  [26,000]
                      requirement.
042               JOINT COMMUNICATIONS            5,135           5,135
                   SUPPORT ELEMENT
                   (JCSE).
043               USCENTCOM............          18,719          18,719
                  ORGANIZATION AND BASE
044               TACTICAL C-E                  123,206         123,206
                   EQUIPMENT.
045               COMBAT SURVIVOR                 3,004           3,004
                   EVADER LOCATER.
046               RADIO EQUIPMENT......          15,736          15,736
047               CCTV/AUDIOVISUAL                5,480           5,480
                   EQUIPMENT.
048               BASE COMM                     130,539         185,539
                   INFRASTRUCTURE.
                      Realign European                          [55,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  MODIFICATIONS
049               COMM ELECT MODS......          70,798          70,798
                  PERSONAL SAFETY &
                   RESCUE EQUIP
051               ITEMS LESS THAN $5             52,964          53,464
                   MILLION.
                      Unfunded                                     [500]
                      requirement--Inst
                      ructor Training
                      Parachutes.
                  DEPOT PLANT+MTRLS
                   HANDLING EQ
052               MECHANIZED MATERIAL            10,381          10,381
                   HANDLING EQUIP.
                  BASE SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
053               BASE PROCURED                  15,038          27,538
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Program increase--                         [5,000]
                      Civil Engineers
                      Construction,
                      Surveying, and
                      Mapping Equipment.
                      Realign European                           [7,500]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
054               ENGINEERING AND EOD            26,287          26,287
                   EQUIPMENT.
055               MOBILITY EQUIPMENT...           8,470           8,470
056               ITEMS LESS THAN $5             28,768         132,783
                   MILLION.
                      Realign European                         [104,015]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  SPECIAL SUPPORT
                   PROJECTS
058               DARP RC135...........          25,985          25,985
059               DCGS-AF..............         178,423         178,423
061               SPECIAL UPDATE                840,980         840,980
                   PROGRAM.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
062A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..      16,601,513      16,601,513
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
064               SPARES AND REPAIR              26,675          26,675
                   PARTS.
                       TOTAL OTHER           19,603,497      19,918,145
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-
                   WIDE
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD
042               MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD.          36,999          36,999
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, NSA
041               INFORMATION SYSTEMS             5,938           5,938
                   SECURITY PROGRAM
                   (ISSP).
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS
045               MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS.          10,529          10,529
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DISA
007               INFORMATION SYSTEMS            24,805          24,805
                   SECURITY.
008               TELEPORT PROGRAM.....          46,638          46,638
009               ITEMS LESS THAN $5             15,541          15,541
                   MILLION.
010               NET CENTRIC                     1,161           1,161
                   ENTERPRISE SERVICES
                   (NCES).
011               DEFENSE INFORMATION           126,345         126,345
                   SYSTEM NETWORK.
012               CYBER SECURITY                  1,817           1,817
                   INITIATIVE.
013               WHITE HOUSE                    45,243          45,243
                   COMMUNICATION AGENCY.
014               SENIOR LEADERSHIP             294,139         294,139
                   ENTERPRISE.
016               JOINT REGIONAL                188,483         188,483
                   SECURITY STACKS
                   (JRSS).
017               JOINT SERVICE                 100,783         100,783
                   PROVIDER.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DLA
019               MAJOR EQUIPMENT......           2,951           2,951
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DSS
023               MAJOR EQUIPMENT......           1,073           1,073
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DCAA
001               ITEMS LESS THAN $5              1,475           1,475
                   MILLION.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS
043               MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS.           9,341           9,341
044               MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS--            903             903
                   CE2T2.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
                   MISSILE DEFENSE
                   AGENCY
027               THAAD................         451,592         770,992
                      Procure                                  [319,400]
                      additional THAAD
                      interceptors.
028               AEGIS BMD............         425,018         583,018
                      Additional SM-3                          [158,000]
                      Block 1B.
029                  ADVANCE                     38,738          38,738
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
030               BMDS AN/TPY-2 RADARS.             947             947
033               AEGIS ASHORE PHASE             59,739          59,739
                   III.
034               IRON DOME............          42,000          42,000
035               AEGIS BMD HARDWARE            160,330         160,330
                   AND SOFTWARE.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DHRA
003               PERSONNEL                      14,588          14,588
                   ADMINISTRATION.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
                   DEFENSE THREAT
                   REDUCTION AGENCY
025               VEHICLES.............             204             204
026               OTHER MAJOR EQUIPMENT          12,363          12,363
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
                   DODEA
021               AUTOMATION/                     1,910           1,910
                   EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT
                   & LOGISTICS.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DCMA
002               MAJOR EQUIPMENT......           4,347           4,347
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
                   DMACT
020               MAJOR EQUIPMENT......          13,464          13,464
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
045A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..         657,759         657,759
                  AVIATION PROGRAMS
049               ROTARY WING UPGRADES          158,988         151,488
                   AND SUSTAINMENT.
                      Per SOCOM                                 [-7,500]
                      requested
                      realignment.
050               UNMANNED ISR.........          13,295          13,295
051               NON-STANDARD AVIATION           4,892           4,892
052               U-28.................           5,769           5,769
053               MH-47 CHINOOK........          87,345          87,345
055               CV-22 MODIFICATION...          42,178          42,178
057               MQ-9 UNMANNED AERIAL           21,660          21,660
                   VEHICLE.
059               PRECISION STRIKE              229,728         229,728
                   PACKAGE.
060               AC/MC-130J...........         179,934         179,934
061               C-130 MODIFICATIONS..          28,059          28,059
                  SHIPBUILDING
062               UNDERWATER SYSTEMS...          92,606          79,806
                      Per SOCOM                                [-12,800]
                      requested
                      realignment.
                  AMMUNITION PROGRAMS
063               ORDNANCE ITEMS <$5M..         112,331         112,331
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT
                   PROGRAMS
064               INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS.          82,538          82,538
065               DISTRIBUTED COMMON             11,042          11,042
                   GROUND/SURFACE
                   SYSTEMS.
066               OTHER ITEMS <$5M.....          54,592          54,592
067               COMBATANT CRAFT                23,272          23,272
                   SYSTEMS.
068               SPECIAL PROGRAMS.....          16,053          16,053
069               TACTICAL VEHICLES....          63,304          63,304
070               WARRIOR SYSTEMS <$5M.         252,070         252,070
071               COMBAT MISSION                 19,570          19,570
                   REQUIREMENTS.
072               GLOBAL VIDEO                    3,589           3,589
                   SURVEILLANCE
                   ACTIVITIES.
073               OPERATIONAL                    17,953          17,953
                   ENHANCEMENTS
                   INTELLIGENCE.
075               OPERATIONAL                   241,429         241,429
                   ENHANCEMENTS.
                  CBDP
076               CHEMICAL BIOLOGICAL           135,031         135,031
                   SITUATIONAL
                   AWARENESS.
077               CB PROTECTION &               141,027         141,027
                   HAZARD MITIGATION.
                       TOTAL                  4,835,418       5,292,518
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       DEFENSE-WIDE.
 
                  JOINT URGENT
                   OPERATIONAL NEEDS
                   FUND
                  JOINT URGENT
                   OPERATIONAL NEEDS
                   FUND
001               JOINT URGENT                   99,795               0
                   OPERATIONAL NEEDS
                   FUND.
                      Program reduction                        [-99,795]
                       TOTAL JOINT               99,795               0
                       URGENT
                       OPERATIONAL
                       NEEDS FUND.
 
                       TOTAL                113,983,713     127,861,301
                       PROCUREMENT.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 4102. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4102. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands
                               of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             FY 2018          House
      Line                 Item              Request        Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
                   ARMY
                  FIXED WING
004               MQ-1 UAV.............          87,300          87,300
                  ROTARY
006               AH-64 APACHE BLOCK             39,040          78,040
                   IIIA REMAN.
                      Unfunded                                  [39,000]
                      requirement.
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   AIRCRAFT
015               MQ-1 PAYLOAD (MIP)...          41,400          33,400
                      Realign European                          [-8,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
018               MULTI SENSOR ABN               33,475           4,000
                   RECON (MIP).
                      Realign European                         [-29,475]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
023               EMARSS SEMA MODS               36,000          36,000
                   (MIP).
025               UTILITY HELICOPTER                             34,809
                   MODS.
                      Unfunded                                  [34,809]
                      requirement.
027               COMMS, NAV                      4,289           4,289
                   SURVEILLANCE.
                  GROUND SUPPORT
                   AVIONICS
033               CMWS.................         139,742         201,542
                      Unfunded                                  [61,800]
                      requirement--B
                      kits.
034               COMMON INFRARED                43,440          43,440
                   COUNTERMEASURES
                   (CIRCM).
                  OTHER SUPPORT
037               AIRCREW INTEGRATED                             12,100
                   SYSTEMS.
                      Unfunded                                  [12,100]
                      requirement.
                       TOTAL AIRCRAFT           424,686         534,920
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       ARMY.
 
                  MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
                   ARMY
                  SURFACE-TO-AIR
                   MISSILE SYSTEM
002               MSE MISSILE..........                         633,570
                      Meet inventory                           [633,570]
                      requirements for
                      COCOMS.
                  AIR-TO-SURFACE
                   MISSILE SYSTEM
005               HELLFIRE SYS SUMMARY.         278,073         288,073
                      Unfunded                                  [10,000]
                      requirement.
                  ANTI-TANK/ASSAULT
                   MISSILE SYS
008               JAVELIN (AAWS-M)                8,112         147,300
                   SYSTEM SUMMARY.
                      Realign European                          [-8,112]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                 [147,300]
                      requirement.
009               TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY.           3,907               0
                      Realign European                          [-3,907]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
011               GUIDED MLRS ROCKET            191,522         204,522
                   (GMLRS).
                      Unfunded                                  [13,000]
                      requirement.
012               MLRS REDUCED RANGE                              6,330
                   PRACTICE ROCKETS
                   (RRPR).
                      Unfunded                                   [6,330]
                      requirement.
013               HIGH MOBILITY                  41,000               0
                   ARTILLERY ROCKET
                   SYSTEM (HIMARS.
                      Realign European                         [-41,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
014               LETHAL MINIATURE                8,669          55,269
                   AERIAL MISSILE
                   SYSTEM (LMAMS.
                      Unfunded                                  [46,600]
                      requirement.
                  MODIFICATIONS
016               ATACMS MODS..........                          69,400
                      Unfunded                                  [69,400]
                      requirement.
018               STINGER MODS.........          28,000               0
                      Realign European                         [-28,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                       TOTAL MISSILE            559,283       1,404,464
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       ARMY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV,
                   ARMY
                  TRACKED COMBAT
                   VEHICLES
001               BRADLEY PROGRAM......         200,000               0
                      Realign European                        [-200,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
002               ARMORED MULTI PURPOSE         253,903               0
                   VEHICLE (AMPV).
                      Realign European                        [-253,903]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   TRACKED COMBAT
                   VEHICLES
004               STRYKER (MOD)........                         177,000
                      Unfunded                                 [177,000]
                      requirement -
                      lethality
                      upgrades.
006               BRADLEY PROGRAM (MOD)          30,000               0
                      Realign European                         [-30,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
008               PALADIN INTEGRATED            125,736               0
                   MANAGEMENT (PIM).
                      Realign European                        [-125,736]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
014               M1 ABRAMS TANK (MOD).         138,700               0
                      Realign European                        [-138,700]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
015               ABRAMS UPGRADE                442,800               0
                   PROGRAM.
                      Realign European                        [-442,800]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                       TOTAL                  1,191,139         177,000
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       W&TCV, ARMY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF
                   AMMUNITION, ARMY
                  SMALL/MEDIUM CAL
                   AMMUNITION
001               CTG, 5.56MM, ALL                                7,100
                   TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                   [7,100]
                      requirement.
002               CTG, 7.62MM, ALL                               14,900
                   TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                  [14,900]
                      requirement.
003               CTG, HANDGUN, ALL                   5              90
                   TYPES.
                      Realign European                              [-5]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                      [90]
                      requirement.
004               CTG, .50 CAL, ALL                 121           8,890
                   TYPES.
                      Realign European                            [-121]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                   [8,890]
                      requirement.
005               CTG, 20MM, ALL TYPES.           1,605           1,605
006               CTG, 25MM, ALL TYPES.                          31,862
                      Unfunded                                  [31,862]
                      requirement.
007               CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES.          35,000          12,150
                      Realign European                         [-25,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                   [2,150]
                      requirement.
008               CTG, 40MM, ALL TYPES.                          17,191
                      Unfunded                                  [17,191]
                      requirement.
                  MORTAR AMMUNITION
009               60MM MORTAR, ALL                                2,500
                   TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                   [2,500]
                      requirement.
010               81MM MORTAR, ALL                                3,109
                   TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                   [3,109]
                      requirement.
011               120MM MORTAR, ALL                              18,192
                   TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                  [18,192]
                      requirement.
                  TANK AMMUNITION
012               CARTRIDGES, TANK,                              40,300
                   105MM AND 120MM, ALL
                   TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                  [40,300]
                      requirement.
                  ARTILLERY AMMUNITION
014               ARTILLERY PROJECTILE,                         159,181
                   155MM, ALL TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                 [159,181]
                      requirement.
015               PROJ 155MM EXTENDED            23,234           4,189
                   RANGE M982.
                      Realign European                         [-19,045]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
016               ARTILLERY                      20,023          84,067
                   PROPELLANTS, FUZES
                   AND PRIMERS, ALL.
                      Realign European                         [-16,678]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [80,722]
                      requirement.
                  MINES
017               MINES & CLEARING               11,615           3,000
                   CHARGES, ALL TYPES.
                      Realign European                         [-11,615]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                   [3,000]
                      requirement.
                  ROCKETS
019               SHOULDER LAUNCHED              25,000          86,881
                   MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                  [61,881]
                      requirement.
020               ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL          75,820         163,820
                   TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                  [20,000]
                      requirement.
                      Unfunded                                  [68,000]
                      requirement--APKW
                      S and M282
                      warheads.
                  OTHER AMMUNITION
022               DEMOLITION MUNITIONS,                           2,261
                   ALL TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                   [2,261]
                      requirement.
023               GRENADES, ALL TYPES..                          25,361
                      Unfunded                                  [25,361]
                      requirement.
024               SIGNALS, ALL TYPES...           1,013           1,842
                      Unfunded                                     [829]
                      requirement.
025               SIMULATORS, ALL TYPES                             450
                      Unfunded                                     [450]
                      requirement.
                  MISCELLANEOUS
027               NON-LETHAL                                        150
                   AMMUNITION, ALL
                   TYPES.
                      Unfunded                                     [150]
                      requirement.
028               ITEMS LESS THAN $5                              3,665
                   MILLION (AMMO).
                      Unfunded                                   [3,665]
                      requirement.
                  PRODUCTION BASE
                   SUPPORT
033               CONVENTIONAL                                   53,000
                   MUNITIONS
                   DEMILITARIZATION.
                      Unfunded                                  [53,000]
                      requirement.
                       TOTAL                    193,436         745,756
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       AMMUNITION, ARMY.
 
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT,
                   ARMY
                  TACTICAL VEHICLES
010               FAMILY OF HEAVY                25,874               0
                   TACTICAL VEHICLES
                   (FHTV).
                      Realign European                         [-25,874]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
012               HVY EXPANDED MOBILE            38,628               0
                   TACTICAL TRUCK EXT
                   SERV.
                      Realign European                         [-38,628]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
014               MODIFICATION OF IN             64,647         135,900
                   SVC EQUIP.
                      Realign European                          [-2,599]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [73,852]
                      requirement--rout
                      e clearance and
                      mine protected
                      vehicles.
015               MINE-RESISTANT AMBUSH-         17,508          17,508
                   PROTECTED (MRAP)
                   MODS.
                  COMM--JOINT
                   COMMUNICATIONS
020               SIGNAL MODERNIZATION            4,900           4,900
                   PROGRAM.
                  COMM--COMBAT
                   COMMUNICATIONS
041               TRACTOR RIDE.........           1,000           1,000
                  COMM--BASE
                   COMMUNICATIONS
062               INSTALLATION INFO               2,500               0
                   INFRASTRUCTURE MOD
                   PROGRAM.
                      Realign European                          [-2,500]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  ELECT EQUIP--TACT INT
                   REL ACT (TIARA)
068               DCGS-A (MIP).........          39,515          52,515
                      Unfunded                                  [13,000]
                      requirement.
070               TROJAN (MIP).........          21,310          15,310
                      Realign European                          [-6,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
071               MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP             2,300           2,300
                   (INTEL SPT) (MIP).
072               CI HUMINT AUTO                 14,460          14,460
                   REPRTING AND
                   COLL(CHARCS).
075               BIOMETRIC TACTICAL              5,180           5,180
                   COLLECTION DEVICES
                   (MIP).
                  ELECT EQUIP--
                   ELECTRONIC WARFARE
                   (EW)
079               CREW.................                          17,500
                      Unfunded                                  [17,500]
                      requirement--EOD
                      DR SKOs.
080               FAMILY OF PERSISTENT           16,935          21,935
                   SURVEILLANCE
                   CAPABILITIE.
                      Unfunded                                   [5,000]
                      requirement.
081               COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/           18,874          12,974
                   SECURITY
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
                      Realign European                          [-5,900]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
                   SURV. (TAC SURV)
084               NIGHT VISION DEVICES.             377             377
085               SMALL TACTICAL                     60           2,210
                   OPTICAL RIFLE
                   MOUNTED MLRF.
                      Unfunded                                   [2,150]
                      requirement.
086               BASE EXPEDITIARY                               29,462
                   TARGETING AND SURV
                   SYS.
                      Unfunded                                  [29,462]
                      requirement.
087               INDIRECT FIRE                  57,500         200,110
                   PROTECTION FAMILY OF
                   SYSTEMS.
                      Unfunded                                 [142,610]
                      requirement--Air
                      and Missile
                      Defense (SHORAD).
091               JOINT BATTLE COMMAND--                         -2,300
                   PLATFORM (JBC-P).
                      Realign European                          [-2,300]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
093               MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP             3,974               0
                   (LLDR).
                      Realign European                          [-3,974]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
095               MORTAR FIRE CONTROL             2,947           2,872
                   SYSTEM.
                      Realign European                             [-75]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL
                   C2 SYSTEMS
098               AIR & MSL DEFENSE               9,100               0
                   PLANNING & CONTROL
                   SYS.
                      Realign European                          [-9,100]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  CHEMICAL DEFENSIVE
                   EQUIPMENT
119               BASE DEFENSE SYSTEMS            3,726           3,726
                   (BDS).
                  ENGINEER (NON-
                   CONSTRUCTION)
                   EQUIPMENT
126               GRND STANDOFF MINE                             10,800
                   DETECTN SYSM
                   (GSTAMIDS).
                      Unfunded                                  [10,800]
                      requirement.
128               HUSKY MOUNTED                                   2,400
                   DETECTION SYSTEM
                   (HMDS).
                      Unfunded                                   [2,400]
                      requirement.
                  COMBAT SERVICE
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
136               HEATERS AND ECU'S....             270             270
142               FIELD FEEDING                     145             145
                   EQUIPMENT.
143               CARGO AERIAL DEL &              1,980           1,980
                   PERSONNEL PARACHUTE
                   SYSTEM.
                  MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
148               COMBAT SUPPORT                 25,690           4,568
                   MEDICAL.
                      Realign European                         [-21,122]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT
149               MOBILE MAINTENANCE              1,124               0
                   EQUIPMENT SYSTEMS.
                      Realign European                          [-1,124]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  CONSTRUCTION
                   EQUIPMENT
153               HYDRAULIC EXCAVATOR..           3,850           3,850
157               HIGH MOBILITY                   1,932           1,932
                   ENGINEER EXCAVATOR
                   (HMEE).
                  GENERATORS
164               GENERATORS AND                    569             569
                   ASSOCIATED EQUIP.
                  TRAINING EQUIPMENT
168               TRAINING DEVICES,               2,700               0
                   NONSYSTEM.
                      Realign European                          [-2,700]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  TEST MEASURE AND DIG
                   EQUIPMENT (TMD)
173               INTEGRATED FAMILY OF            7,500               0
                   TEST EQUIPMENT
                   (IFTE).
                      Realign European                          [-7,500]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  OTHER SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
176               RAPID EQUIPPING                 8,500          13,500
                   SOLDIER SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Unfunded                                   [5,000]
                      requirement.
                       TOTAL OTHER              405,575         577,953
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       ARMY.
 
                  JOINT IMPROVISED
                   EXPLOSIVE DEVICE
                   DEFEAT FUND
                  NETWORK ATTACK
001               RAPID ACQUISITION AND         483,058         483,058
                   THREAT RESPONSE.
                       TOTAL JOINT              483,058         483,058
                       IMPROVISED-
                       THREAT DEFEAT
                       FUND.
 
                  AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
                   NAVY
                  OTHER AIRCRAFT
027               STUASL0 UAV..........           3,900           3,900
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   AIRCRAFT
033               F-18 SERIES..........                          16,000
                      Unfunded                                  [16,000]
                      requirement -ALR-
                      67(V)3 Retrofit A
                      and B Kits.
034               H-53 SERIES..........             950             950
035               SH-60 SERIES.........          15,382          15,382
037               EP-3 SERIES..........           7,220           7,220
047               SPECIAL PROJECT                19,855          19,855
                   AIRCRAFT.
051               COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT.          75,530          75,530
062               QRC..................          15,150          15,150
                  AIRCRAFT SPARES AND
                   REPAIR PARTS
064               SPARES AND REPAIR              18,850          18,850
                   PARTS.
                  AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
                   EQUIP & FACILITIES
066               AIRCRAFT INDUSTRIAL               463             463
                   FACILITIES.
                       TOTAL AIRCRAFT           157,300         173,300
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       NAVY.
 
                  WEAPONS PROCUREMENT,
                   NAVY
                  STRATEGIC MISSILES
003               TOMAHAWK.............         100,086         100,086
                  TACTICAL MISSILES
004               AMRAAM...............                          12,000
                      Unfunded                                  [12,000]
                      requirement--AIM-
                      120 Captive Air
                      Training Missiles
                      Guidance sections.
007               STANDARD MISSILE.....          35,208          35,208
011               HELLFIRE.............           8,771           8,771
012               LASER MAVERICK.......           5,040           5,040
                  MODIFICATION OF
                   MISSILES
017               ESSM.................           1,768           1,768
                  GUNS AND GUN MOUNTS
035               SMALL ARMS AND                  1,500           1,500
                   WEAPONS.
                       TOTAL WEAPONS            152,373         164,373
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       NAVY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF AMMO,
                   NAVY & MC
                  NAVY AMMUNITION
001               GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS          74,021          74,021
002               JDAM.................         106,941         106,941
003               AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL           1,184           1,184
                   TYPES.
007               AIR EXPENDABLE                 15,700          15,700
                   COUNTERMEASURES.
008               JATOS................             540             540
012               OTHER SHIP GUN                 13,789          13,789
                   AMMUNITION.
013               SMALL ARMS & LANDING            1,963           1,963
                   PARTY AMMO.
014               PYROTECHNIC AND                   765             765
                   DEMOLITION.
016               AMMUNITION LESS THAN              866             866
                   $5 MILLION.
                  MARINE CORPS
                   AMMUNITION
019               60MM, ALL TYPES......                          11,000
                      Unfunded                                  [11,000]
                      requirement--Full
                      range practice
                      rounds.
020               MORTARS..............           1,290           1,290
021               81MM, ALL TYPES......                          14,500
                      Unfunded                                  [14,500]
                      requirement--Full
                      range practice
                      rounds.
023               DIRECT SUPPORT                  1,355           1,355
                   MUNITIONS.
024               INFANTRY WEAPONS                1,854           1,854
                   AMMUNITION.
027               ARTILLERY, ALL TYPES.                          17,000
                      Unfunded                                  [17,000]
                      requirement--HE
                      Training Rounds.
033               ARTILLERY MUNITIONS..           5,319           5,319
                       TOTAL                    225,587         268,087
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       AMMO, NAVY & MC.
 
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT,
                   NAVY
                  OTHER SHIPBOARD
                   EQUIPMENT
025               UNDERWATER EOD                 12,348           8,332
                   PROGRAMS.
                      Realign European                          [-4,016]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  SMALL BOATS
032               STANDARD BOATS.......          18,000          18,000
                  SHIP SONARS
046               SSN ACOUSTIC                   43,500               0
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Realign European                         [-43,500]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  AVIATION ELECTRONIC
                   EQUIPMENT
078               NAVAL MISSION                   2,550           2,550
                   PLANNING SYSTEMS.
                  OTHER SHORE
                   ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
080               TACTICAL/MOBILE C4I             7,900               0
                   SYSTEMS.
                      Realign European                          [-7,900]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
081               DCGS-N...............           6,392           4,492
                      Realign European                          [-1,900]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  CRYPTOLOGIC EQUIPMENT
101               CRYPTOLOGIC                     2,280           2,280
                   COMMUNICATIONS EQUIP.
                  AIRCRAFT SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
119               AVIATION SUPPORT               29,245          29,245
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  SHIP MISSILE SYSTEMS
                   EQUIPMENT
121               SHIP MISSILE SUPPORT            2,436           2,436
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  OTHER ORDNANCE
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
126               EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE             31,970          31,970
                   DISPOSAL EQUIP.
                  CIVIL ENGINEERING
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
132               GENERAL PURPOSE                   496             390
                   TRUCKS.
                      Realign European                            [-106]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
134               FIRE FIGHTING                   2,304           2,304
                   EQUIPMENT.
135               TACTICAL VEHICLES....           2,336           2,336
                  SUPPLY SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
141               SUPPLY EQUIPMENT.....             164               0
                      Realign European                            [-164]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
143               FIRST DESTINATION                 420             420
                   TRANSPORTATION.
                  COMMAND SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
147               COMMAND SUPPORT                21,650          21,650
                   EQUIPMENT.
152               OPERATING FORCES               15,800          15,800
                   SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.
154               ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT           1,000               0
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Realign European                          [-1,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
155               PHYSICAL SECURITY              15,890          15,890
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
161A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..           2,200           2,200
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
161               SPARES AND REPAIR               1,178           1,178
                   PARTS.
                       TOTAL OTHER              220,059         161,473
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       NAVY.
 
                  PROCUREMENT, MARINE
                   CORPS
                  ARTILLERY AND OTHER
                   WEAPONS
006               HIGH MOBILITY                   5,360           5,360
                   ARTILLERY ROCKET
                   SYSTEM.
                  GUIDED MISSILES
011               JAVELIN..............           2,833           2,833
012               FOLLOW ON TO SMAW....              49              49
013               ANTI-ARMOR WEAPONS              5,024           5,024
                   SYSTEM-HEAVY (AAWS-
                   H).
                  REPAIR AND TEST
                   EQUIPMENT
017               REPAIR AND TEST                 8,241           8,241
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  OTHER SUPPORT (TEL)
019               MODIFICATION KITS....             750             750
                  COMMAND AND CONTROL
                   SYSTEM (NON-TEL)
020               ITEMS UNDER $5                    200          20,400
                   MILLION (COMM &
                   ELEC).
                      Unfunded                                  [20,200]
                      requirement--nigh
                      t optics for
                      sniper rifles.
                  RADAR + EQUIPMENT
                   (NON-TEL)
023               GROUND/AIR TASK                                39,200
                   ORIENTED RADAR (G/
                   ATOR).
                      Unfunded                                   [1,500]
                      requirement--CEG
                      Shelters.
                      Unfunded                                  [37,700]
                      requirement--G/
                      ATOR acceleration.
024               RQ-21 UAS............           8,400           8,400
                  INTELL/COMM EQUIPMENT
                   (NON-TEL)
026               FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM..              50              50
027               INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT            3,000           3,000
                   EQUIPMENT.
029               UNMANNED AIR SYSTEMS                           16,600
                   (INTEL).
                      Unfunded                                  [16,600]
                      requirement -
                      UUNS for long
                      endurance small
                      UAS.
                  OTHER SUPPORT (NON-
                   TEL)
037               COMMAND POST SYSTEMS.           5,777          75,777
                      Additional NOTM-A                         [70,000]
                      Systems for
                      emerging
                      operational
                      requirements.
038               RADIO SYSTEMS........           4,590           4,590
                  ENGINEER AND OTHER
                   EQUIPMENT
053               EOD SYSTEMS..........          21,000          21,000
                  SPARES AND REPAIR
                   PARTS
062               SPARES AND REPAIR                               3,129
                   PARTS.
                      Unfunded                                   [3,129]
                      requirement--G/
                      ATOR spares.
                       TOTAL                     65,274         214,403
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       MARINE CORPS.
 
                  AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  OTHER AIRCRAFT
017               MQ-9.................         271,080         271,080
                  AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT
033               C-17A................          26,850          26,850
                  OTHER AIRCRAFT
048               C-130J MODS..........           8,400           8,400
051               COMPASS CALL MODS....          56,720          56,720
056               E-8..................           3,000           3,000
061               RQ-4 MODS............                          39,600
                      Unfunded                                  [39,600]
                      requirement--Tact
                      ical Field
                      Terminal
                      Antennaes.
062               HC/MC-130                     153,080         153,080
                   MODIFICATIONS.
063               OTHER AIRCRAFT.......          10,381          10,381
065               MQ-9 MODS............          56,400          56,400
                  AIRCRAFT SPARES AND
                   REPAIR PARTS
067               INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR         129,450         129,450
                   PARTS.
                  COMMON SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
068               AIRCRAFT REPLACEMENT           25,417               0
                   SUPPORT EQUIP.
                      Realign European                         [-25,417]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                       TOTAL AIRCRAFT           740,778         754,961
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  MISSILE PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  TACTICAL
006               PREDATOR HELLFIRE             294,480         294,480
                   MISSILE.
007               SMALL DIAMETER BOMB..          90,920          90,920
                  CLASS IV
011               AGM-65D MAVERICK.....          10,000          10,000
                       TOTAL MISSILE            395,400         395,400
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  SPACE PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  SPACE PROGRAMS
010               MILSATCOM............           2,256           2,256
                       TOTAL SPACE                2,256           2,256
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  PROCUREMENT OF
                   AMMUNITION, AIR
                   FORCE
                  ROCKETS
001               ROCKETS..............          49,050          49,050
                  CARTRIDGES
002               CARTRIDGES...........          11,384          11,384
                  BOMBS
006               JOINT DIRECT ATTACK           390,577         390,577
                   MUNITION.
                  FLARES
015               FLARES...............           3,498           3,498
                  FUZES
016               FUZES................          47,000          47,000
                       TOTAL                    501,509         501,509
                       PROCUREMENT OF
                       AMMUNITION, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT,
                   AIR FORCE
                  PASSENGER CARRYING
                   VEHICLES
001               PASSENGER CARRYING              3,855           8,377
                   VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                          [-1,350]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                   [5,872]
                      requirement.
                  CARGO AND UTILITY
                   VEHICLES
002               MEDIUM TACTICAL                                13,300
                   VEHICLE.
                      Unfunded                                  [13,300]
                      requirement.
004               CARGO AND UTILITY               1,882         100,678
                   VEHICLES.
                      Unfunded                                  [98,796]
                      requirement.
                  SPECIAL PURPOSE
                   VEHICLES
005               SECURITY AND TACTICAL           1,100          11,064
                   VEHICLES.
                      Unfunded                                   [9,964]
                      requirement.
006               SPECIAL PURPOSE                32,479          11,265
                   VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                         [-31,821]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [10,607]
                      requirement.
                  FIRE FIGHTING
                   EQUIPMENT
007               FIRE FIGHTING/CRASH            22,583               0
                   RESCUE VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                         [-22,583]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  MATERIALS HANDLING
                   EQUIPMENT
008               MATERIALS HANDLING              5,353          80,384
                   VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                          [-4,026]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [79,057]
                      requirement.
                  BASE MAINTENANCE
                   SUPPORT
009               RUNWAY SNOW REMOV &            11,315          10,275
                   CLEANING EQUIP.
                      Realign European                          [-9,161]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                   [8,121]
                      requirement.
010               BASE MAINTENANCE               40,451          13,989
                   SUPPORT VEHICLES.
                      Realign European                         [-39,692]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                      Unfunded                                  [13,230]
                      requirement.
                  INTELLIGENCE PROGRAMS
013               INTERNATIONAL INTEL             8,873           8,873
                   TECH & ARCHITECTURES.
015               INTELLIGENCE COMM               2,000           2,000
                   EQUIPMENT.
                  ELECTRONICS PROGRAMS
016               AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL &          56,500          95,200
                   LANDING SYS.
                      Unfunded                                  [16,500]
                      requirement--depl
                      oyable RAPCON
                      systems.
                      Unfunded                                   [6,000]
                      requirement--digi
                      tal air traffic
                      control radios.
                      Unfunded                                  [16,200]
                      requirement--D-
                      ILS.
018               BATTLE CONTROL                                  1,400
                   SYSTEM--FIXED.
                      Unfunded                                   [1,400]
                      requirement.
019               THEATER AIR CONTROL             4,970           4,970
                   SYS IMPROVEMENTS.
                  SPCL COMM-ELECTRONICS
                   PROJECTS
029               AIR FORCE PHYSICAL              3,000          37,500
                   SECURITY SYSTEM.
                      Unfunded                                  [18,000]
                      requirement--Intr
                      usion Detection
                      Systems.
                      Unfunded                                  [16,500]
                      requirement--PL2
                      BPSS systems.
                  ORGANIZATION AND BASE
048               BASE COMM                      55,000               0
                   INFRASTRUCTURE.
                      Realign European                         [-55,000]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  PERSONAL SAFETY &
                   RESCUE EQUIP
051               ITEMS LESS THAN $5              8,469          71,869
                   MILLION.
                      Unfunded                                  [59,400]
                      requirement--batt
                      lefield airman
                      combat equipment.
                      Unfunded                                   [4,000]
                      requirements.
                  BASE SUPPORT
                   EQUIPMENT
053               BASE PROCURED                   7,500               0
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Realign European                          [-7,500]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
054               ENGINEERING AND EOD            80,427         112,977
                   EQUIPMENT.
                      Unfunded                                  [32,550]
                      requirement.
055               MOBILITY EQUIPMENT...                          37,000
                      Unfunded                                  [37,000]
                      requirement--Basi
                      c Expeditionary
                      Airfield
                      Resources.
056               ITEMS LESS THAN $5            110,405           6,390
                   MILLION.
                      Realign European                        [-104,015]
                      Reassurance
                      Initiative to
                      Base.
                  SPECIAL SUPPORT
                   PROJECTS
058               DARP RC135...........             700             700
059               DCGS-AF..............           9,200         100,400
                      Unfunded                                  [91,200]
                      requirement.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
062A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..       3,542,825       3,542,825
                       TOTAL OTHER            4,008,887       4,271,436
                       PROCUREMENT, AIR
                       FORCE.
 
                  PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-
                   WIDE
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DISA
008               TELEPORT PROGRAM.....           1,979           1,979
018               DEFENSE INFORMATION            12,000          12,000
                   SYSTEMS NETWORK.
                  MAJOR EQUIPMENT,
                   MISSILE DEFENSE
                   AGENCY
034               IRON DOME............                          50,000
                      Additional funds                          [50,000]
                      for Iron Dome
                      Tamir
                      interceptors.
                  CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
045A              CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..          43,653          43,653
                  AVIATION PROGRAMS
046               MANNED ISR...........          15,900          15,900
047               MC-12................          20,000          20,000
050               UNMANNED ISR.........          38,933          38,933
051               NON-STANDARD AVIATION           9,600           9,600
052               U-28.................           8,100           8,100
053               MH-47 CHINOOK........          10,270          10,270
057               MQ-9 UNMANNED AERIAL           19,780          19,780
                   VEHICLE.
061               C-130 MODIFICATIONS..           3,750           3,750
                  AMMUNITION PROGRAMS
063               ORDNANCE ITEMS <$5M..          62,643          62,643
                  OTHER PROCUREMENT
                   PROGRAMS
064               INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS.          12,000          12,000
069               TACTICAL VEHICLES....          38,527          38,527
070               WARRIOR SYSTEMS <$5M.          20,215          20,215
073               OPERATIONAL                     7,134           7,134
                   ENHANCEMENTS
                   INTELLIGENCE.
075               OPERATIONAL                   193,542         211,067
                   ENHANCEMENTS.
                      Unfunded                                  [15,900]
                      requirement-
                      Joint Task Force
                      Platform
                      Expansion.
                      Unfunded                                   [1,625]
                      requirement-
                      Publicly
                      Available
                      Information (PAI)
                      Capability
                      Acceleration.
                       TOTAL                    518,026         585,551
                       PROCUREMENT,
                       DEFENSE-WIDE.
 
                  NATIONAL GUARD AND
                   RESERVE EQUIPMENT
                  UNDISTRIBUTED
007               UNDISTRIBUTED........                         500,000
                      Program increase.                        [500,000]
                       TOTAL NATIONAL                           500,000
                       GUARD AND
                       RESERVE
                       EQUIPMENT.
 
                       TOTAL                 10,244,626      11,915,900
                       PROCUREMENT.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 4103. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS FOR BASE 
              REQUIREMENTS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
   SEC. 4103. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS FOR BASE
                 REQUIREMENTS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             FY 2018          House
      Line                 Item              Request        Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  SHIPBUILDING AND
                   CONVERSION, NAVY
                  OTHER WARSHIPS
003                  ADVANCE                                    200,000
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                      CVN 81 AP........                        [200,000]
009               DDG-51...............                       1,896,800
                      DDG..............                      [1,862,800]
                      Ship Signal                               [34,000]
                      Exploitation
                      Equipment.
010                  ADVANCE                                     45,000
                     PROCUREMENT (CY).
                      DDG AP...........                         [45,000]
011               LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP.                       1,033,000
                      LCS..............                      [1,033,000]
                  AMPHIBIOUS SHIPS
012A              AMPHIBIOUS SHIP                               100,000
                   REPLACEMENT LX(R)
                   ADVANCE PROCUREMENT
                   (CY).
                      Program increase.                        [100,000]
013               LPD-17...............                       1,786,000
                      LPD-30...........                      [1,786,000]
014               EXPEDITIONARY SEA                             635,000
                   BASE (ESB).
                      ESB..............                        [635,000]
                  AUXILIARIES, CRAFT
                   AND PRIOR YR PROGRAM
                   COST
025               SHIP TO SHORE                                 312,000
                   CONNECTOR.
                      SSC..............                        [312,000]
026               SERVICE CRAFT........                          39,000
                      Berthing Barge...                         [39,000]
                       TOTAL                                  6,046,800
                       SHIPBUILDING AND
                       CONVERSION, NAVY.
 
                       TOTAL                                  6,046,800
                       PROCUREMENT.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

        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 2018          House
  Line             Program Element                          Item                     Request        Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
                                              EVAL, ARMY
         ..................................  BASIC RESEARCH
   001   0601101A                            IN-HOUSE LABORATORY INDEPENDENT             12,010          12,010
                                              RESEARCH.
   002   0601102A                            DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES.........         263,590         263,590
   003   0601103A                            UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...          67,027          67,027
   004   0601104A                            UNIVERSITY AND INDUSTRY RESEARCH            87,395          87,395
                                              CENTERS.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL BASIC RESEARCH........         430,022         430,022
         ..................................
         ..................................  APPLIED RESEARCH
   005   0602105A                            MATERIALS TECHNOLOGY..............          29,640          29,640
   006   0602120A                            SENSORS AND ELECTRONIC                      35,730          35,730
                                              SURVIVABILITY.
   007   0602122A                            TRACTOR HIP.......................           8,627           8,627
   008   0602211A                            AVIATION TECHNOLOGY...............          66,086          66,086
   009   0602270A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE TECHNOLOGY.....          27,144          27,144
   010   0602303A                            MISSILE TECHNOLOGY................          43,742          43,742
   011   0602307A                            ADVANCED WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY.......          22,785          22,785
   012   0602308A                            ADVANCED CONCEPTS AND SIMULATION..          28,650          28,650
   013   0602601A                            COMBAT VEHICLE AND AUTOMOTIVE               67,232          67,232
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   014   0602618A                            BALLISTICS TECHNOLOGY.............          85,309          85,309
   015   0602622A                            CHEMICAL, SMOKE AND EQUIPMENT                4,004           4,004
                                              DEFEATING TECHNOLOGY.
   016   0602623A                            JOINT SERVICE SMALL ARMS PROGRAM..           5,615           5,615
   017   0602624A                            WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS TECHNOLOGY..          41,455          41,455
   018   0602705A                            ELECTRONICS AND ELECTRONIC DEVICES          58,352          58,352
   019   0602709A                            NIGHT VISION TECHNOLOGY...........          34,723          34,723
   020   0602712A                            COUNTERMINE SYSTEMS...............          26,190          26,190
   021   0602716A                            HUMAN FACTORS ENGINEERING                   24,127          24,127
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   022   0602720A                            ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY..          21,678          21,678
   023   0602782A                            COMMAND, CONTROL, COMMUNICATIONS            33,123          33,123
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   024   0602783A                            COMPUTER AND SOFTWARE TECHNOLOGY..          14,041          14,041
   025   0602784A                            MILITARY ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY...          67,720          67,720
   026   0602785A                            MANPOWER/PERSONNEL/TRAINING                 20,216          20,216
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   027   0602786A                            WARFIGHTER TECHNOLOGY.............          39,559          44,559
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [5,000]
   028   0602787A                            MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY................          83,434          83,434
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......         889,182         894,182
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
   029   0603001A                            WARFIGHTER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY....          44,863          44,863
   030   0603002A                            MEDICAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.......          67,780          67,780
   031   0603003A                            AVIATION ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY......         160,746         160,746
   032   0603004A                            WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS ADVANCED              84,079          84,079
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   033   0603005A                            COMBAT VEHICLE AND AUTOMOTIVE              125,537         125,537
                                              ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.
   034   0603006A                            SPACE APPLICATION ADVANCED                  12,231          12,231
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   035   0603007A                            MANPOWER, PERSONNEL AND TRAINING             6,466           6,466
                                              ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.
   036   0603009A                            TRACTOR HIKE......................          28,552          28,552
   037   0603015A                            NEXT GENERATION TRAINING &                  16,434          16,434
                                              SIMULATION SYSTEMS.
   039   0603125A                            COMBATING TERRORISM--TECHNOLOGY             26,903          26,903
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   040   0603130A                            TRACTOR NAIL......................           4,880           4,880
   041   0603131A                            TRACTOR EGGS......................           4,326           4,326
   042   0603270A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE TECHNOLOGY.....          31,296          31,296
   043   0603313A                            MISSILE AND ROCKET ADVANCED                 62,850          72,850
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Simulation upgrades for land                           [10,000]
                                                 based anti-ship missile
                                                 development.
   044   0603322A                            TRACTOR CAGE......................          12,323          12,323
   045   0603461A                            HIGH PERFORMANCE COMPUTING                 182,331         182,331
                                              MODERNIZATION PROGRAM.
   046   0603606A                            LANDMINE WARFARE AND BARRIER                17,948          17,948
                                              ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.
   047   0603607A                            JOINT SERVICE SMALL ARMS PROGRAM..           5,796           5,796
   048   0603710A                            NIGHT VISION ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY..          47,135          47,135
   049   0603728A                            ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY            10,421          10,421
                                              DEMONSTRATIONS.
   050   0603734A                            MILITARY ENGINEERING ADVANCED               32,448          32,448
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   051   0603772A                            ADVANCED TACTICAL COMPUTER SCIENCE          52,206          52,206
                                              AND SENSOR TECHNOLOGY.
   052   0603794A                            C3 ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY............          33,426          33,426
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY          1,070,977       1,080,977
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
                                              PROTOTYPES
   053   0603305A                            ARMY MISSLE DEFENSE SYSTEMS                  9,634           9,634
                                              INTEGRATION.
   055   0603327A                            AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEMS             33,949          48,949
                                              ENGINEERING.
         ..................................      Realign European Reassurance                           [15,000]
                                                 Initiative to Base.
   056   0603619A                            LANDMINE WARFARE AND BARRIER--ADV           72,909          72,909
                                              DEV.
   057   0603627A                            SMOKE, OBSCURANT AND TARGET                  7,135           7,135
                                              DEFEATING SYS-ADV DEV.
   058   0603639A                            TANK AND MEDIUM CALIBER AMMUNITION          41,452          43,902
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--RF                                [2,450]
                                                 countermeasures.
   059   0603645A                            ARMORED SYSTEM MODERNIZATION--ADV           32,739          54,739
                                              DEV.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                         [22,000]
   060   0603747A                            SOLDIER SUPPORT AND SURVIVABILITY.          10,157          10,157
   061   0603766A                            TACTICAL ELECTRONIC SURVEILLANCE            27,733          29,353
                                              SYSTEM--ADV DEV.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                          [1,620]
   062   0603774A                            NIGHT VISION SYSTEMS ADVANCED               12,347          12,347
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   063   0603779A                            ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY--          10,456          10,456
                                              DEM/VAL.
   064   0603790A                            NATO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT.....           2,588           2,588
   065   0603801A                            AVIATION--ADV DEV.................          14,055          14,055
   066   0603804A                            LOGISTICS AND ENGINEER EQUIPMENT--          35,333          35,333
                                              ADV DEV.
   067   0603807A                            MEDICAL SYSTEMS--ADV DEV..........          33,491          33,491
   068   0603827A                            SOLDIER SYSTEMS--ADVANCED                   20,239          45,239
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Enhanced lightweight body                              [25,000]
                                                 armor and combat helmets
                                                 technology.
   069   0604017A                            ROBOTICS DEVELOPMENT..............          39,608          39,608
   070   0604100A                            ANALYSIS OF ALTERNATIVES..........           9,921           9,921
   071   0604114A                            LOWER TIER AIR MISSILE DEFENSE              76,728          76,728
                                              (LTAMD) SENSOR.
   072   0604115A                            TECHNOLOGY MATURATION INITIATIVES.         115,221         100,221
         ..................................      Program Reduction.............                        [-15,000]
   073   0604117A                            MANEUVER--SHORT RANGE AIR DEFENSE           20,000          20,000
                                              (M-SHORAD).
   074   0604118A                            TRACTOR BEAM......................          10,400          10,400
   075   0604120A                            ASSURED POSITIONING, NAVIGATION            164,967         164,967
                                              AND TIMING (PNT).
   076   0604121A                            SYNTHETIC TRAINING ENVIRONMENT               1,600           1,600
                                              REFINEMENT & PROTOTYPING.
   077   0604319A                            INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION                    11,303          11,303
                                              CAPABILITY INCREMENT 2-INTERCEPT
                                              (IFPC2).
   078   0305251A                            CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS FORCES AND            56,492          56,492
                                              FORCE SUPPORT.
   079   1206308A                            ARMY SPACE SYSTEMS INTEGRATION....          20,432          20,432
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT             890,889         941,959
                                                DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPES.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & DEMONSTRATION
   080   0604201A                            AIRCRAFT AVIONICS.................          30,153          30,153
   081   0604270A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....          71,671          71,671
   083   0604290A                            MID-TIER NETWORKING VEHICULAR               10,589          10,589
                                              RADIO (MNVR).
   084   0604321A                            ALL SOURCE ANALYSIS SYSTEM........           4,774           4,774
   085   0604328A                            TRACTOR CAGE......................          17,252          17,252
   086   0604601A                            INFANTRY SUPPORT WEAPONS..........          87,643          89,243
         ..................................      Program increase--soldier                               [3,000]
                                                 enhancement program.
         ..................................      Program reduction- obligation                          [-5,000]
                                                 delays.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--air                               [3,600]
                                                 soldier system.
   087   0604604A                            MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLES..........           6,039           6,039
   088   0604611A                            JAVELIN...........................          21,095          21,095
   089   0604622A                            FAMILY OF HEAVY TACTICAL VEHICLES.          10,507          10,507
   090   0604633A                            AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL...............           3,536           3,536
   092   0604642A                            LIGHT TACTICAL WHEELED VEHICLES...           7,000           7,000
   093   0604645A                            ARMORED SYSTEMS MODERNIZATION               36,242          36,242
                                              (ASM)--ENG DEV.
   094   0604710A                            NIGHT VISION SYSTEMS--ENG DEV.....         108,504         126,004
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                         [17,500]
   095   0604713A                            COMBAT FEEDING, CLOTHING, AND                3,702           3,702
                                              EQUIPMENT.
   096   0604715A                            NON-SYSTEM TRAINING DEVICES--ENG            43,575          43,575
                                              DEV.
   097   0604741A                            AIR DEFENSE COMMAND, CONTROL AND            28,726          28,726
                                              INTELLIGENCE--ENG DEV.
   098   0604742A                            CONSTRUCTIVE SIMULATION SYSTEMS             18,562          18,562
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   099   0604746A                            AUTOMATIC TEST EQUIPMENT                     8,344           8,344
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   100   0604760A                            DISTRIBUTIVE INTERACTIVE                    11,270          11,270
                                              SIMULATIONS (DIS)--ENG DEV.
   101   0604768A                            BRILLIANT ANTI-ARMOR SUBMUNITION            10,000          10,000
                                              (BAT).
   102   0604780A                            COMBINED ARMS TACTICAL TRAINER              18,566          18,566
                                              (CATT) CORE.
   103   0604798A                            BRIGADE ANALYSIS, INTEGRATION AND          145,360         145,360
                                              EVALUATION.
   104   0604802A                            WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS--ENG DEV....         145,232         157,410
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                          [8,000]
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--40mm low                          [4,178]
                                                 velocity M320 cartridge.
   105   0604804A                            LOGISTICS AND ENGINEER EQUIPMENT--          90,965          92,965
                                              ENG DEV.
         ..................................      Next generation vehicle                                 [2,000]
                                                 camouflage technology.
   106   0604805A                            COMMAND, CONTROL, COMMUNICATIONS             9,910           9,910
                                              SYSTEMS--ENG DEV.
   107   0604807A                            MEDICAL MATERIEL/MEDICAL                    39,238          39,238
                                              BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE EQUIPMENT--ENG
                                              DEV.
   108   0604808A                            LANDMINE WARFARE/BARRIER--ENG DEV.          34,684          34,684
   109   0604818A                            ARMY TACTICAL COMMAND & CONTROL            164,409         188,409
                                              HARDWARE & SOFTWARE.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                          [5,000]
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--Assured                          [19,000]
                                                 Communications.
   110   0604820A                            RADAR DEVELOPMENT.................          32,968          32,968
   111   0604822A                            GENERAL FUND ENTERPRISE BUSINESS            49,554          49,554
                                              SYSTEM (GFEBS).
   112   0604823A                            FIREFINDER........................          45,605          45,605
   113   0604827A                            SOLDIER SYSTEMS--WARRIOR DEM/VAL..          16,127          23,127
         ..................................      Program increase- soldier                               [7,000]
                                                 power development initiatives.
   114   0604852A                            SUITE OF SURVIVABILITY ENHANCEMENT          98,600         133,600
                                              SYSTEMS--EMD.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirements.........                         [35,000]
   115   0604854A                            ARTILLERY SYSTEMS--EMD............           1,972           3,972
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--IT3                               [2,000]
                                                 demonstrator.
   116   0605013A                            INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT          81,776          81,776
   117   0605018A                            INTEGRATED PERSONNEL AND PAY               172,361         172,361
                                              SYSTEM-ARMY (IPPS-A).
   118   0605028A                            ARMORED MULTI-PURPOSE VEHICLE              199,778         199,778
                                              (AMPV).
   119   0605029A                            INTEGRATED GROUND SECURITY                   4,418           4,418
                                              SURVEILLANCE RESPONSE CAPABILITY
                                              (IGSSR-C).
   120   0605030A                            JOINT TACTICAL NETWORK CENTER               15,877          15,877
                                              (JTNC).
   121   0605031A                            JOINT TACTICAL NETWORK (JTN)......          44,150          44,150
   122   0605032A                            TRACTOR TIRE......................          34,670         113,570
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                         [78,900]
   123   0605033A                            GROUND-BASED OPERATIONAL                     5,207           5,207
                                              SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM--
                                              EXPEDITIONARY (GBOSS-E).
   124   0605034A                            TACTICAL SECURITY SYSTEM (TSS)....           4,727           4,727
   125   0605035A                            COMMON INFRARED COUNTERMEASURES            105,778         105,778
                                              (CIRCM).
   126   0605036A                            COMBATING WEAPONS OF MASS                    6,927           6,927
                                              DESTRUCTION (CWMD).
   127   0605037A                            EVIDENCE COLLECTION AND DETAINEE               214             214
                                              PROCESSING.
   128   0605038A                            NUCLEAR BIOLOGICAL CHEMICAL                 16,125          16,125
                                              RECONNAISSANCE VEHICLE (NBCRV)
                                              SENSOR SUITE.
   129   0605041A                            DEFENSIVE CYBER TOOL DEVELOPMENT..          55,165          55,165
   130   0605042A                            TACTICAL NETWORK RADIO SYSTEMS              20,076          20,076
                                              (LOW-TIER).
   131   0605047A                            CONTRACT WRITING SYSTEM...........          20,322          20,322
   132   0605049A                            MISSILE WARNING SYSTEM                      55,810          55,810
                                              MODERNIZATION (MWSM).
   133   0605051A                            AIRCRAFT SURVIVABILITY DEVELOPMENT          30,879          30,879
   134   0605052A                            INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION                   175,069         175,069
                                              CAPABILITY INC 2--BLOCK 1.
   135   0605053A                            GROUND ROBOTICS...................          70,760          70,760
   137   0605380A                            AMF JOINT TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEM              8,965           8,965
                                              (JTRS).
   138   0605450A                            JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND MISSILE (JAGM)          34,626          34,626
   140   0605457A                            ARMY INTEGRATED AIR AND MISSILE            336,420         252,320
                                              DEFENSE (AIAMD).
         ..................................      Program Reduction.............                        [-84,100]
   143   0605766A                            NATIONAL CAPABILITIES INTEGRATION            6,882           9,382
                                              (MIP).
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                          [2,500]
   144   0605812A                            JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE                23,467          23,467
                                              (JLTV) ENGINEERING AND
                                              MANUFACTURING DEVELOPMENT PH.
   145   0605830A                            AVIATION GROUND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.           6,930           6,930
   146   0210609A                            PALADIN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT                6,112           6,112
                                              (PIM).
   147   0303032A                            TROJAN--RH12......................           4,431           4,431
   150   0304270A                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....          14,616          14,616
   151   1205117A                            TRACTOR BEARS.....................          17,928          17,928
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT &         3,012,840       3,111,418
                                                DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................
         ..................................  RDT&E MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   152   0604256A                            THREAT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT......          22,862          22,862
   153   0604258A                            TARGET SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT........          13,902          13,902
   154   0604759A                            MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT..............         102,901         102,901
   155   0605103A                            RAND ARROYO CENTER................          20,140          20,140
   156   0605301A                            ARMY KWAJALEIN ATOLL..............         246,663         246,663
   157   0605326A                            CONCEPTS EXPERIMENTATION PROGRAM..          29,820          29,820
   159   0605601A                            ARMY TEST RANGES AND FACILITIES...         307,588         307,588
   160   0605602A                            ARMY TECHNICAL TEST                         49,242          49,242
                                              INSTRUMENTATION AND TARGETS.
   161   0605604A                            SURVIVABILITY/LETHALITY ANALYSIS..          41,843          41,843
   162   0605606A                            AIRCRAFT CERTIFICATION............           4,804           4,804
   163   0605702A                            METEOROLOGICAL SUPPORT TO RDT&E              7,238           7,238
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   164   0605706A                            MATERIEL SYSTEMS ANALYSIS.........          21,890          21,890
   165   0605709A                            EXPLOITATION OF FOREIGN ITEMS.....          12,684          12,684
   166   0605712A                            SUPPORT OF OPERATIONAL TESTING....          51,040          51,040
   167   0605716A                            ARMY EVALUATION CENTER............          56,246          56,246
   168   0605718A                            ARMY MODELING & SIM X-CMD                    1,829           1,829
                                              COLLABORATION & INTEG.
   169   0605801A                            PROGRAMWIDE ACTIVITIES............          55,060          55,060
   170   0605803A                            TECHNICAL INFORMATION ACTIVITIES..          33,934          33,934
   171   0605805A                            MUNITIONS STANDARDIZATION,                  43,444          43,444
                                              EFFECTIVENESS AND SAFETY.
   172   0605857A                            ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY             5,087           5,087
                                              MGMT SUPPORT.
   173   0605898A                            ARMY DIRECT REPORT HEADQUARTERS--           54,679          54,679
                                              R&D - MHA.
   174   0606001A                            MILITARY GROUND-BASED CREW                   7,916           7,916
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   175   0606002A                            RONALD REAGAN BALLISTIC MISSILE             61,254          61,254
                                              DEFENSE TEST SITE.
   176   0303260A                            DEFENSE MILITARY DECEPTION                   1,779           1,779
                                              INITIATIVE.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL RDT&E MANAGEMENT             1,253,845       1,253,845
                                                SUPPORT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
   178   0603778A                            MLRS PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM..           8,929           8,929
   179   0603813A                            TRACTOR PULL......................           4,014           4,014
   180   0605024A                            ANTI-TAMPER TECHNOLOGY SUPPORT....           4,094           4,094
   181   0607131A                            WEAPONS AND MUNITIONS PRODUCT               15,738          15,738
                                              IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS.
   182   0607133A                            TRACTOR SMOKE.....................           4,513           4,513
   183   0607134A                            LONG RANGE PRECISION FIRES (LRPF).         102,014         102,014
   184   0607135A                            APACHE PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM          59,977          59,977
   185   0607136A                            BLACKHAWK PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT               34,416          43,716
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--UH-60V                            [9,300]
                                                 development.
   186   0607137A                            CHINOOK PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT                194,567         194,567
                                              PROGRAM.
   187   0607138A                            FIXED WING PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT               9,981           9,981
                                              PROGRAM.
   188   0607139A                            IMPROVED TURBINE ENGINE PROGRAM...         204,304         204,304
   189   0607140A                            EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES FROM NIE....           1,023           1,023
   190   0607141A                            LOGISTICS AUTOMATION..............           1,504           1,504
   191   0607142A                            AVIATION ROCKET SYSTEM PRODUCT              10,064          10,064
                                              IMPROVEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT.
   192   0607143A                            UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEM UNIVERSAL          38,463          38,463
                                              PRODUCTS.
   193   0607665A                            FAMILY OF BIOMETRICS..............           6,159           6,159
   194   0607865A                            PATRIOT PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT.......          90,217          90,217
   195   0202429A                            AEROSTAT JOINT PROJECT--COCOM                6,749           6,749
                                              EXERCISE.
   196   0203728A                            JOINT AUTOMATED DEEP OPERATION              33,520          33,520
                                              COORDINATION SYSTEM (JADOCS).
   197   0203735A                            COMBAT VEHICLE IMPROVEMENT                 343,175         351,175
                                              PROGRAMS.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--M88A2E1.                          [8,000]
   198   0203740A                            MANEUVER CONTROL SYSTEM...........           6,639           6,639
   199   0203743A                            155MM SELF-PROPELLED HOWITZER               40,784          40,784
                                              IMPROVEMENTS.
   200   0203744A                            AIRCRAFT MODIFICATIONS/PRODUCT              39,358          39,358
                                              IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMS.
   201   0203752A                            AIRCRAFT ENGINE COMPONENT                      145             145
                                              IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
   202   0203758A                            DIGITIZATION......................           4,803           4,803
   203   0203801A                            MISSILE/AIR DEFENSE PRODUCT                  2,723          17,723
                                              IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Realign European Reassurance                           [15,000]
                                                 Initiative to Base.
   204   0203802A                            OTHER MISSILE PRODUCT IMPROVEMENT            5,000           5,000
                                              PROGRAMS.
   205   0203808A                            TRACTOR CARD......................          37,883          37,883
   206   0205402A                            INTEGRATED BASE DEFENSE--                                    4,500
                                              OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEV.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--modal                             [4,500]
                                                 passive detection system.
   207   0205410A                            MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT......           1,582           1,582
   208   0205412A                            ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY TECHNOLOGY--             195             195
                                              OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEV.
   209   0205456A                            LOWER TIER AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE          78,926          78,926
                                              (AMD) SYSTEM.
   210   0205778A                            GUIDED MULTIPLE-LAUNCH ROCKET              102,807         102,807
                                              SYSTEM (GMLRS).
   213   0303028A                            SECURITY AND INTELLIGENCE                   13,807          13,807
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   214   0303140A                            INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY               132,438         132,438
                                              PROGRAM.
   215   0303141A                            GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM......          64,370          64,370
   217   0303150A                            WWMCCS/GLOBAL COMMAND AND CONTROL           10,475          10,475
                                              SYSTEM.
   220   0305172A                            COMBINED ADVANCED APPLICATIONS....           1,100           1,100
   222   0305204A                            TACTICAL UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES.           9,433          16,925
         ..................................      Realign European Reassurance                            [7,492]
                                                 Initiative to Base.
   223   0305206A                            AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS...           5,080          20,080
         ..................................      Realign European Reassurance                           [15,000]
                                                 Initiative to Base.
   224   0305208A                            DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE           24,700          24,700
                                              SYSTEMS.
   225   0305219A                            MQ-1C GRAY EAGLE UAS..............           9,574           9,574
   226   0305232A                            RQ-11 UAV.........................           2,191           2,191
   227   0305233A                            RQ-7 UAV..........................          12,773          12,773
   228   0307665A                            BIOMETRICS ENABLED INTELLIGENCE...           2,537           2,537
   229   0310349A                            WIN-T INCREMENT 2--INITIAL                   4,723           4,723
                                              NETWORKING.
   230   0708045A                            END ITEM INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS            60,877          65,877
                                              ACTIVITIES.
         ..................................      Development of improved                                 [5,000]
                                                 manufacturing technology for
                                                 separation, extraction,
                                                 smelter, sintering, leaching,
                                                 processing, beneficiation, or
                                                 production of specialty metals
                                                 such as lanthanide elements,
                                                 yttrium or scandium.
   231   1203142A                            SATCOM GROUND ENVIRONMENT (SPACE).          11,959          11,959
   232   1208053A                            JOINT TACTICAL GROUND SYSTEM......          10,228          10,228
  232A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............           7,154           7,154
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS          1,877,685       1,941,977
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT,        9,425,440       9,654,380
                                                  TEST & EVAL, ARMY.
         ..................................
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
                                              EVAL, NAVY
         ..................................  BASIC RESEARCH
   001   0601103N                            UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...         118,130         138,130
         ..................................      Defense University Research                            [20,000]
                                                 Instrumentation Program.
   002   0601152N                            IN-HOUSE LABORATORY INDEPENDENT             19,438          19,438
                                              RESEARCH.
   003   0601153N                            DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES.........         458,333         458,333
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL BASIC RESEARCH........         595,901         615,901
         ..................................
         ..................................  APPLIED RESEARCH
   004   0602114N                            POWER PROJECTION APPLIED RESEARCH.          13,553          13,553
   005   0602123N                            FORCE PROTECTION APPLIED RESEARCH.         125,557         125,557
   006   0602131M                            MARINE CORPS LANDING FORCE                  53,936          53,936
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   007   0602235N                            COMMON PICTURE APPLIED RESEARCH...          36,450          36,450
   008   0602236N                            WARFIGHTER SUSTAINMENT APPLIED              48,649          48,649
                                              RESEARCH.
   009   0602271N                            ELECTROMAGNETIC SYSTEMS APPLIED             79,598          79,598
                                              RESEARCH.
   010   0602435N                            OCEAN WARFIGHTING ENVIRONMENT               42,411          42,411
                                              APPLIED RESEARCH.
   011   0602651M                            JOINT NON-LETHAL WEAPONS APPLIED             6,425           6,425
                                              RESEARCH.
   012   0602747N                            UNDERSEA WARFARE APPLIED RESEARCH.          56,094          56,094
   013   0602750N                            FUTURE NAVAL CAPABILITIES APPLIED          156,805         156,805
                                              RESEARCH.
   014   0602782N                            MINE AND EXPEDITIONARY WARFARE              32,733          32,733
                                              APPLIED RESEARCH.
   015   0602792N                            INNOVATIVE NAVAL PROTOTYPES (INP)          171,146         171,146
                                              APPLIED RESEARCH.
   016   0602861N                            SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT--         62,722          62,722
                                              ONR FIELD ACITIVITIES.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......         886,079         886,079
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
   019   0603123N                            FORCE PROTECTION ADVANCED                   26,342          26,342
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   020   0603271N                            ELECTROMAGNETIC SYSTEMS ADVANCED             9,360           9,360
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   021   0603640M                            USMC ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY                   154,407         154,407
                                              DEMONSTRATION (ATD).
   022   0603651M                            JOINT NON-LETHAL WEAPONS                    13,448          13,448
                                              TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
   023   0603673N                            FUTURE NAVAL CAPABILITIES ADVANCED         231,772         231,772
                                              TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
   024   0603680N                            MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..          57,797          67,797
         ..................................      Program increase for                                   [10,000]
                                                 manufacturing capability
                                                 industrial partnerships for
                                                 undersea vehicles.
   025   0603729N                            WARFIGHTER PROTECTION ADVANCED               4,878           4,878
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   027   0603758N                            NAVY WARFIGHTING EXPERIMENTS AND            64,889          64,889
                                              DEMONSTRATIONS.
   028   0603782N                            MINE AND EXPEDITIONARY WARFARE              15,164          15,164
                                              ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.
   029   0603801N                            INNOVATIVE NAVAL PROTOTYPES (INP)          108,285         132,285
                                              ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Program increase for railgun                           [24,000]
                                                 tactical demonstrator.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY            686,342         720,342
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
                                              PROTOTYPES
   030   0603207N                            AIR/OCEAN TACTICAL APPLICATIONS...          48,365          48,365
   031   0603216N                            AVIATION SURVIVABILITY............           5,566           5,566
   033   0603251N                            AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS..................             695             695
   034   0603254N                            ASW SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT...........           7,661           7,661
   035   0603261N                            TACTICAL AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE..           3,707           3,707
   036   0603382N                            ADVANCED COMBAT SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY          61,381          61,381
   037   0603502N                            SURFACE AND SHALLOW WATER MINE             154,117         177,117
                                              COUNTERMEASURES.
         ..................................      LDUUV.........................                         [23,000]
   038   0603506N                            SURFACE SHIP TORPEDO DEFENSE......          14,974          14,974
   039   0603512N                            CARRIER SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.......           9,296           9,296
   040   0603525N                            PILOT FISH........................         132,083         132,083
   041   0603527N                            RETRACT LARCH.....................          15,407          15,407
   042   0603536N                            RETRACT JUNIPER...................         122,413         122,413
   043   0603542N                            RADIOLOGICAL CONTROL..............             745             745
   044   0603553N                            SURFACE ASW.......................           1,136           1,136
   045   0603561N                            ADVANCED SUBMARINE SYSTEM                  100,955         100,955
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   046   0603562N                            SUBMARINE TACTICAL WARFARE SYSTEMS          13,834          13,834
   047   0603563N                            SHIP CONCEPT ADVANCED DESIGN......          36,891          36,891
   048   0603564N                            SHIP PRELIMINARY DESIGN &                   12,012          12,012
                                              FEASIBILITY STUDIES.
   049   0603570N                            ADVANCED NUCLEAR POWER SYSTEMS....         329,500         329,500
   050   0603573N                            ADVANCED SURFACE MACHINERY SYSTEMS          29,953          29,953
   051   0603576N                            CHALK EAGLE.......................         191,610         191,610
   052   0603581N                            LITTORAL COMBAT SHIP (LCS)........          40,991          40,991
   053   0603582N                            COMBAT SYSTEM INTEGRATION.........          24,674          24,674
   054   0603595N                            OHIO REPLACEMENT..................         776,158         776,158
   055   0603596N                            LCS MISSION MODULES...............         116,871         116,871
   056   0603597N                            AUTOMATED TEST AND ANALYSIS.......           8,052           8,052
   057   0603599N                            FRIGATE DEVELOPMENT...............         143,450         143,450
   058   0603609N                            CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS............           8,909           8,909
   060   0603635M                            MARINE CORPS GROUND COMBAT/SUPPORT           1,428           1,428
                                              SYSTEM.
   061   0603654N                            JOINT SERVICE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE            53,367          53,367
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   063   0603713N                            OCEAN ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY                 8,212           8,212
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   064   0603721N                            ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION..........          20,214          20,214
   065   0603724N                            NAVY ENERGY PROGRAM...............          50,623          50,623
   066   0603725N                            FACILITIES IMPROVEMENT............           2,837           2,837
   067   0603734N                            CHALK CORAL.......................         245,143         245,143
   068   0603739N                            NAVY LOGISTIC PRODUCTIVITY........           2,995           2,995
   069   0603746N                            RETRACT MAPLE.....................         306,101         306,101
   070   0603748N                            LINK PLUMERIA.....................         253,675         253,675
   071   0603751N                            RETRACT ELM.......................          55,691          55,691
   072   0603764N                            LINK EVERGREEN....................          48,982          48,982
   074   0603790N                            NATO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT.....           9,099           9,099
   075   0603795N                            LAND ATTACK TECHNOLOGY............          33,568          33,568
   076   0603851M                            JOINT NON-LETHAL WEAPONS TESTING..          29,873          29,873
   077   0603860N                            JOINT PRECISION APPROACH AND               106,391         106,391
                                              LANDING SYSTEMS--DEM/VAL.
   078   0603925N                            DIRECTED ENERGY AND ELECTRIC               107,310         133,310
                                              WEAPON SYSTEMS.
         ..................................      Program increase for railgun                           [26,000]
                                                 tactical demonstrator.
   079   0604112N                            GERALD R. FORD CLASS NUCLEAR                83,935          83,935
                                              AIRCRAFT CARRIER (CVN 78--80).
   081   0604272N                            TACTICAL AIR DIRECTIONAL INFRARED           46,844          46,844
                                              COUNTERMEASURES (TADIRCM).
   083   0604286M                            MARINE CORPS ADDITIVE                        6,200           6,200
                                              MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   085   0604320M                            RAPID TECHNOLOGY CAPABILITY                  7,055           7,055
                                              PROTOTYPE.
   086   0604454N                            LX (R)............................           9,578           9,578
   087   0604536N                            ADVANCED UNDERSEA PROTOTYPING.....          66,543          76,543
         ..................................      XLUUV.........................                         [10,000]
   089   0604659N                            PRECISION STRIKE WEAPONS                    31,315          31,315
                                              DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.
   090   0604707N                            SPACE AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE (SEW)          42,851          42,851
                                              ARCHITECTURE/ENGINEERING SUPPORT.
   091   0604786N                            OFFENSIVE ANTI-SURFACE WARFARE             160,694         160,694
                                              WEAPON DEVELOPMENT.
   093   0303354N                            ASW SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT--MIP......           8,278           8,278
   094   0304240M                            ADVANCED TACTICAL UNMANNED                   7,979           7,979
                                              AIRCRAFT SYSTEM.
   095   0304270N                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT--               527             527
                                              MIP.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT           4,218,714       4,277,714
                                                DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPES.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & DEMONSTRATION
   096   0603208N                            TRAINING SYSTEM AIRCRAFT..........          16,945          16,945
   097   0604212N                            OTHER HELO DEVELOPMENT............          26,786          26,786
   098   0604214N                            AV-8B AIRCRAFT--ENG DEV...........          48,780          48,780
   099   0604215N                            STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT.............           2,722           2,722
   100   0604216N                            MULTI-MISSION HELICOPTER UPGRADE             5,371           5,371
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   101   0604218N                            AIR/OCEAN EQUIPMENT ENGINEERING...             782             782
   102   0604221N                            P-3 MODERNIZATION PROGRAM.........           1,361           1,361
   103   0604230N                            WARFARE SUPPORT SYSTEM............          14,167          14,167
   104   0604231N                            TACTICAL COMMAND SYSTEM...........          55,695          55,695
   105   0604234N                            ADVANCED HAWKEYE..................         292,535         292,535
   106   0604245N                            H-1 UPGRADES......................          61,288          61,288
   107   0604261N                            ACOUSTIC SEARCH SENSORS...........          37,167          37,167
   108   0604262N                            V-22A.............................         171,386         186,386
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                         [15,000]
   109   0604264N                            AIR CREW SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT......          13,235          23,235
         ..................................      Air Crew Sensor Improvements..                         [10,000]
   110   0604269N                            EA-18.............................         173,488         173,488
   111   0604270N                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....          54,055          83,055
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--EWSA....                          [5,500]
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--Intrepid                          [3,000]
                                                 Tiger II (V)3 UH-1Y jettison
                                                 capability.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirements--range                           [20,500]
                                                 improvements and upgrades.
   112   0604273N                            EXECUTIVE HELO DEVELOPMENT........         451,938         451,938
   113   0604274N                            NEXT GENERATION JAMMER (NGJ)......         632,936         624,136
         ..................................      Unjustified cost growth.......                         [-8,800]
   114   0604280N                            JOINT TACTICAL RADIO SYSTEM--NAVY            4,310           4,310
                                              (JTRS-NAVY).
   115   0604282N                            NEXT GENERATION JAMMER (NGJ)                66,686          66,686
                                              INCREMENT II.
   116   0604307N                            SURFACE COMBATANT COMBAT SYSTEM            390,238         390,238
                                              ENGINEERING.
   117   0604311N                            LPD-17 CLASS SYSTEMS INTEGRATION..             689             689
   118   0604329N                            SMALL DIAMETER BOMB (SDB).........         112,846         112,846
   119   0604366N                            STANDARD MISSILE IMPROVEMENTS.....         158,578         158,578
   120   0604373N                            AIRBORNE MCM......................          15,734          15,734
   122   0604378N                            NAVAL INTEGRATED FIRE CONTROL--             25,445          25,445
                                              COUNTER AIR SYSTEMS ENGINEERING.
   124   0604501N                            ADVANCED ABOVE WATER SENSORS......          87,233          92,233
         ..................................      SPY-1 Solid State Advancement.                          [5,000]
   125   0604503N                            SSN-688 AND TRIDENT MODERNIZATION.         130,981         130,981
   126   0604504N                            AIR CONTROL.......................          75,186          75,186
   127   0604512N                            SHIPBOARD AVIATION SYSTEMS........         177,926         177,926
   128   0604518N                            COMBAT INFORMATION CENTER                    8,062           8,062
                                              CONVERSION.
   129   0604522N                            AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE RADAR               32,090          32,090
                                              (AMDR) SYSTEM.
   130   0604558N                            NEW DESIGN SSN....................         120,087         120,087
   131   0604562N                            SUBMARINE TACTICAL WARFARE SYSTEM.          50,850          50,850
   132   0604567N                            SHIP CONTRACT DESIGN/ LIVE FIRE             67,166          87,166
                                              T&E.
         ..................................      CVN 80 DFA....................                         [20,000]
   133   0604574N                            NAVY TACTICAL COMPUTER RESOURCES..           4,817           4,817
   134   0604580N                            VIRGINIA PAYLOAD MODULE (VPM).....          72,861          72,861
   135   0604601N                            MINE DEVELOPMENT..................          25,635          25,635
   136   0604610N                            LIGHTWEIGHT TORPEDO DEVELOPMENT...          28,076          28,076
   137   0604654N                            JOINT SERVICE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE             7,561           7,561
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   138   0604703N                            PERSONNEL, TRAINING, SIMULATION,            40,828          40,828
                                              AND HUMAN FACTORS.
   139   0604727N                            JOINT STANDOFF WEAPON SYSTEMS.....             435             435
   140   0604755N                            SHIP SELF DEFENSE (DETECT &                161,713         161,713
                                              CONTROL).
   141   0604756N                            SHIP SELF DEFENSE (ENGAGE: HARD            212,412         243,412
                                              KILL).
         ..................................      OTH Weapon Development........                         [31,000]
   142   0604757N                            SHIP SELF DEFENSE (ENGAGE: SOFT            103,391         103,391
                                              KILL/EW).
   143   0604761N                            INTELLIGENCE ENGINEERING..........          34,855          34,855
   144   0604771N                            MEDICAL DEVELOPMENT...............           9,353           9,353
   145   0604777N                            NAVIGATION/ID SYSTEM..............          92,546         101,546
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [9,000]
   146   0604800M                            JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)--EMD...         152,934         152,934
   147   0604800N                            JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER (JSF)--EMD...         108,931         108,931
   148   0604810M                            JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER FOLLOW ON             144,958         144,958
                                              MODERNIZATION (FOM)--MARINE CORPS.
   149   0604810N                            JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER FOLLOW ON             143,855         143,855
                                              MODERNIZATION (FOM)--NAVY.
   150   0605013M                            INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT          14,865          14,865
   151   0605013N                            INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT         152,977         152,977
   152   0605024N                            ANTI-TAMPER TECHNOLOGY SUPPORT....           3,410           3,410
   153   0605212N                            CH-53K RDTE.......................         340,758         340,758
   154   0605215N                            MISSION PLANNING..................          33,430          33,430
   155   0605217N                            COMMON AVIONICS...................          58,163          58,163
   156   0605220N                            SHIP TO SHORE CONNECTOR (SSC).....          22,410          22,410
   157   0605327N                            T-AO 205 CLASS....................           1,961           1,961
   158   0605414N                            UNMANNED CARRIER AVIATION (UCA)...         222,208         222,208
   159   0605450N                            JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND MISSILE (JAGM)          15,473          15,473
   160   0605500N                            MULTI-MISSION MARITIME AIRCRAFT             11,795          11,795
                                              (MMA).
   161   0605504N                            MULTI-MISSION MARITIME (MMA)               181,731         181,731
                                              INCREMENT III.
   162   0605611M                            MARINE CORPS ASSAULT VEHICLES              178,993         178,993
                                              SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT &
                                              DEMONSTRATION.
   163   0605813M                            JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE                20,710          20,710
                                              (JLTV) SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT &
                                              DEMONSTRATION.
   164   0204202N                            DDG-1000..........................         140,500         140,500
   168   0304785N                            TACTICAL CRYPTOLOGIC SYSTEMS......          28,311          28,311
   170   0306250M                            CYBER OPERATIONS TECHNOLOGY                  4,502           4,502
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT &         6,362,102       6,472,302
                                                DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   171   0604256N                            THREAT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT......          91,819          91,819
   172   0604258N                            TARGET SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT........          23,053          23,053
   173   0604759N                            MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT..............          52,634          59,634
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [7,000]
   174   0605126N                            JOINT THEATER AIR AND MISSILE                  141             141
                                              DEFENSE ORGANIZATION.
   175   0605152N                            STUDIES AND ANALYSIS SUPPORT--NAVY           3,917           3,917
   176   0605154N                            CENTER FOR NAVAL ANALYSES.........          50,432          50,432
   179   0605804N                            TECHNICAL INFORMATION SERVICES....             782             782
   180   0605853N                            MANAGEMENT, TECHNICAL &                     94,562          94,562
                                              INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT.
   181   0605856N                            STRATEGIC TECHNICAL SUPPORT.......           4,313           4,313
   182   0605861N                            RDT&E SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY                 1,104           1,104
                                              MANAGEMENT.
   183   0605863N                            RDT&E SHIP AND AIRCRAFT SUPPORT...         105,666         105,666
   184   0605864N                            TEST AND EVALUATION SUPPORT.......         373,667         413,667
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [40,000]
   185   0605865N                            OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION             20,298          20,298
                                              CAPABILITY.
   186   0605866N                            NAVY SPACE AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE           17,341          17,341
                                              (SEW) SUPPORT.
   188   0605873M                            MARINE CORPS PROGRAM WIDE SUPPORT.          21,751          21,751
   189   0605898N                            MANAGEMENT HQ--R&D................          44,279          44,279
   190   0606355N                            WARFARE INNOVATION MANAGEMENT.....          28,841          28,841
   191   0902498N                            MANAGEMENT HEADQUARTERS                      1,749           1,749
                                              (DEPARTMENTAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES).
   194   1206867N                            SEW SURVEILLANCE/RECONNAISSANCE              9,408           9,408
                                              SUPPORT.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....         945,757         992,757
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
   196   0607658N                            COOPERATIVE ENGAGEMENT CAPABILITY           92,571         103,571
                                              (CEC).
         ..................................      CEC IFF Mode 5 Acceleration...                         [11,000]
   197   0607700N                            DEPLOYABLE JOINT COMMAND AND                 3,137           3,137
                                              CONTROL.
   198   0101221N                            STRATEGIC SUB & WEAPONS SYSTEM             135,219         135,219
                                              SUPPORT.
   199   0101224N                            SSBN SECURITY TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..          36,242          36,242
   200   0101226N                            SUBMARINE ACOUSTIC WARFARE                  12,053          12,053
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   201   0101402N                            NAVY STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS.....          18,221          18,221
   203   0204136N                            F/A-18 SQUADRONS..................         224,470         213,470
         ..................................      Program reduction- delayed                            [-11,000]
                                                 procurement rates.
   204   0204163N                            FLEET TELECOMMUNICATIONS                    33,525          33,525
                                              (TACTICAL).
   205   0204228N                            SURFACE SUPPORT...................          24,829          24,829
   206   0204229N                            TOMAHAWK AND TOMAHAWK MISSION              133,617         142,617
                                              PLANNING CENTER (TMPC).
         ..................................      Tomahawk Modernization........                          [9,000]
   207   0204311N                            INTEGRATED SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM....          38,972          50,572
         ..................................      Realign European Reassurance                           [11,600]
                                                 Initiative to Base.
   208   0204413N                            AMPHIBIOUS TACTICAL SUPPORT UNITS            3,940           3,940
                                              (DISPLACEMENT CRAFT).
   209   0204460M                            GROUND/AIR TASK ORIENTED RADAR (G/          54,645          54,645
                                              ATOR).
   210   0204571N                            CONSOLIDATED TRAINING SYSTEMS               66,518          76,518
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      Modernization of Barking Sands                         [10,000]
                                                 Tactical Underwater Range.
   211   0204574N                            CRYPTOLOGIC DIRECT SUPPORT........           1,155           1,155
   212   0204575N                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE (EW) READINESS           51,040          51,040
                                              SUPPORT.
   213   0205601N                            HARM IMPROVEMENT..................          87,989          97,989
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--AARGM                            [10,000]
                                                 Derivative Program.
   214   0205604N                            TACTICAL DATA LINKS...............          89,852          89,852
   215   0205620N                            SURFACE ASW COMBAT SYSTEM                   29,351          29,351
                                              INTEGRATION.
   216   0205632N                            MK-48 ADCAP.......................          68,553          68,553
   217   0205633N                            AVIATION IMPROVEMENTS.............         119,099         119,099
   218   0205675N                            OPERATIONAL NUCLEAR POWER SYSTEMS.         127,445         127,445
   219   0206313M                            MARINE CORPS COMMUNICATIONS                123,825         120,325
                                              SYSTEMS.
         ..................................      Excess growth--tactical radio                          [-3,500]
                                                 systems.
   220   0206335M                            COMMON AVIATION COMMAND AND                  7,343           7,343
                                              CONTROL SYSTEM (CAC2S).
   221   0206623M                            MARINE CORPS GROUND COMBAT/                 66,009          66,009
                                              SUPPORTING ARMS SYSTEMS.
   222   0206624M                            MARINE CORPS COMBAT SERVICES                25,258          25,258
                                              SUPPORT.
   223   0206625M                            USMC INTELLIGENCE/ELECTRONIC                30,886          30,886
                                              WARFARE SYSTEMS (MIP).
   224   0206629M                            AMPHIBIOUS ASSAULT VEHICLE........          58,728          58,728
   225   0207161N                            TACTICAL AIM MISSILES.............          42,884          51,884
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--AIM-9X                            [9,000]
                                                 Blk II Systems Improvement
                                                 program.
   226   0207163N                            ADVANCED MEDIUM RANGE AIR-TO-AIR            25,364          25,364
                                              MISSILE (AMRAAM).
   232   0303138N                            CONSOLIDATED AFLOAT NETWORK                 24,271          24,271
                                              ENTERPRISE SERVICES (CANES).
   233   0303140N                            INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY                50,269          50,269
                                              PROGRAM.
   236   0305192N                            MILITARY INTELLIGENCE PROGRAM                6,352           6,352
                                              (MIP) ACTIVITIES.
   237   0305204N                            TACTICAL UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES.           7,770           7,770
   238   0305205N                            UAS INTEGRATION AND                         39,736          39,736
                                              INTEROPERABILITY.
   239   0305208M                            DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE           12,867          12,867
                                              SYSTEMS.
   240   0305208N                            DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE           46,150          46,150
                                              SYSTEMS.
   241   0305220N                            MQ-4C TRITON......................          84,115          84,115
   242   0305231N                            MQ-8 UAV..........................          62,656          62,656
   243   0305232M                            RQ-11 UAV.........................           2,022           2,022
   245   0305234N                            SMALL (LEVEL 0) TACTICAL UAS                 4,835           4,835
                                              (STUASL0).
   246   0305239M                            RQ-21A............................           8,899           8,899
   247   0305241N                            MULTI-INTELLIGENCE SENSOR                   99,020          99,020
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   248   0305242M                            UNMANNED AERIAL SYSTEMS (UAS)               18,578          11,478
                                              PAYLOADS (MIP).
         ..................................      Program reduction.............                         [-7,100]
   249   0305421N                            RQ-4 MODERNIZATION................         229,404         229,404
   250   0308601N                            MODELING AND SIMULATION SUPPORT...           5,238           5,238
   251   0702207N                            DEPOT MAINTENANCE (NON-IF)........          38,227          38,227
   252   0708730N                            MARITIME TECHNOLOGY (MARITECH)....           4,808           4,808
   253   1203109N                            SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS (SPACE)..          37,836          37,836
  253A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............       1,364,347       1,364,347
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS          3,980,140       4,019,140
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT,       17,675,035      17,984,235
                                                  TEST & EVAL, NAVY.
         ..................................
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
                                              EVAL, AF
         ..................................  BASIC RESEARCH
   001   0601102F                            DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES.........         342,919         342,919
   002   0601103F                            UNIVERSITY RESEARCH INITIATIVES...         147,923         147,923
   003   0601108F                            HIGH ENERGY LASER RESEARCH                  14,417          14,417
                                              INITIATIVES.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL BASIC RESEARCH........         505,259         505,259
         ..................................
         ..................................  APPLIED RESEARCH
   004   0602102F                            MATERIALS.........................         124,264         124,264
   005   0602201F                            AEROSPACE VEHICLE TECHNOLOGIES....         124,678         129,678
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [5,000]
   006   0602202F                            HUMAN EFFECTIVENESS APPLIED                108,784         108,784
                                              RESEARCH.
   007   0602203F                            AEROSPACE PROPULSION..............         192,695         197,695
         ..................................      Educational Partnership                                 [5,000]
                                                 Agreements.
   008   0602204F                            AEROSPACE SENSORS.................         152,782         152,782
   009   0602298F                            SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT--          8,353           8,353
                                               MAJOR HEADQUARTERS ACTIVITIES.
   010   0602601F                            SPACE TECHNOLOGY..................         116,503         116,503
   011   0602602F                            CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS............         112,195         112,195
   012   0602605F                            DIRECTED ENERGY TECHNOLOGY........         132,993         132,993
   013   0602788F                            DOMINANT INFORMATION SCIENCES AND          167,818         167,818
                                              METHODS.
   014   0602890F                            HIGH ENERGY LASER RESEARCH........          43,049          43,049
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......       1,284,114       1,294,114
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
   015   0603112F                            ADVANCED MATERIALS FOR WEAPON               37,856          47,856
                                              SYSTEMS.
         ..................................      Metals affordability research.                         [10,000]
   016   0603199F                            SUSTAINMENT SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY          22,811          22,811
                                              (S&T).
   017   0603203F                            ADVANCED AEROSPACE SENSORS........          40,978          40,978
   018   0603211F                            AEROSPACE TECHNOLOGY DEV/DEMO.....         115,966         115,966
   019   0603216F                            AEROSPACE PROPULSION AND POWER             104,499         109,499
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
         ..................................      Program Increase for Robust                             [5,000]
                                                 Electronical Power System.
   020   0603270F                            ELECTRONIC COMBAT TECHNOLOGY......          60,551          60,551
   021   0603401F                            ADVANCED SPACECRAFT TECHNOLOGY....          58,910          58,910
   022   0603444F                            MAUI SPACE SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM              10,433          10,433
                                              (MSSS).
   023   0603456F                            HUMAN EFFECTIVENESS ADVANCED                33,635          33,635
                                              TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
   024   0603601F                            CONVENTIONAL WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY...         167,415         167,415
   025   0603605F                            ADVANCED WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY.......          45,502          45,502
   026   0603680F                            MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..          46,450          46,450
   027   0603788F                            BATTLESPACE KNOWLEDGE DEVELOPMENT           49,011          49,011
                                              AND DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY            794,017         809,017
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
                                              PROTOTYPES
   028   0603260F                            INTELLIGENCE ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT.           5,652           8,352
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--OSINT                             [1,200]
                                                 exploitation and fusion.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--SIGINT                            [1,500]
                                                 Tactical Analysis Reporting
                                                 Gateway.
   030   0603742F                            COMBAT IDENTIFICATION TECHNOLOGY..          24,397          24,397
   031   0603790F                            NATO RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT.....           3,851           3,851
   033   0603851F                            INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC                  10,736          10,736
                                              MISSILE--DEM/VAL.
   034   0603859F                            POLLUTION PREVENTION--DEM/VAL.....               2               2
   035   0604015F                            LONG RANGE STRIKE--BOMBER.........       2,003,580       2,003,580
   036   0604201F                            INTEGRATED AVIONICS PLANNING AND            65,458          65,458
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   037   0604257F                            ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY AND SENSORS...          68,719          94,919
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--ASARS-2B                         [11,500]
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--                                 [14,700]
                                                 Hyperspectral Chip Development.
   038   0604288F                            NATIONAL AIRBORNE OPS CENTER                 7,850           7,850
                                              (NAOC) RECAP.
   039   0604317F                            TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER...............           3,295           3,295
   040   0604327F                            HARD AND DEEPLY BURIED TARGET               17,365          17,365
                                              DEFEAT SYSTEM (HDBTDS) PROGRAM.
   041   0604414F                            CYBER RESILIENCY OF WEAPON SYSTEMS-         32,253          32,253
                                              ACS.
   044   0604776F                            DEPLOYMENT & DISTRIBUTION                   26,222          26,222
                                              ENTERPRISE R&D.
   046   0604858F                            TECH TRANSITION PROGRAM...........         840,650         935,650
         ..................................      Program Increase..............                         [10,000]
         ..................................      Unfunded Requirement..........                         [70,000]
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--Long-                            [15,000]
                                                 Endurance Aerial
                                                 Platform(LEAP) Ahead
                                                 Prototyping.
   047   0605230F                            GROUND BASED STRATEGIC DETERRENT..         215,721         215,721
   049   0207110F                            NEXT GENERATION AIR DOMINANCE.....         294,746         421,746
         ..................................      Unfunded Requirement..........                        [127,000]
   050   0207455F                            THREE DIMENSIONAL LONG-RANGE RADAR          10,645          10,645
                                              (3DELRR).
   052   0305236F                            COMMON DATA LINK EXECUTIVE AGENT            41,509          41,509
                                              (CDL EA).
   053   0306250F                            CYBER OPERATIONS TECHNOLOGY                226,287         226,287
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   054   0306415F                            ENABLED CYBER ACTIVITIES..........          16,687          16,687
   055   0408011F                            SPECIAL TACTICS / COMBAT CONTROL..           4,500           4,500
   056   0901410F                            CONTRACTING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY          15,867          15,867
                                              SYSTEM.
   057   1203164F                            NAVSTAR GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM          253,939         263,939
                                              (USER EQUIPMENT) (SPACE).
         ..................................      Demonstration of Backup and                            [10,000]
                                                 Complementary PNT Capabilities
                                                 of GPS.
   058   1203710F                            EO/IR WEATHER SYSTEMS.............          10,000          10,000
   059   1206422F                            WEATHER SYSTEM FOLLOW-ON..........         112,088         112,088
   060   1206425F                            SPACE SITUATION AWARENESS SYSTEMS.          34,764          34,764
   061   1206434F                            MIDTERM POLAR MILSATCOM SYSTEM....          63,092          63,092
   062   1206438F                            SPACE CONTROL TECHNOLOGY..........           7,842           7,842
   063   1206730F                            SPACE SECURITY AND DEFENSE PROGRAM          41,385          41,385
   064   1206760F                            PROTECTED TACTICAL ENTERPRISE               18,150          18,150
                                              SERVICE (PTES).
   065   1206761F                            PROTECTED TACTICAL SERVICE (PTS)..          24,201          24,201
   066   1206855F                            PROTECTED SATCOM SERVICES (PSCS)--          16,000          16,000
                                              AGGREGATED.
   067   1206857F                            OPERATIONALLY RESPONSIVE SPACE....          87,577         117,577
         ..................................      Responsive Launch vehicles,                            [30,000]
                                                 infrastructure, and small sats.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT           4,605,030       4,895,930
                                                DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPES.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & DEMONSTRATION
   068   0604200F                            FUTURE ADVANCED WEAPON ANALYSIS &            5,100           5,100
                                              PROGRAMS.
   069   0604201F                            INTEGRATED AVIONICS PLANNING AND           101,203         101,203
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   070   0604222F                            NUCLEAR WEAPONS SUPPORT...........           3,009           3,009
   071   0604270F                            ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT....           2,241           2,241
   072   0604281F                            TACTICAL DATA NETWORKS ENTERPRISE.          38,250          38,250
   073   0604287F                            PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT.......          19,739          19,739
   074   0604329F                            SMALL DIAMETER BOMB (SDB)--EMD....          38,979          38,979
   078   0604429F                            AIRBORNE ELECTRONIC ATTACK........           7,091           7,091
   080   0604602F                            ARMAMENT/ORDNANCE DEVELOPMENT.....          46,540          46,540
   081   0604604F                            SUBMUNITIONS......................           2,705           2,705
   082   0604617F                            AGILE COMBAT SUPPORT..............          31,240          34,240
         ..................................      Joint Expeditionary Airfield                            [3,000]
                                                 Damage Repair.
   084   0604706F                            LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEMS..............           9,060           9,060
   085   0604735F                            COMBAT TRAINING RANGES............          87,350          87,350
   086   0604800F                            F-35--EMD.........................         292,947         292,947
   088   0604932F                            LONG RANGE STANDOFF WEAPON........         451,290         451,290
   089   0604933F                            ICBM FUZE MODERNIZATION...........         178,991         178,991
   090   0605030F                            JOINT TACTICAL NETWORK CENTER               12,736          12,736
                                              (JTNC).
   091   0605031F                            JOINT TACTICAL NETWORK (JTN)......           9,319           9,319
   092   0605213F                            F-22 MODERNIZATION INCREMENT 3.2B.          13,600          13,600
   094   0605221F                            KC-46.............................          93,845               0
         ..................................      Under execution...............                        [-93,845]
   095   0605223F                            ADVANCED PILOT TRAINING...........         105,999         105,999
   096   0605229F                            COMBAT RESCUE HELICOPTER..........         354,485         354,485
   100   0605458F                            AIR & SPACE OPS CENTER 10.2 RDT&E.         119,745          49,745
         ..................................      Program reduction.............                        [-70,000]
   101   0605931F                            B-2 DEFENSIVE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM...         194,570         194,570
   102   0101125F                            NUCLEAR WEAPONS MODERNIZATION.....          91,237          91,237
   103   0207171F                            F-15 EPAWSS.......................         209,847         209,847
   104   0207328F                            STAND IN ATTACK WEAPON............           3,400           3,400
   105   0207701F                            FULL COMBAT MISSION TRAINING......          16,727          16,727
   109   0307581F                            JSTARS RECAP......................         417,201         417,201
   110   0401310F                            C-32 EXECUTIVE TRANSPORT                     6,017           6,017
                                              RECAPITALIZATION.
   111   0401319F                            PRESIDENTIAL AIRCRAFT                      434,069         434,069
                                              RECAPITALIZATION (PAR).
   112   0701212F                            AUTOMATED TEST SYSTEMS............          18,528          18,528
   113   1203176F                            COMBAT SURVIVOR EVADER LOCATOR....          24,967          24,967
   114   1203940F                            SPACE SITUATION AWARENESS                   10,029          10,029
                                              OPERATIONS.
   115   1206421F                            COUNTERSPACE SYSTEMS..............          66,370          66,370
   116   1206425F                            SPACE SITUATION AWARENESS SYSTEMS.          48,448          48,448
   117   1206426F                            SPACE FENCE.......................          35,937          35,937
   118   1206431F                            ADVANCED EHF MILSATCOM (SPACE)....         145,610         145,610
   119   1206432F                            POLAR MILSATCOM (SPACE)...........          33,644          33,644
   120   1206433F                            WIDEBAND GLOBAL SATCOM (SPACE)....          14,263          14,263
   121   1206441F                            SPACE BASED INFRARED SYSTEM                311,844         311,844
                                              (SBIRS) HIGH EMD.
   122   1206442F                            EVOLVED SBIRS.....................          71,018          71,018
   123   1206853F                            EVOLVED EXPENDABLE LAUNCH VEHICLE          297,572         297,572
                                              PROGRAM (SPACE) - EMD.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT &         4,476,762       4,315,917
                                                DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   124   0604256F                            THREAT SIMULATOR DEVELOPMENT......          35,405          35,405
   125   0604759F                            MAJOR T&E INVESTMENT..............          82,874          87,874
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                          [5,000]
   126   0605101F                            RAND PROJECT AIR FORCE............          34,346          34,346
   128   0605712F                            INITIAL OPERATIONAL TEST &                  15,523          15,523
                                              EVALUATION.
   129   0605807F                            TEST AND EVALUATION SUPPORT.......         678,289         739,089
         ..................................      Program Increase..............                         [32,400]
         ..................................      Testing, evaluation, and                                [1,000]
                                                 certification of additional
                                                 suppliers for arresting gear
                                                 systems for fighter aircraft.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                         [27,400]
   130   0605826F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- GLOBAL POWER.......         219,809         219,809
   131   0605827F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- GLOBAL VIG & COMBAT         223,179         223,179
                                              SYS.
   132   0605828F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- GLOBAL REACH.......         138,556         138,556
   133   0605829F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- CYBER, NETWORK, &           221,393         221,393
                                              BUS SYS.
   134   0605830F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- GLOBAL BATTLE MGMT.         152,577         152,577
   135   0605831F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- CAPABILITY                  196,561         196,561
                                              INTEGRATION.
   136   0605832F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- ADVANCED PRGM                28,322          28,322
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   137   0605833F                            ACQ WORKFORCE- NUCLEAR SYSTEMS....         126,611         126,611
   140   0605898F                            MANAGEMENT HQ--R&D................           9,154           9,154
   141   0605976F                            FACILITIES RESTORATION AND                 135,507         135,507
                                              MODERNIZATION--TEST AND
                                              EVALUATION SUPPORT.
   142   0605978F                            FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT--TEST AND            28,720          28,720
                                              EVALUATION SUPPORT.
   143   0606017F                            REQUIREMENTS ANALYSIS AND                   35,453         110,453
                                              MATURATION.
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement..........                         [50,000]
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--                                 [25,000]
                                                 Penetrating Counter air (PCA)
                                                 Risk Reduction.
   146   0308602F                            ENTEPRISE INFORMATION SERVICES              29,049          29,049
                                              (EIS).
   147   0702806F                            ACQUISITION AND MANAGEMENT SUPPORT          14,980          14,980
   148   0804731F                            GENERAL SKILL TRAINING............           1,434           1,434
   150   1001004F                            INTERNATIONAL ACTIVITIES..........           4,569           4,569
   151   1206116F                            SPACE TEST AND TRAINING RANGE               25,773          25,773
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   152   1206392F                            SPACE AND MISSILE CENTER (SMC)             169,887         169,887
                                              CIVILIAN WORKFORCE.
   153   1206398F                            SPACE & MISSILE SYSTEMS CENTER--             9,531           9,531
                                              MHA.
   154   1206860F                            ROCKET SYSTEMS LAUNCH PROGRAM               20,975          20,975
                                              (SPACE).
   155   1206864F                            SPACE TEST PROGRAM (STP)..........          25,398          25,398
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....       2,663,875       2,804,675
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
   157   0604222F                            NUCLEAR WEAPONS SUPPORT...........          27,579          27,579
   158   0604233F                            SPECIALIZED UNDERGRADUATE FLIGHT             5,776           5,776
                                              TRAINING.
   159   0604445F                            WIDE AREA SURVEILLANCE............          16,247          16,247
   161   0605018F                            AF INTEGRATED PERSONNEL AND PAY             21,915          21,915
                                              SYSTEM (AF-IPPS).
   162   0605024F                            ANTI-TAMPER TECHNOLOGY EXECUTIVE            33,150          33,150
                                              AGENCY.
   163   0605117F                            FOREIGN MATERIEL ACQUISITION AND            66,653          66,653
                                              EXPLOITATION.
   164   0605278F                            HC/MC-130 RECAP RDT&E.............          38,579          38,579
   165   0606018F                            NC3 INTEGRATION...................          12,636          12,636
   166   0101113F                            B-52 SQUADRONS....................         111,910         111,910
   167   0101122F                            AIR-LAUNCHED CRUISE MISSILE (ALCM)             463             463
   168   0101126F                            B-1B SQUADRONS....................          62,471          62,471
   169   0101127F                            B-2 SQUADRONS.....................         193,108         193,108
   170   0101213F                            MINUTEMAN SQUADRONS...............         210,845         210,845
         ..................................      Increase ICBM Cryptopgraphy                            [20,000]
                                                 Upgrade II.
         ..................................      Reduce MM Ground and                                  [-10,000]
                                                 Communications Equipment.
         ..................................      Reduce MM Support Equipment...                        [-10,000]
   171   0101313F                            INTEGRATED STRATEGIC PLANNING AND           25,736          25,736
                                              ANALYSIS NETWORK (ISPAN)--
                                              USSTRATCOM.
   173   0101316F                            WORLDWIDE JOINT STRATEGIC                    6,272          70,272
                                              COMMUNICATIONS.
         ..................................      Enhances E-4B cyber security..                         [64,000]
   174   0101324F                            INTEGRATED STRATEGIC PLANNING &             11,032          11,032
                                              ANALYSIS NETWORK.
   176   0102110F                            UH-1N REPLACEMENT PROGRAM.........         108,617         108,617
   177   0102326F                            REGION/SECTOR OPERATION CONTROL              3,347           3,347
                                              CENTER MODERNIZATION PROGRAM.
   179   0205219F                            MQ-9 UAV..........................         201,394         201,394
   182   0207131F                            A-10 SQUADRONS....................          17,459          17,459
   183   0207133F                            F-16 SQUADRONS....................         246,578         271,578
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--MIDS-                            [25,000]
                                                 JTRS software changes.
   184   0207134F                            F-15E SQUADRONS...................         320,271         320,271
   185   0207136F                            MANNED DESTRUCTIVE SUPPRESSION....          15,106          35,106
         ..................................      HTS pod block upgrade program.                         [20,000]
   186   0207138F                            F-22A SQUADRONS...................         610,942         610,942
   187   0207142F                            F-35 SQUADRONS....................         334,530         334,530
   188   0207161F                            TACTICAL AIM MISSILES.............          34,952          34,952
   189   0207163F                            ADVANCED MEDIUM RANGE AIR-TO-AIR            61,322          61,322
                                              MISSILE (AMRAAM).
   191   0207227F                            COMBAT RESCUE--PARARESCUE.........             693             693
   193   0207249F                            PRECISION ATTACK SYSTEMS                     1,714           1,714
                                              PROCUREMENT.
   194   0207253F                            COMPASS CALL......................          14,040          14,040
   195   0207268F                            AIRCRAFT ENGINE COMPONENT                  109,243         109,243
                                              IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.
   197   0207325F                            JOINT AIR-TO-SURFACE STANDOFF               29,932          29,932
                                              MISSILE (JASSM).
   198   0207410F                            AIR & SPACE OPERATIONS CENTER               26,956          26,956
                                              (AOC).
   199   0207412F                            CONTROL AND REPORTING CENTER (CRC)           2,450           2,450
   200   0207417F                            AIRBORNE WARNING AND CONTROL               151,726         151,726
                                              SYSTEM (AWACS).
   201   0207418F                            TACTICAL AIRBORNE CONTROL SYSTEMS.           3,656           3,656
   203   0207431F                            COMBAT AIR INTELLIGENCE SYSTEM              13,420          13,420
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   204   0207444F                            TACTICAL AIR CONTROL PARTY-MOD....          10,623          10,623
   205   0207448F                            C2ISR TACTICAL DATA LINK..........           1,754           1,754
   206   0207452F                            DCAPES............................          17,382          17,382
   207   0207573F                            NATIONAL TECHNICAL NUCLEAR                   2,307           2,307
                                              FORENSICS.
   208   0207590F                            SEEK EAGLE........................          25,397          25,397
   209   0207601F                            USAF MODELING AND SIMULATION......          10,175          10,175
   210   0207605F                            WARGAMING AND SIMULATION CENTERS..          12,839          12,839
   211   0207697F                            DISTRIBUTED TRAINING AND EXERCISES           4,190           4,190
   212   0208006F                            MISSION PLANNING SYSTEMS..........          85,531          85,531
   213   0208007F                            TACTICAL DECEPTION................           3,761           3,761
   214   0208087F                            AF OFFENSIVE CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS          35,693          35,693
   215   0208088F                            AF DEFENSIVE CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS          20,964          20,964
   218   0301017F                            GLOBAL SENSOR INTEGRATED ON                  3,549           3,549
                                              NETWORK (GSIN).
   219   0301112F                            NUCLEAR PLANNING AND EXECUTION               4,371           4,371
                                              SYSTEM (NPES).
   227   0301401F                            AIR FORCE SPACE AND CYBER NON-               3,721           3,721
                                              TRADITIONAL ISR FOR BATTLESPACE
                                              AWARENESS.
   228   0302015F                            E-4B NATIONAL AIRBORNE OPERATIONS           35,467          35,467
                                              CENTER (NAOC).
   230   0303131F                            MINIMUM ESSENTIAL EMERGENCY                 48,841          48,841
                                              COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK (MEECN).
   231   0303140F                            INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY                42,973          42,973
                                              PROGRAM.
   232   0303141F                            GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM......             105             105
   233   0303142F                            GLOBAL FORCE MANAGEMENT--DATA                2,147           2,147
                                              INITIATIVE.
   236   0304260F                            AIRBORNE SIGINT ENTERPRISE........         121,948         121,948
   237   0304310F                            COMMERCIAL ECONOMIC ANALYSIS......           3,544           3,544
   240   0305020F                            CCMD INTELLIGENCE INFORMATION                1,542           1,542
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   241   0305099F                            GLOBAL AIR TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT                4,453           4,453
                                              (GATM).
   243   0305111F                            WEATHER SERVICE...................          26,654          31,654
         ..................................      Commercial weather pilot                                [5,000]
                                                 program.
   244   0305114F                            AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL, APPROACH, AND           6,306           7,806
                                              LANDING SYSTEM (ATCALS).
         ..................................      Unfunded requirement--ground                            [1,500]
                                                 based sense and avoid.
   245   0305116F                            AERIAL TARGETS....................          21,295          21,295
   248   0305128F                            SECURITY AND INVESTIGATIVE                     415             415
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   250   0305146F                            DEFENSE JOINT COUNTERINTELLIGENCE            3,867           3,867
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   257   0305202F                            DRAGON U-2........................          34,486          34,486
   259   0305206F                            AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS...           4,450          17,250
         ..................................      WAMI Technology Upgrades......                         [12,800]
   260   0305207F                            MANNED RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS.....          14,269          14,269
   261   0305208F                            DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE           27,501          39,001
                                              SYSTEMS.
         ..................................      Unfunded requierment..........                         [11,500]
   262   0305220F                            RQ-4 UAV..........................         214,849         214,849
   263   0305221F                            NETWORK-CENTRIC COLLABORATIVE               18,842          18,842
                                              TARGETING.
   265   0305238F                            NATO AGS..........................          44,729          44,729
   266   0305240F                            SUPPORT TO DCGS ENTERPRISE........          26,349          26,349
   269   0305600F                            INTERNATIONAL INTELLIGENCE                   3,491           3,491
                                              TECHNOLOGY AND ARCHITECTURES.
   271   0305881F                            RAPID CYBER ACQUISITION...........           4,899           4,899
   275   0305984F                            PERSONNEL RECOVERY COMMAND & CTRL            2,445           2,445
                                              (PRC2).
   276   0307577F                            INTELLIGENCE MISSION DATA (IMD)...           8,684           8,684
   278   0401115F                            C-130 AIRLIFT SQUADRON............          10,219          10,219
   279   0401119F                            C-5 AIRLIFT SQUADRONS (IF)........          22,758          22,758
   280   0401130F                            C-17 AIRCRAFT (IF)................          34,287          34,287
   281   0401132F                            C-130J PROGRAM....................          26,821          26,821
   282   0401134F                            LARGE AIRCRAFT IR COUNTERMEASURES            5,283           5,283
                                              (LAIRCM).
   283   0401218F                            KC-135S...........................           9,942           9,942
   284   0401219F                            KC-10S............................           7,933           7,933
   285   0401314F                            OPERATIONAL SUPPORT AIRLIFT.......           6,681           6,681
   286   0401318F                            CV-22.............................          22,519          22,519
   287   0401840F                            AMC COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM....           3,510           3,510
   288   0408011F                            SPECIAL TACTICS / COMBAT CONTROL..           8,090           8,090
   289   0702207F                            DEPOT MAINTENANCE (NON-IF)........           1,528           1,528
   290   0708055F                            MAINTENANCE, REPAIR & OVERHAUL              31,677          31,677
                                              SYSTEM.
   291   0708610F                            LOGISTICS INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY            33,344          33,344
                                              (LOGIT).
   292   0708611F                            SUPPORT SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.......           9,362           9,362
   293   0804743F                            OTHER FLIGHT TRAINING.............           2,074           2,074
   294   0808716F                            OTHER PERSONNEL ACTIVITIES........             107             107
   295   0901202F                            JOINT PERSONNEL RECOVERY AGENCY...           2,006           2,006
   296   0901218F                            CIVILIAN COMPENSATION PROGRAM.....           3,780           3,780
   297   0901220F                            PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION..........           7,472           7,472
   298   0901226F                            AIR FORCE STUDIES AND ANALYSIS               1,563           1,563
                                              AGENCY.
   299   0901538F                            FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT INFORMATION            91,211          91,211
                                              SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.
   300   1201921F                            SERVICE SUPPORT TO STRATCOM--SPACE          14,255          14,255
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   301   1202247F                            AF TENCAP.........................          31,914          31,914
   302   1203001F                            FAMILY OF ADVANCED BLOS TERMINALS           32,426          32,426
                                              (FAB-T).
   303   1203110F                            SATELLITE CONTROL NETWORK (SPACE).          18,808          21,308
         ..................................      Program increase..............                          [2,500]
   305   1203165F                            NAVSTAR GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM           10,029          10,029
                                              (SPACE AND CONTROL SEGMENTS).
   306   1203173F                            SPACE AND MISSILE TEST AND                  25,051          25,051
                                              EVALUATION CENTER.
   307   1203174F                            SPACE INNOVATION, INTEGRATION AND           11,390          11,390
                                              RAPID TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
   308   1203179F                            INTEGRATED BROADCAST SERVICE (IBS)           8,747           8,747
   309   1203182F                            SPACELIFT RANGE SYSTEM (SPACE)....          10,549          10,549
   310   1203265F                            GPS III SPACE SEGMENT.............         243,435         243,435
   311   1203400F                            SPACE SUPERIORITY INTELLIGENCE....          12,691          12,691
   312   1203614F                            JSPOC MISSION SYSTEM..............          99,455          99,455
   313   1203620F                            NATIONAL SPACE DEFENSE CENTER.....          18,052          18,052
   314   1203699F                            SHARED EARLY WARNING (SEW)........           1,373           1,373
   315   1203906F                            NCMC--TW/AA SYSTEM................           5,000           5,000
   316   1203913F                            NUDET DETECTION SYSTEM (SPACE)....          31,508          31,508
   317   1203940F                            SPACE SITUATION AWARENESS                   99,984          99,984
                                              OPERATIONS.
   318   1206423F                            GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM III--            510,938         510,938
                                              OPERATIONAL CONTROL SEGMENT.
  318A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............      14,938,002      14,974,002
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [36,000]
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS         20,585,302      20,763,602
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  UNDISTRIBUTED
   319   0901560F                            UNDISTRIBUTED.....................                        -195,900
         ..................................      Bomber Modernization--Excess                         [-195,900]
                                                 to Need.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED.........                        -195,900
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT,       34,914,359      35,192,614
                                                  TEST & EVAL, AF.
         ..................................
         ..................................  RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
                                              EVAL, DW
         ..................................  BASIC RESEARCH
   001   0601000BR                           DTRA BASIC RESEARCH...............          37,201          37,201
   002   0601101E                            DEFENSE RESEARCH SCIENCES.........         432,347         432,347
   003   0601110D8Z                          BASIC RESEARCH INITIATIVES........          40,612          40,612
   004   0601117E                            BASIC OPERATIONAL MEDICAL RESEARCH          43,126          43,126
                                              SCIENCE.
   005   0601120D8Z                          NATIONAL DEFENSE EDUCATION PROGRAM          74,298          74,298
   006   0601228D8Z                          HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES AND             25,865          35,865
                                              UNIVERSITIES/MINORITY
                                              INSTITUTIONS.
         ..................................      Program Increase..............                         [10,000]
   007   0601384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE             43,898          43,898
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL BASIC RESEARCH........         697,347         707,347
         ..................................
         ..................................  APPLIED RESEARCH
   008   0602000D8Z                          JOINT MUNITIONS TECHNOLOGY........          19,111          19,111
   009   0602115E                            BIOMEDICAL TECHNOLOGY.............         109,360         109,360
   011   0602234D8Z                          LINCOLN LABORATORY RESEARCH                 49,748          49,748
                                              PROGRAM.
   012   0602251D8Z                          APPLIED RESEARCH FOR THE                    49,226          49,226
                                              ADVANCEMENT OF S&T PRIORITIES.
   013   0602303E                            INFORMATION & COMMUNICATIONS               392,784         392,784
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   014   0602383E                            BIOLOGICAL WARFARE DEFENSE........          13,014          13,014
   015   0602384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE            201,053         201,053
                                              PROGRAM.
   016   0602668D8Z                          CYBER SECURITY RESEARCH...........          14,775          14,775
   017   0602702E                            TACTICAL TECHNOLOGY...............         343,776         343,776
   018   0602715E                            MATERIALS AND BIOLOGICAL                   224,440         224,440
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   019   0602716E                            ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY............         295,447         295,447
   020   0602718BR                           COUNTER WEAPONS OF MASS                    157,908         157,908
                                              DESTRUCTION APPLIED RESEARCH.
   021   0602751D8Z                          SOFTWARE ENGINEERING INSTITUTE               8,955           8,955
                                              (SEI) APPLIED RESEARCH.
   022   1160401BB                           SOF TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT........          34,493          34,493
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......       1,914,090       1,914,090
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
   023   0603000D8Z                          JOINT MUNITIONS ADVANCED                    25,627          25,627
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   024   0603122D8Z                          COMBATING TERRORISM TECHNOLOGY              76,230          81,230
                                              SUPPORT.
         ..................................      Program increase--conventional                          [5,000]
                                                 EOD equipment.
   025   0603133D8Z                          FOREIGN COMPARATIVE TESTING.......          24,199          24,199
   026   0603160BR                           COUNTER WEAPONS OF MASS                    268,607         268,607
                                              DESTRUCTION ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   027   0603176C                            ADVANCED CONCEPTS AND PERFORMANCE           12,996          12,996
                                              ASSESSMENT.
   029   0603178C                            WEAPONS TECHNOLOGY................           5,495          60,595
         ..................................      Restore funding for directed                           [55,100]
                                                 energy prioritization in DoD's
                                                 BMD efforts.
   031   0603180C                            ADVANCED RESEARCH.................          20,184          20,184
   032   0603225D8Z                          JOINT DOD-DOE MUNITIONS TECHNOLOGY          18,662          18,662
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   035   0603286E                            ADVANCED AEROSPACE SYSTEMS........         155,406         155,406
   036   0603287E                            SPACE PROGRAMS AND TECHNOLOGY.....         247,435         247,435
   037   0603288D8Z                          ANALYTIC ASSESSMENTS..............          13,154          13,154
   038   0603289D8Z                          ADVANCED INNOVATIVE ANALYSIS AND            37,674          30,674
                                              CONCEPTS.
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                         [-7,000]
   039   0603291D8Z                          ADVANCED INNOVATIVE ANALYSIS AND            15,000          15,000
                                              CONCEPTS--MHA.
   040   0603294C                            COMMON KILL VEHICLE TECHNOLOGY....         252,879         252,879
   041   0603342D8W                          DEFENSE INNOVATION UNIT                     29,594          29,594
                                              EXPERIMENTAL (DIUX).
   042   0603375D8Z                          TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION.............          59,863          24,863
         ..................................      Unjustified growth............                        [-35,000]
   043   0603384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE            145,359         145,359
                                              PROGRAM--ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT.
   044   0603527D8Z                          RETRACT LARCH.....................         171,120         171,120
   045   0603618D8Z                          JOINT ELECTRONIC ADVANCED                   14,389          14,389
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   046   0603648D8Z                          JOINT CAPABILITY TECHNOLOGY                105,871         105,871
                                              DEMONSTRATIONS.
   047   0603662D8Z                          NETWORKED COMMUNICATIONS                    12,661          12,661
                                              CAPABILITIES.
   048   0603680D8Z                          DEFENSE-WIDE MANUFACTURING SCIENCE         136,159         136,159
                                              AND TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM.
   049   0603680S                            MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM..          40,511          40,511
   050   0603699D8Z                          EMERGING CAPABILITIES TECHNOLOGY            57,876          49,876
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................      SOCOM ATL effort..............                         [-8,000]
   051   0603712S                            GENERIC LOGISTICS R&D TECHNOLOGY            10,611          10,611
                                              DEMONSTRATIONS.
   053   0603716D8Z                          STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH            71,832          81,832
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Environmental resiliency......                         [10,000]
   054   0603720S                            MICROELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGY                219,803         219,803
                                              DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT.
   055   0603727D8Z                          JOINT WARFIGHTING PROGRAM.........           6,349           6,349
   056   0603739E                            ADVANCED ELECTRONICS TECHNOLOGIES.          79,173          79,173
   057   0603760E                            COMMAND, CONTROL AND                       106,787         106,787
                                              COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS.
   058   0603766E                            NETWORK-CENTRIC WARFARE TECHNOLOGY         439,386         439,386
   059   0603767E                            SENSOR TECHNOLOGY.................         210,123         210,123
   060   0603769D8Z                          DISTRIBUTED LEARNING ADVANCED               11,211          11,211
                                              TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT.
   062   0603781D8Z                          SOFTWARE ENGINEERING INSTITUTE....          15,047          15,047
   063   0603826D8Z                          QUICK REACTION SPECIAL PROJECTS...          69,203          69,203
   064   0603833D8Z                          ENGINEERING SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY..          25,395          25,395
   065   0603941D8Z                          TEST & EVALUATION SCIENCE &                 89,586          89,586
                                              TECHNOLOGY.
   066   0604055D8Z                          OPERATIONAL ENERGY CAPABILITY               38,403          38,403
                                              IMPROVEMENT.
   067   0303310D8Z                          CWMD SYSTEMS......................          33,382          33,382
   068   1160402BB                           SOF ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY                     72,605          72,605
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY          3,445,847       3,465,947
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................  ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              PROTOTYPES
   069   0603161D8Z                          NUCLEAR AND CONVENTIONAL PHYSICAL           32,937          32,937
                                              SECURITY EQUIPMENT RDT&E ADC&P.
   070   0603600D8Z                          WALKOFF...........................         101,714         101,714
   072   0603821D8Z                          ACQUISITION ENTERPRISE DATA &                2,198           2,198
                                              INFORMATION SERVICES.
   073   0603851D8Z                          ENVIRONMENTAL SECURITY TECHNICAL            54,583          54,583
                                              CERTIFICATION PROGRAM.
   074   0603881C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE TERMINAL         230,162         230,162
                                              DEFENSE SEGMENT.
   075   0603882C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE                  828,097         850,093
                                              MIDCOURSE DEFENSE SEGMENT.
         ..................................      Improve Discrimination                                 [21,996]
                                                 Capability for GMD.
   076   0603884BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE            148,518         148,518
                                              PROGRAM--DEM/VAL.
   077   0603884C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SENSORS.         247,345         326,207
         ..................................      Funding increase to accelerate                         [21,000]
                                                 development and deployment of
                                                 interim and perm MD
                                                 enhancements for HI.
         ..................................      Improve Discrimination                                 [57,862]
                                                 Capability for GMD.
   078   0603890C                            BMD ENABLING PROGRAMS.............         449,442         478,884
         ..................................      GMD Discrimination............                         [23,342]
         ..................................      Improve High Fidelity Modeling                          [6,100]
                                                 and Simulation for GMD.
   079   0603891C                            SPECIAL PROGRAMS--MDA.............         320,190         320,190
   080   0603892C                            AEGIS BMD.........................         852,052         852,052
   083   0603896C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE COMMAND          430,115         430,115
                                              AND CONTROL, BATTLE MANAGEMENT
                                              AND COMMUNICATI.
   084   0603898C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE JOINT             48,954          48,954
                                              WARFIGHTER SUPPORT.
   085   0603904C                            MISSILE DEFENSE INTEGRATION &               53,265          53,265
                                              OPERATIONS CENTER (MDIOC).
   086   0603906C                            REGARDING TRENCH..................           9,113           9,113
   087   0603907C                            SEA BASED X-BAND RADAR (SBX)......         130,695         130,695
   088   0603913C                            ISRAELI COOPERATIVE PROGRAMS......         105,354         105,354
   089   0603914C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE TEST....         305,791         305,791
   090   0603915C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE TARGETS.         410,425         410,425
   091   0603920D8Z                          HUMANITARIAN DEMINING.............          10,837          10,837
   092   0603923D8Z                          COALITION WARFARE.................          10,740          10,740
   093   0604016D8Z                          DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CORROSION              3,837           3,837
                                              PROGRAM.
   094   0604115C                            TECHNOLOGY MATURATION INITIATIVES.         128,406         258,406
         ..................................      Acceleration of kintetic and                          [100,000]
                                                 nonkinetic boost phase BMD.
         ..................................      Program increase..............                         [30,000]
   095   0604132D8Z                          MISSILE DEFEAT PROJECT............          98,369          98,369
   096   0604181C                            HYPERSONIC DEFENSE................          75,300          75,300
   097   0604250D8Z                          ADVANCED INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES..       1,175,832       1,153,832
         ..................................      Program decrease..............                        [-22,000]
   098   0604294D8Z                          TRUSTED & ASSURED MICROELECTRONICS          83,626          83,626
   099   0604331D8Z                          RAPID PROTOTYPING PROGRAM.........         100,000         100,000
   101   0604400D8Z                          DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE (DOD)                  3,967           3,967
                                              UNMANNED SYSTEM COMMON
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   102   0604682D8Z                          WARGAMING AND SUPPORT FOR                    3,833           3,833
                                              STRATEGIC ANALYSIS (SSA).
   104   0604826J                            JOINT C5 CAPABILITY DEVELOPMENT,            23,638          23,638
                                              INTEGRATION AND INTEROPERABILITY
                                              ASSESSMENTS.
   105   0604873C                            LONG RANGE DISCRIMINATION RADAR            357,659         357,659
                                              (LRDR).
   106   0604874C                            IMPROVED HOMELAND DEFENSE                  465,530         545,530
                                              INTERCEPTORS.
         ..................................      C3 Booster Development........                         [80,000]
   107   0604876C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE TERMINAL          36,239          36,239
                                              DEFENSE SEGMENT TEST.
   108   0604878C                            AEGIS BMD TEST....................         134,468         160,819
         ..................................      To provide AAW at Aegis Ashore                         [26,351]
                                                 sites, consistent w/ FY16 and
                                                 FY17 NDAAs.
   109   0604879C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SENSOR            84,239          84,239
                                              TEST.
   110   0604880C                            LAND-BASED SM-3 (LBSM3)...........          30,486          97,761
         ..................................      To provide AAW at Aegis Ashore                         [67,275]
                                                 sites, consistent w/ FY16 and
                                                 FY17 NDAAs.
   111   0604881C                            AEGIS SM-3 BLOCK IIA CO-                     9,739           9,739
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   112   0604887C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE                   76,757          76,757
                                              MIDCOURSE SEGMENT TEST.
   113   0604894C                            MULTI-OBJECT KILL VEHICLE.........           6,500           6,500
   114   0303191D8Z                          JOINT ELECTROMAGNETIC TECHNOLOGY             2,902           2,902
                                              (JET) PROGRAM.
   115   0305103C                            CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE.........             986             986
   116   1206893C                            SPACE TRACKING & SURVEILLANCE               34,907          34,907
                                              SYSTEM.
   117   1206895C                            BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM            16,994          16,994
                                              SPACE PROGRAMS.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT           7,736,741       8,148,667
                                                DEVELOPMENT AND PROTOTYPES.
         ..................................
         ..................................  SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND
                                              DEMONSTRATION
   118   0604161D8Z                          NUCLEAR AND CONVENTIONAL PHYSICAL           12,536          12,536
                                              SECURITY EQUIPMENT RDT&E SDD.
   119   0604165D8Z                          PROMPT GLOBAL STRIKE CAPABILITY            201,749         201,749
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   120   0604384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE            406,789         406,789
                                              PROGRAM--EMD.
   122   0604771D8Z                          JOINT TACTICAL INFORMATION                  15,358          15,358
                                              DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM (JTIDS).
   123   0605000BR                           COUNTER WEAPONS OF MASS                      6,241           6,241
                                              DESTRUCTION SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT.
   124   0605013BL                           INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT          12,322          12,322
   125   0605021SE                           HOMELAND PERSONNEL SECURITY                  4,893           4,893
                                              INITIATIVE.
   126   0605022D8Z                          DEFENSE EXPORTABILITY PROGRAM.....           3,162           3,162
   127   0605027D8Z                          OUSD(C) IT DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES          21,353          21,353
   128   0605070S                            DOD ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT           6,266           6,266
                                              AND DEMONSTRATION.
   129   0605075D8Z                          DCMO POLICY AND INTEGRATION.......           2,810           2,810
   130   0605080S                            DEFENSE AGENCY INITIATIVES (DAI)--          24,436          24,436
                                              FINANCIAL SYSTEM.
   131   0605090S                            DEFENSE RETIRED AND ANNUITANT PAY           13,475          13,475
                                              SYSTEM (DRAS).
   133   0605210D8Z                          DEFENSE-WIDE ELECTRONIC                     11,870          11,870
                                              PROCUREMENT CAPABILITIES.
   134   0605294D8Z                          TRUSTED & ASSURED MICROELECTRONICS          61,084          61,084
   135   0303141K                            GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM......           2,576           2,576
   136   0305304D8Z                          DOD ENTERPRISE ENERGY INFORMATION            3,669           3,669
                                              MANAGEMENT (EEIM).
   137   0305310D8Z                          CWMD SYSTEMS: SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT             8,230           8,230
                                              AND DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT AND         818,819         818,819
                                                DEMONSTRATION.
         ..................................
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   138   0604774D8Z                          DEFENSE READINESS REPORTING SYSTEM           6,941           6,941
                                              (DRRS).
   139   0604875D8Z                          JOINT SYSTEMS ARCHITECTURE                   4,851           4,851
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   140   0604940D8Z                          CENTRAL TEST AND EVALUATION                211,325         211,325
                                              INVESTMENT DEVELOPMENT (CTEIP).
   141   0604942D8Z                          ASSESSMENTS AND EVALUATIONS.......          30,144          50,144
         ..................................      Program increase for cyber                             [20,000]
                                                 vulnerability assessments and
                                                 hardening.
   142   0605001E                            MISSION SUPPORT...................          63,769          63,769
   143   0605100D8Z                          JOINT MISSION ENVIRONMENT TEST              91,057          91,057
                                              CAPABILITY (JMETC).
   144   0605104D8Z                          TECHNICAL STUDIES, SUPPORT AND              22,386          22,386
                                              ANALYSIS.
   145   0605126J                            JOINT INTEGRATED AIR AND MISSILE            36,581          36,581
                                              DEFENSE ORGANIZATION (JIAMDO).
   147   0605142D8Z                          SYSTEMS ENGINEERING...............          37,622          37,622
   148   0605151D8Z                          STUDIES AND ANALYSIS SUPPORT--OSD.           5,200           5,200
   149   0605161D8Z                          NUCLEAR MATTERS-PHYSICAL SECURITY.           5,232           5,232
   150   0605170D8Z                          SUPPORT TO NETWORKS AND                     12,583          12,583
                                              INFORMATION INTEGRATION.
   151   0605200D8Z                          GENERAL SUPPORT TO USD                      31,451          31,451
                                              (INTELLIGENCE).
   152   0605384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE            104,348         104,348
                                              PROGRAM.
   161   0605790D8Z                          SMALL BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH           2,372           2,372
                                              (SBIR)/ SMALL BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY
                                              TRANSFER.
   162   0605798D8Z                          DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY ANALYSIS.......          24,365          24,365
   163   0605801KA                           DEFENSE TECHNICAL INFORMATION               54,145          54,145
                                              CENTER (DTIC).
   164   0605803SE                           R&D IN SUPPORT OF DOD ENLISTMENT,           30,356          30,356
                                              TESTING AND EVALUATION.
   165   0605804D8Z                          DEVELOPMENT TEST AND EVALUATION...          20,571          20,571
   166   0605898E                            MANAGEMENT HQ--R&D................          14,017          14,017
   167   0605998KA                           MANAGEMENT HQ--DEFENSE TECHNICAL             4,187           4,187
                                              INFORMATION CENTER (DTIC).
   168   0606100D8Z                          BUDGET AND PROGRAM ASSESSMENTS....           3,992           3,992
   169   0606225D8Z                          ODNA TECHNOLOGY AND RESOURCE                 1,000           1,000
                                              ANALYSIS.
   170   0203345D8Z                          DEFENSE OPERATIONS SECURITY                  2,551           2,551
                                              INITIATIVE (DOSI).
   171   0204571J                            JOINT STAFF ANALYTICAL SUPPORT....           7,712           7,712
   174   0303166J                            SUPPORT TO INFORMATION OPERATIONS              673             673
                                              (IO) CAPABILITIES.
   175   0303260D8Z                          DEFENSE MILITARY DECEPTION PROGRAM           1,006           1,006
                                              OFFICE (DMDPO).
   177   0305172K                            COMBINED ADVANCED APPLICATIONS....          16,998          16,998
   180   0305245D8Z                          INTELLIGENCE CAPABILITIES AND               18,992          18,992
                                              INNOVATION INVESTMENTS.
   181   0306310D8Z                          CWMD SYSTEMS: RDT&E MANAGEMENT               1,231           1,231
                                              SUPPORT.
   183   0804767J                            COCOM EXERCISE ENGAGEMENT AND               44,500          44,500
                                              TRAINING TRANSFORMATION (CE2T2)--
                                              MHA.
   184   0901598C                            MANAGEMENT HQ--MDA................          29,947          29,947
   187   0903235K                            JOINT SERVICE PROVIDER (JSP)......           5,113           5,113
  187A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............          63,312          63,312
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....       1,010,530       1,030,530
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
   188   0604130V                            ENTERPRISE SECURITY SYSTEM (ESS)..           4,565           4,565
   189   0605127T                            REGIONAL INTERNATIONAL OUTREACH              1,871           1,871
                                              (RIO) AND PARTNERSHIP FOR PEACE
                                              INFORMATION MANA.
   190   0605147T                            OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE               298             298
                                              SHARED INFORMATION SYSTEM
                                              (OHASIS).
   191   0607210D8Z                          INDUSTRIAL BASE ANALYSIS AND                10,882          15,882
                                              SUSTAINMENT SUPPORT.
         ..................................      Program increase for increase                           [5,000]
                                                 analytical support.
   192   0607310D8Z                          CWMD SYSTEMS: OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS            7,222           7,222
                                              DEVELOPMENT.
   193   0607327T                            GLOBAL THEATER SECURITY                     14,450          14,450
                                              COOPERATION MANAGEMENT
                                              INFORMATION SYSTEMS (G-TSCMIS).
   194   0607384BP                           CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE             45,677          45,677
                                              (OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT).
   195   0208043J                            PLANNING AND DECISION AID SYSTEM             3,037           3,037
                                              (PDAS).
   196   0208045K                            C4I INTEROPERABILITY..............          59,490          59,490
   198   0301144K                            JOINT/ALLIED COALITION INFORMATION           6,104           6,104
                                              SHARING.
   202   0302016K                            NATIONAL MILITARY COMMAND SYSTEM-            1,863           1,863
                                              WIDE SUPPORT.
   203   0302019K                            DEFENSE INFO INFRASTRUCTURE                 21,564          21,564
                                              ENGINEERING AND INTEGRATION.
   204   0303126K                            LONG-HAUL COMMUNICATIONS--DCS.....          15,428          15,428
   205   0303131K                            MINIMUM ESSENTIAL EMERGENCY                 15,855          15,855
                                              COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK (MEECN).
   206   0303135G                            PUBLIC KEY INFRASTRUCTURE (PKI)...           4,811           4,811
   207   0303136G                            KEY MANAGEMENT INFRASTRUCTURE               33,746          33,746
                                              (KMI).
   208   0303140D8Z                          INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY                 9,415          19,415
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Cyber Scholarship Program.....                         [10,000]
   209   0303140G                            INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY               227,652         235,652
                                              PROGRAM.
         ..................................      Program increase to support                             [8,000]
                                                 cyber defense education of
                                                 reservists and the National
                                                 Guard.
   210   0303150K                            GLOBAL COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM.          42,687          42,687
   211   0303153K                            DEFENSE SPECTRUM ORGANIZATION.....           8,750           8,750
   214   0303228K                            JOINT INFORMATION ENVIRONMENT                4,689           4,689
                                              (JIE).
   216   0303430K                            FEDERAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICES              50,000          50,000
                                              INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.
   222   0305103K                            CYBER SECURITY INITIATIVE.........           1,686           1,686
   227   0305186D8Z                          POLICY R&D PROGRAMS...............           6,526           6,526
   228   0305199D8Z                          NET CENTRICITY....................          18,455          18,455
   230   0305208BB                           DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE            5,496           5,496
                                              SYSTEMS.
   233   0305208K                            DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/SURFACE            3,049           3,049
                                              SYSTEMS.
   236   0305327V                            INSIDER THREAT....................           5,365           5,365
   237   0305387D8Z                          HOMELAND DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY                  2,071           2,071
                                              TRANSFER PROGRAM.
   243   0307577D8Z                          INTELLIGENCE MISSION DATA (IMD)...          13,111          13,111
   245   0708012S                            PACIFIC DISASTER CENTERS..........           1,770           1,770
   246   0708047S                            DEFENSE PROPERTY ACCOUNTABILITY              2,924           2,924
                                              SYSTEM.
   248   1105219BB                           MQ-9 UAV..........................          37,863          37,863
   251   1160403BB                           AVIATION SYSTEMS..................         259,886         267,386
         ..................................      Per SOCOM requested                                     [7,500]
                                                 realignment.
   252   1160405BB                           INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT..           8,245           8,245
   253   1160408BB                           OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS..........          79,455          79,455
   254   1160431BB                           WARRIOR SYSTEMS...................          45,935          45,935
   255   1160432BB                           SPECIAL PROGRAMS..................           1,978           1,978
   256   1160434BB                           UNMANNED ISR......................          31,766          31,766
   257   1160480BB                           SOF TACTICAL VEHICLES.............           2,578           2,578
   258   1160483BB                           MARITIME SYSTEMS..................          42,315          55,115
         ..................................      Per SOCOM requested                                    [12,800]
                                                 realignment.
   259   1160489BB                           GLOBAL VIDEO SURVEILLANCE                    4,661           4,661
                                              ACTIVITIES.
   260   1160490BB                           OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS                    12,049          12,049
                                              INTELLIGENCE.
   261   1203610K                            TELEPORT PROGRAM..................             642             642
  261A   9999999999                          CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...............       3,689,646       3,689,646
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEM           4,867,528       4,910,828
                                                DEVELOPMENT.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT,       20,490,902      20,996,228
                                                  TEST & EVAL, DW.
         ..................................
         ..................................  OPERATIONAL TEST & EVAL, DEFENSE
         ..................................  MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
   001   0605118OTE                          OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION...          83,503          83,503
   002   0605131OTE                          LIVE FIRE TEST AND EVALUATION.....          59,500          59,500
   003   0605814OTE                          OPERATIONAL TEST ACTIVITIES AND             67,897          67,897
                                              ANALYSES.
         ..................................     SUBTOTAL MANAGEMENT SUPPORT....         210,900         210,900
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL OPERATIONAL TEST &              210,900         210,900
                                                  EVAL, DEFENSE.
         ..................................
         ..................................       TOTAL RDT&E..................      82,716,636      84,038,357
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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 2018         House
  Line   Program Element        Item          Request       Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
   006   0602120A         SENSORS AND                                 v
                           ELECTRONIC
                           SURVIVABILITY.
         ...............
         ...............  ADVANCED
                           COMPONENT
                           DEVELOPMENT &
                           PROTOTYPES
   055   0603327A         AIR AND MISSILE        15,000               0
                           DEFENSE SYSTEMS
                           ENGINEERING.
         ...............      Realign                          [-15,000]
                              European
                              Reassurance
                              Initiative
                              to Base.
   058   0603639A         TANK AND MEDIUM                         4,000
                           CALIBER
                           AMMUNITION.
         ...............      Unfunded                           [4,000]
                              requirement-
                              -JLTV
                              lethality
                              30mm upgrade.
   060   0603747A         SOLDIER SUPPORT         3,000           3,000
                           AND
                           SURVIVABILITY.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL            18,000           7,000
                             ADVANCED
                             COMPONENT
                             DEVELOPMENT &
                             PROTOTYPES.
         ...............
         ...............  SYSTEM
                           DEVELOPMENT &
                           DEMONSTRATION
   080   0604201A         AIRCRAFT                               12,000
                           AVIONICS.
         ...............      Unfunded                          [12,000]
                              requirement-
                              -A-PNT
                              measures.
   122   0605032A         TRACTOR TIRE....        5,000           5,000
   125   0605035A         COMMON INFRARED        21,540          21,540
                           COUNTERMEASURES
                           (CIRCM).
   132   0605049A         MISSILE WARNING                       155,000
                           SYSTEM
                           MODERNIZATION
                           (MWSM).
         ...............      Unfunded                         [155,000]
                              requirements
                              -LIMWS.
   133   0605051A         AIRCRAFT               30,100          30,100
                           SURVIVABILITY
                           DEVELOPMENT.
   147   0303032A         TROJAN--RH12....        1,200           1,200
         ...............     SUBTOTAL            57,840         224,840
                             SYSTEM
                             DEVELOPMENT &
                             DEMONSTRATION.
         ...............
         ...............  OPERATIONAL
                           SYSTEMS
                           DEVELOPMENT
   183   0607134A         LONG RANGE                             56,731
                           PRECISION FIRES
                           (LRPF).
         ...............      Unfunded                          [42,731]
                              requirement.
         ...............      Unfunded                          [14,000]
                              requirement-
                              -CDAEM
                              Bridging
                              Strategy.
   191   0607142A         AVIATION ROCKET                         8,000
                           SYSTEM PRODUCT
                           IMPROVEMENT AND
                           DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............      Unfunded                           [8,000]
                              requirement-
                              -M282
                              warhead
                              qualificatio
                              n.
   203   0203801A         MISSILE/AIR            15,000               0
                           DEFENSE PRODUCT
                           IMPROVEMENT
                           PROGRAM.
         ...............      Realign                          [-15,000]
                              European
                              Reassurance
                              Initiative
                              to Base.
   222   0305204A         TACTICAL                7,492               0
                           UNMANNED AERIAL
                           VEHICLES.
         ...............      Realign                           [-7,492]
                              European
                              Reassurance
                              Initiative
                              to Base.
   223   0305206A         AIRBORNE               15,000               0
                           RECONNAISSANCE
                           SYSTEMS.
         ...............      Realign                          [-15,000]
                              European
                              Reassurance
                              Initiative
                              to Base.
   228   0307665A         BIOMETRICS              6,036           6,036
                           ENABLED
                           INTELLIGENCE.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL            43,528          70,767
                             OPERATIONAL
                             SYSTEMS
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL            119,368         302,607
                               RESEARCH,
                               DEVELOPMENT
                               , TEST &
                               EVAL, ARMY.
         ...............
         ...............  ADVANCED
                           COMPONENT
                           DEVELOPMENT &
                           PROTOTYPES
   041   0603527N         RETRACT LARCH...       22,000          22,000
   081   0604272N         TACTICAL AIR            5,710           5,710
                           DIRECTIONAL
                           INFRARED
                           COUNTERMEASURES
                           (TADIRCM).
         ...............     SUBTOTAL            27,710          27,710
                             ADVANCED
                             COMPONENT
                             DEVELOPMENT &
                             PROTOTYPES.
         ...............
         ...............  OPERATIONAL
                           SYSTEMS
                           DEVELOPMENT
   207   0204311N         INTEGRATED             11,600               0
                           SURVEILLANCE
                           SYSTEM.
         ...............      Realign                          [-11,600]
                              European
                              Reassurance
                              Initiative
                              to Base.
   211   0204574N         CRYPTOLOGIC             1,200           1,200
                           DIRECT SUPPORT.
  253A   9999999999       CLASSIFIED             89,855          89,855
                           PROGRAMS.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL           102,655          91,055
                             OPERATIONAL
                             SYSTEMS
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL            130,365         118,765
                               RESEARCH,
                               DEVELOPMENT
                               , TEST &
                               EVAL, NAVY.
         ...............
         ...............  ADVANCED
                           COMPONENT
                           DEVELOPMENT &
                           PROTOTYPES
   029   0603438F         SPACE CONTROL           7,800           7,800
                           TECHNOLOGY.
   053   0306250F         CYBER OPERATIONS        5,400           5,400
                           TECHNOLOGY
                           DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL            13,200          13,200
                             ADVANCED
                             COMPONENT
                             DEVELOPMENT &
                             PROTOTYPES.
         ...............
         ...............  OPERATIONAL
                           SYSTEMS
                           DEVELOPMENT
   196   0207277F         ISR INNOVATIONS.        5,750           5,750
   214   0208087F         AF OFFENSIVE            4,000           4,000
                           CYBERSPACE
                           OPERATIONS.
   286   0401318F         CV-22...........                       14,000
         ...............      Unfunded                           [7,000]
                              requirement-
                              -common
                              eletrical
                              interface.
         ...............      Unfunded                           [7,000]
                              requirement-
                              -intelligenc
                              e broadcast
                              system.
  318A   9999999999       CLASSIFIED            112,408         112,408
                           PROGRAMS.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL           122,158         136,158
                             OPERATIONAL
                             SYSTEMS
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL            135,358         149,358
                               RESEARCH,
                               DEVELOPMENT
                               , TEST &
                               EVAL, AF.
         ...............
         ...............  ADVANCED
                           TECHNOLOGY
                           DEVELOPMENT
   024   0603122D8Z       COMBATING              25,000          25,000
                           TERRORISM
                           TECHNOLOGY
                           SUPPORT.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL            25,000          25,000
                             ADVANCED
                             TECHNOLOGY
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............  ADVANCED
                           COMPONENT
                           DEVELOPMENT AND
                           PROTOTYPES
   088   0603913C         ISRAELI                               507,646
                           COOPERATIVE
                           PROGRAMS.
         ...............      Additional                       [507,646]
                              Cooperative
                              funds,
                              consistent
                              with Title
                              XVI
                              authorizatio
                              ns.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                           507,646
                             ADVANCED
                             COMPONENT
                             DEVELOPMENT
                             AND
                             PROTOTYPES.
         ...............
         ...............  OPERATIONAL
                           SYSTEM
                           DEVELOPMENT
   253   1160408BB        OPERATIONAL             1,920           3,920
                           ENHANCEMENTS.
         ...............      Unfunded                           [2,000]
                              Requirement-
                              Publicly
                              Available
                              Information
                              (PAI)
                              Capability
                              Acceleration.
   256   1160434BB        UNMANNED ISR....        3,000           3,000
  261A   9999999999       CLASSIFIED            196,176         196,176
                           PROGRAMS.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL           201,096         203,096
                             OPERATIONAL
                             SYSTEM
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL            226,096         735,742
                               RESEARCH,
                               DEVELOPMENT
                               , TEST &
                               EVAL, DW.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL RDT&E      611,187       1,306,472
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 4203. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION FOR OVERSEAS 
              CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS FOR BASE REQUIREMENTS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
   SEC. 4203. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION FOR OVERSEAS
 CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS FOR BASE REQUIREMENTS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              FY 2018         House
  Line   Program Element        Item          Request       Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
         ...............   RESEARCH,
                           DEVELOPMENT,
                           TEST & EVAL,
                           ARMY
         ...............  ADVANCED
                           TECHNOLOGY
                           DEVELOPMENT
   042   0603270A         ELECTRONIC                              3,000
                           WARFARE
                           TECHNOLOGY.
         ...............      Multi-Domain                       [3,000]
                              Battle
                              Exercise
                              Capability.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                             3,000
                             ADVANCED
                             TECHNOLOGY
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............  SYSTEM
                           DEVELOPMENT &
                           DEMONSTRATION
   085   0604328A         TRACTOR CAGE....                       13,000
         ...............      Unfunded                          [13,000]
                              Requirement.
   117   0605018A         INTEGRATED                             15,000
                           PERSONNEL AND
                           PAY SYSTEM-ARMY
                           (IPPS-A).
         ...............      Unfunded                          [15,000]
                              Requirement.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                            28,000
                             SYSTEM
                             DEVELOPMENT &
                             DEMONSTRATION.
         ...............
         ...............  OPERATIONAL
                           SYSTEMS
                           DEVELOPMENT
   203   0203801A         MISSILE/AIR                            26,000
                           DEFENSE PRODUCT
                           IMPROVEMENT
                           PROGRAM.
         ...............      Unfunded                          [26,000]
                              requirement-
                              -Stinger PIP.
   213   0303028A         SECURITY AND                           21,845
                           INTELLIGENCE
                           ACTIVITIES.
         ...............      Unfunded                          [21,845]
                              Requirement.
   214   0303140A         INFORMATION                             7,021
                           SYSTEMS
                           SECURITY
                           PROGRAM.
         ...............      Unfunded                           [7,021]
                              Requirement.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                            54,866
                             OPERATIONAL
                             SYSTEMS
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL                             85,866
                               RESEARCH,
                               DEVELOPMENT
                               , TEST &
                               EVAL, ARMY.
         ...............
         ...............   RESEARCH,
                           DEVELOPMENT,
                           TEST & EVAL,
                           NAVY
         ...............  APPLIED RESEARCH
   010   0602435N         OCEAN                                  15,000
                           WARFIGHTING
                           ENVIRONMENT
                           APPLIED
                           RESEARCH.
         ...............      AGOR SLEP...                      [15,000]
   014   0602782N         MINE AND                               23,500
                           EXPEDITIONARY
                           WARFARE APPLIED
                           RESEARCH.
         ...............      MS-177A                           [23,500]
                              Maritime
                              Senson.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                            38,500
                             APPLIED
                             RESEARCH.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL                             38,500
                               RESEARCH,
                               DEVELOPMENT
                               , TEST &
                               EVAL, NAVY.
         ...............
         ...............   RESEARCH,
                           DEVELOPMENT,
                           TEST & EVAL, AF
         ...............  APPLIED RESEARCH
   007   0602203F         AEROSPACE                               2,500
                           PROPULSION.
         ...............      Unfunded                           [2,500]
                              Requirement.
   012   0602605F         DIRECTED ENERGY                         8,300
                           TECHNOLOGY.
         ...............      Unfunded                           [8,300]
                              Requirement.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                            10,800
                             APPLIED
                             RESEARCH.
         ...............
         ...............  ADVANCED
                           TECHNOLOGY
                           DEVELOPMENT
   018   0603211F         AEROSPACE                               5,700
                           TECHNOLOGY DEV/
                           DEMO.
         ...............      Unfunded                           [5,700]
                              requirement.
   019   0603216F         AEROSPACE                              13,500
                           PROPULSION AND
                           POWER
                           TECHNOLOGY.
         ...............      Unfunded                          [13,500]
                              requirement.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                            19,200
                             ADVANCED
                             TECHNOLOGY
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............  ADVANCED
                           COMPONENT
                           DEVELOPMENT &
                           PROTOTYPES
   041   0604414F         CYBER RESILIENCY                       10,200
                           OF WEAPON
                           SYSTEMS-ACS.
         ...............      Unfunding                         [10,200]
                              requirement.
   062   1206438F         SPACE CONTROL                          56,900
                           TECHNOLOGY.
         ...............      AF UPL......                      [56,900]
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                            67,100
                             ADVANCED
                             COMPONENT
                             DEVELOPMENT &
                             PROTOTYPES.
         ...............
         ...............  OPERATIONAL
                           SYSTEMS
                           DEVELOPMENT
   230   0303131F         MINIMUM                                11,000
                           ESSENTIAL
                           EMERGENCY
                           COMMUNICATIONS
                           NETWORK (MEECN).
         ...............      AF UPL--                          [11,000]
                              support for
                              AEHF
                              terminals.
   302   1203001F         FAMILY OF                              58,400
                           ADVANCED BLOS
                           TERMINALS (FAB-
                           T).
         ...............      AF UPL--FAB-                       [7,400]
                              T testing
                              activities.
         ...............      AF UPL--                          [31,900]
                              POTUS voice
                              conference
                              configuratio
                              n.
         ...............      AF UPL--                           [6,600]
                              spares for
                              testing.
         ...............      AF UPL -                          [12,500]
                              spares for
                              testing.
   312   1203614F         JSPOC MISSION                          24,250
                           SYSTEM.
         ...............      AF UPL--BMC2                      [24,250]
                              software.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                            93,650
                             OPERATIONAL
                             SYSTEMS
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL                            190,750
                               RESEARCH,
                               DEVELOPMENT
                               , TEST &
                               EVAL, AF.
         ...............
         ...............   RESEARCH,
                           DEVELOPMENT,
                           TEST & EVAL, DW
         ...............  ADVANCED
                           COMPONENT
                           DEVELOPMENT AND
                           PROTOTYPES
   075   0603882C         BALLISTIC                             351,000
                           MISSILE DEFENSE
                           MIDCOURSE
                           DEFENSE SEGMENT.
         ...............      Increase GBI                     [208,000]
                              magazine
                              capacity at
                              Fort Greely.
         ...............      Procure 3                         [45,000]
                              additional
                              EKVs.
         ...............      Procure 7                         [98,000]
                              additional
                              boosters.
   117   1206895C         BALLISTIC                              27,500
                           MISSILE DEFENSE
                           SYSTEM SPACE
                           PROGRAMS.
         ...............      Initiates                         [27,500]
                              BMDS Global
                              Sensors AoA
                              reccommendat
                              ions for
                              space sensor
                              architecture.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                           378,500
                             ADVANCED
                             COMPONENT
                             DEVELOPMENT
                             AND
                             PROTOTYPES.
         ...............
         ...............  SYSTEM
                           DEVELOPMENT AND
                           DEMONSTRATION
  137A   0604XXX          RESEARCH AND                           50,000
                           DEVELOPMENT OF
                           MILITARY
                           RESPONSE
                           OPTIONS FOR
                           RUSSIAN INF
                           TREATY
                           VIOLATION.
         ...............      Program                           [50,000]
                              increase.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                            50,000
                             SYSTEM
                             DEVELOPMENT
                             AND
                             DEMONSTRATION.
         ...............
         ...............  MANAGEMENT
                           SUPPORT
   151   0605200D8Z       GENERAL SUPPORT                        30,000
                           TO USD
                           (INTELLIGENCE).
         ...............      PROJECT                           [30,000]
                              Maven.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                            30,000
                             MANAGEMENT
                             SUPPORT.
         ...............
         ...............  OPERATIONAL
                           SYSTEM
                           DEVELOPMENT
   236   0305327V         INSIDER THREAT..                        5,000
         ...............      Defense                            [5,000]
                              Insider
                              Threat
                              Management
                              and Analysis
                              Center.
         ...............     SUBTOTAL                             5,000
                             OPERATIONAL
                             SYSTEM
                             DEVELOPMENT.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL                            463,500
                               RESEARCH,
                               DEVELOPMENT
                               , TEST &
                               EVAL, DW.
         ...............
         ...............       TOTAL RDT&E                      778,616
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                 TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE

SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     FY 2018          House
  Line                                     Item                                      Request        Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   MANEUVER UNITS.......................................................       1,455,366       2,193,657
              Improve unit training and maintenance readiness..................                         [54,700]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                        [683,591]
    020   MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES.............................................         105,147         112,847
              Execute the National Military Strategy...........................                          [7,700]
    030   ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE...............................................         604,117         692,417
              Improve training readiness.......................................                         [88,300]
    040   THEATER LEVEL ASSETS.................................................         793,217         820,517
              Decisive Action training and operations..........................                         [27,300]
    050   LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT.......................................       1,169,478       1,207,178
              Combat Training Center Operations and Maintenance................                         [37,700]
    060   AVIATION ASSETS......................................................       1,496,503       1,674,803
              Aviation and ISR Maintenance Requirements........................                         [28,200]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                        [150,100]
    070   FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT...................................       3,675,901       3,767,870
              Maintenance of organizational clothing and equipment.............                         [26,500]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [8,969]
              SOUTHCOM--Maritime Patrol Aircraft Expansion.....................                         [38,500]
              SOUTHCOM--Mission and Other Ship Operations......................                         [18,000]
    080   LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................         466,720         466,720
    090   LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................       1,443,516       1,594,265
              Depot maintenance of hardware and munitions......................                         [46,600]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                        [104,149]
    100   BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT..............................................       8,080,357       8,142,264
              C4I / Cyber capabilities enabling support........................                         [13,200]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [48,707]
    110   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..................       3,401,155       3,433,155
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [32,000]
    120   MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS..............................         443,790         443,790
    140   ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES................................................                         135,150
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                        [126,250]
              Training, supplies, spares, and repair site support..............                          [8,900]
    180   US AFRICA COMMAND....................................................         225,382         225,382
    190   US EUROPEAN COMMAND..................................................         141,352         185,602
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [44,250]
    200   US SOUTHERN COMMAND..................................................         190,811         194,311
              Mission and Other Ship Operations................................                          [3,500]
    210   US FORCES KOREA......................................................          59,578          59,578
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................      23,752,390      25,349,506
 
          MOBILIZATION
    220   STRATEGIC MOBILITY...................................................         346,667         347,791
              Sustainment of strategically positioned assets enabling force                              [1,124]
              projection.......................................................
    230   ARMY PREPOSITIONED STOCKS............................................         422,108         483,846
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [56,500]
              Sustain Army War Reserve Secondary Items for deployed forces.....                          [5,238]
    240   INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS..............................................           7,750           7,750
              SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION............................................         776,525         839,387
 
          TRAINING AND RECRUITING
    250   OFFICER ACQUISITION..................................................         137,556         137,556
    260   RECRUIT TRAINING.....................................................          58,872          58,872
    270   ONE STATION UNIT TRAINING............................................          58,035          58,035
    280   SENIOR RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS...............................         505,089         505,089
    290   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING...........................................       1,015,541       1,018,685
              Leadership development and training..............................                          [3,144]
    300   FLIGHT TRAINING......................................................       1,124,115       1,124,115
    310   PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION...................................         220,688         220,688
    320   TRAINING SUPPORT.....................................................         618,164         621,690
              Department of the Army directed training.........................                          [3,526]
    330   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING...........................................         613,586         613,586
    340   EXAMINING............................................................         171,223         171,223
    350   OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION.....................................         214,738         214,738
    360   CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING......................................         195,099         195,099
    370   JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS................................         176,116         176,116
              SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................       5,108,822       5,115,492
 
          ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
    390   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION...........................................         555,502         709,552
              Logistics associated with increased end strength.................                         [57,900]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [96,150]
    400   CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES............................................         894,208         905,657
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [11,449]
    410   LOGISTIC SUPPORT ACTIVITIES..........................................         715,462         715,462
    420   AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT................................................         446,931         446,931
    430   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................         493,616         493,616
    440   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS...........................................       2,084,922       2,102,822
              Annual maintenance of Enterprise License Agreements..............                         [17,900]
    450   MANPOWER MANAGEMENT..................................................         259,588         259,588
    460   OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT..............................................         326,387         326,387
    470   OTHER SERVICE SUPPORT................................................       1,087,602       1,078,602
              Program decrease.................................................                         [-9,000]
    480   ARMY CLAIMS ACTIVITIES...............................................         210,514         210,514
    490   REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT...............................................         243,584         243,584
    500   FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND AUDIT READINESS.............................         284,592         292,992
              DISA migration cost and system support...........................                          [8,400]
    510   INTERNATIONAL MILITARY HEADQUARTERS..................................         415,694         415,694
    520   MISC. SUPPORT OF OTHER NATIONS.......................................          46,856          46,856
    565   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..................................................       1,242,222       1,313,047
              Army Analytics Group.............................................                          [5,000]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [65,825]
              SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES..............................       9,307,680       9,561,304
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    570   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                        -426,100
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                        [-20,600]
              Foreign Currency adjustments.....................................                       [-146,400]
              Historical unobligated balances..................................                       [-259,100]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                        -426,100
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY.............................      38,945,417      40,439,589
 
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES.............................................          11,461          11,461
    020   ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE...............................................         577,410         577,410
    030   THEATER LEVEL ASSETS.................................................         117,298         117,298
    040   LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT.......................................         552,016         552,016
    050   AVIATION ASSETS......................................................          80,302          81,461
              Increase aviation readiness......................................                          [1,159]
    060   FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT...................................         399,035         399,258
              Pay and allowances for career development training...............                            [223]
    070   LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................         102,687         102,687
    080   LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................          56,016          56,016
    090   BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT..............................................         599,947         599,947
    100   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..................         273,940         273,940
    110   MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS..............................          22,909          22,909
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................       2,793,021       2,794,403
 
          ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
    120   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION...........................................          11,116          11,116
    130   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................          17,962          17,962
    140   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS...........................................          18,550          20,950
              Annual maintenance of Enterprise License Agreements..............                          [2,400]
    150   MANPOWER MANAGEMENT..................................................           6,166           6,166
    160   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING...........................................          60,027          60,027
              SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................         113,821         116,221
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    190   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                          -2,500
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                         [-2,500]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                          -2,500
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES.........................       2,906,842       2,908,124
 
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   MANEUVER UNITS.......................................................         777,883         810,983
              Unit training and maintenance readiness..........................                         [33,100]
    020   MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES.............................................         190,639         190,639
    030   ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE...............................................         807,557         819,457
              Improve training readiness.......................................                         [11,900]
    040   THEATER LEVEL ASSETS.................................................          85,476          93,376
              Decisive Action training and operations..........................                          [7,900]
    050   LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT.......................................          36,672          38,897
              Aviation contract support for rotary wing aircraft...............                          [2,225]
    060   AVIATION ASSETS......................................................         956,381         974,581
              Increase aviation readiness......................................                         [18,200]
    070   FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT...................................         777,756         777,941
              Pay and allowances for career development training...............                            [185]
    080   LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................          51,506          51,506
    090   LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................         244,942         244,942
    100   BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT..............................................       1,144,726       1,144,726
    110   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..................         781,895         781,895
    120   MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS..............................         999,052         999,052
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................       6,854,485       6,927,995
 
          ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
    130   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION...........................................           7,703           7,703
    140   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................          79,236          81,236
              Department of Defense State Partnership Program..................                          [2,000]
    150   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS...........................................          85,160          94,760
              Annual maintenance of Enterprise License Agreements..............                          [9,600]
    160   MANPOWER MANAGEMENT..................................................           8,654           8,654
    170   OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT..............................................         268,839         268,839
    180   REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT...............................................           3,093           3,093
              SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................         452,685         464,285
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    190   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                         -10,700
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                        [-10,700]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                         -10,700
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG.............................       7,307,170       7,381,580
 
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS..................................       5,544,165       5,570,915
              Cbt logistics Mnt for TAO-187....................................                         [22,000]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [4,750]
    020   FLEET AIR TRAINING...................................................       2,075,000       2,075,000
    030   AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA & ENGINEERING SERVICES.......................          46,801          46,801
    040   AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT....................................         119,624         119,624
    050   AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT..................................................         552,536         594,536
              Fund aviation spt to max executable..............................                         [42,000]
    060   AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE...........................................       1,088,482       1,088,482
    070   AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................          40,584          40,584
    080   AVIATION LOGISTICS...................................................         723,786         843,786
              Fund aviation logistics to max executable........................                        [120,000]
    090   MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS....................................       4,067,334       4,071,011
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [3,677]
    100   SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING...................................         977,701         977,701
    110   SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE...............................................       7,165,858       7,175,358
              Western Pacific Ship Repair......................................                          [9,500]
    120   SHIP DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT........................................       2,193,851       2,193,851
    130   COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE.........................       1,288,094       1,299,494
              Logistics support for legacy C41 systems.........................                          [6,000]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [5,400]
    150   SPACE SYSTEMS AND SURVEILLANCE.......................................         206,678         211,078
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [4,400]
    160   WARFARE TACTICS......................................................         621,581         622,581
              Operational Range and Environmental Compliance...................                          [1,000]
    170   OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY.............................         370,681         370,681
    180   COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................................................       1,437,966       1,460,950
              Coastal Riverine Force meet operational requirements.............                          [7,000]
              COMPACFLT C41 Upgrade............................................                         [10,000]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [5,984]
    190   EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE AND DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT...................         162,705         162,705
    210   COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS.................................          65,108          65,108
    220   COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION SUPPORT..........................          86,892         155,992
              Joint Training Capability and Exercise Programs..................                         [64,100]
              No-Notice Agile Logistics Exercise...............................                          [5,000]
    230   MILITARY INFORMATION SUPPORT OPERATIONS..............................           8,427           8,427
    240   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................         385,212         385,212
    260   FLEET BALLISTIC MISSILE..............................................       1,278,456       1,278,456
    280   WEAPONS MAINTENANCE..................................................         745,680         751,980
              Munitions wholeness..............................................                          [5,000]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [1,300]
    290   OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT.........................................         380,016         380,016
    300   ENTERPRISE INFORMATION...............................................         914,428         914,428
    310   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION...........................       1,905,679       1,905,679
    320   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT...............................................       4,333,688       4,356,688
              Operational range clearance......................................                         [11,000]
              Port Operations Service Craft Maintenance........................                         [12,000]
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................      38,787,013      39,127,124
 
          MOBILIZATION
    330   SHIP PREPOSITIONING AND SURGE........................................         417,450         427,450
              Strategic sealift management.....................................                         [10,000]
    360   SHIP ACTIVATIONS/INACTIVATIONS.......................................         198,341         198,341
    370   EXPEDITIONARY HEALTH SERVICES SYSTEMS................................          66,849          66,849
    390   COAST GUARD SUPPORT..................................................          21,870          21,870
              SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION............................................         704,510         714,510
 
          TRAINING AND RECRUITING
    400   OFFICER ACQUISITION..................................................         143,924         143,924
    410   RECRUIT TRAINING.....................................................           8,975           8,975
    420   RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS......................................         144,708         144,708
    430   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING...........................................         812,708         812,708
    450   PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION...................................         180,448         182,448
              Naval Sea Cadets.................................................                          [2,000]
    460   TRAINING SUPPORT.....................................................         234,596         234,596
    470   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING...........................................         177,517         177,517
    480   OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION.....................................         103,154         103,154
    490   CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING......................................          72,216          72,216
    500   JUNIOR ROTC..........................................................          53,262          53,262
              SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................       1,931,508       1,933,508
 
          ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
    510   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................       1,135,429       1,126,429
              Program decrease.................................................                         [-9,000]
    530   CIVILIAN MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT...........................         149,365         149,365
    540   MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT...........................         386,749         386,749
    590   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION...........................................         165,301         165,301
    610   PLANNING, ENGINEERING, AND PROGRAM SUPPORT...........................         311,616         311,616
    620   ACQUISITION, LOGISTICS, AND OVERSIGHT................................         665,580         665,580
    660   INVESTIGATIVE AND SECURITY SERVICES..................................         659,143         659,143
    775   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..................................................         543,193         553,193
              Research and Technology Protection...............................                         [10,000]
              SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................       4,016,376       4,017,376
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    780   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                        -356,800
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                       [-143,600]
              Foreign Currency adjustments.....................................                        [-35,300]
              Historical unobligated balances..................................                       [-177,900]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                        -356,800
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY.............................      45,439,407      45,435,718
 
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   OPERATIONAL FORCES...................................................         967,949       1,132,682
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                        [164,733]
    020   FIELD LOGISTICS......................................................       1,065,090       1,065,090
    030   DEPOT MAINTENANCE....................................................         286,635         286,635
    040   MARITIME PREPOSITIONING..............................................          85,577          85,577
    050   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................         181,518         181,518
    060   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.............................         785,264         785,264
    070   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT...............................................       2,196,252       2,196,252
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................       5,568,285       5,733,018
 
          TRAINING AND RECRUITING
    080   RECRUIT TRAINING.....................................................          16,163          16,163
    090   OFFICER ACQUISITION..................................................           1,154           1,154
    100   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING...........................................         100,398         100,398
    110   PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION...................................          46,474          46,474
    120   TRAINING SUPPORT.....................................................         405,039         405,039
    130   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING...........................................         201,601         201,601
    140   OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION.....................................          32,045          32,045
    150   JUNIOR ROTC..........................................................          24,394          24,394
              SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................         827,268         827,268
 
          ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
    160   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION...........................................          28,827          28,827
    170   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................         378,683         375,683
              Program decrease.................................................                         [-3,000]
    190   ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT...................................          77,684          77,684
    215   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..................................................          52,661          52,661
              SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................         537,855         534,855
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    220   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                         -38,000
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                         [-1,800]
              Foreign Currency adjustments.....................................                        [-11,400]
              Historical unobligated balances..................................                        [-24,800]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                         -38,000
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS.....................       6,933,408       7,057,141
 
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS..................................         596,876         596,876
    020   INTERMEDIATE MAINTENANCE.............................................           5,902           5,902
    030   AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE...........................................          94,861          94,861
    040   AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................             381             381
    050   AVIATION LOGISTICS...................................................          13,822          13,822
    060   SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING...................................             571             571
    070   COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS................................................          16,718          16,718
    080   COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................................................         118,079         118,079
    090   CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................             308             308
    100   ENTERPRISE INFORMATION...............................................          28,650          28,650
    110   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION...........................          86,354          86,354
    120   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT...............................................         103,596         103,596
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................       1,066,118       1,066,118
 
          ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
    130   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................           1,371           1,371
    140   MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT...........................          13,289          13,289
    160   ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT...................................           3,229           3,229
              SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................          17,889          17,889
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    180   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                          -9,800
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                         [-9,800]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                          -9,800
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES.........................       1,084,007       1,074,207
 
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   OPERATING FORCES.....................................................         103,468         103,468
    020   DEPOT MAINTENANCE....................................................          18,794          18,794
    030   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION...........................          32,777          32,777
    040   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT...............................................         111,213         111,213
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................         266,252         266,252
 
          ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
    060   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................          12,585          12,585
              SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................          12,585          12,585
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    080   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                            -300
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                           [-300]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                            -300
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE.......................         278,837         278,537
 
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................................................         694,702         727,802
              Adversarial Air Training- mission qualification..................                         [10,200]
              B-2 Replenishment spares.........................................                          [9,000]
              PACAF Contingency response group.................................                          [4,200]
              Rocket system launch program.....................................                          [8,000]
              Training equipment shortfalls....................................                          [1,700]
    020   COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES............................................       1,392,326       1,547,048
              Battlefield airman equipment assembly............................                          [8,300]
              Personnel recovery requirements..................................                            [500]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [96,522]
              TARP contractor specialist.......................................                            [800]
              Training equipment shortfalls....................................                          [6,000]
              Training specialist contract.....................................                            [400]
              Unified capabilities.............................................                         [42,200]
    030   AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING (OJT, MAINTAIN SKILLS).......................       1,128,640       1,179,940
              F-35 maintenance instructors.....................................                         [49,700]
              Readiness decision support enterprise............................                          [1,600]
    040   DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE.................................       2,755,367       2,873,088
              Aircraft depot level reparables..................................                         [92,100]
              Battlefield airman equipment.....................................                          [7,100]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [18,521]
    050   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..................       3,292,553       3,315,253
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [22,700]
    060   CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT......................       6,555,186       6,756,965
              Aircraft depot level repairables.................................                        [177,700]
              E4B maintenance personnel........................................                          [1,000]
              EC-130H service life extension...................................                         [12,000]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [4,279]
              Sustain C-37B....................................................                          [6,800]
    070   FLYING HOUR PROGRAM..................................................       4,135,330       4,201,997
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [66,667]
    080   BASE SUPPORT.........................................................       5,985,232       6,090,537
              Application hosting/MSO..........................................                         [27,000]
              Cloud migration..................................................                         [25,600]
              Enterprise svcs in FY18..........................................                         [39,000]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [13,705]
    090   GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING.........................................         847,516         977,216
              Aviation readiness shortfalls....................................                          [2,000]
              Cyber readiness shortfalls.......................................                         [35,300]
              Cyber security readiness shortfalls..............................                         [57,500]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [2,000]
              Space based readiness shortfalls.................................                         [32,900]
    100   OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS........................................       1,131,817       1,253,379
              Anti-terrorism force protection..................................                         [10,000]
              Cyber readiness shortfalls.......................................                          [4,000]
              Cyber training readiness shortfalls..............................                         [11,000]
              EOD training and readiness shortfalls............................                          [5,400]
              Installation processing nodes....................................                         [51,400]
              ISR sustainment and readiness....................................                          [9,800]
              PACAF- restore contingency response group........................                         [10,100]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [19,562]
              Tailored OPIR intel products.....................................                            [300]
    120   LAUNCH FACILITIES....................................................         175,457         175,457
    130   SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS................................................         353,458         541,758
              Command and Control sustainment and readiness....................                         [47,100]
              Operationalizing commercial SSA..................................                         [15,000]
              Space based sustainment and readiness shortfalls.................                        [126,200]
    160   US NORTHCOM/NORAD....................................................         189,891         189,891
    170   US STRATCOM..........................................................         534,236         534,236
    180   US CYBERCOM..........................................................         357,830         357,830
    190   US CENTCOM...........................................................         168,208         168,208
    200   US SOCOM.............................................................           2,280           2,280
    210   US TRANSCOM..........................................................             533             533
    215   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..................................................       1,091,655       1,091,655
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................      30,792,217      31,985,073
 
          MOBILIZATION
    220   AIRLIFT OPERATIONS...................................................       1,570,697       1,577,097
              C-37B flying hours...............................................                          [1,800]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [4,600]
    230   MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS............................................         130,241         288,311
              Basic Expeditionary Airfield Resources PACOM.....................                         [22,600]
              BEAR PACOM.......................................................                         [22,600]
              BEAR PACOM spares................................................                          [2,900]
              PACAF Contingency response group.................................                         [10,100]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [99,870]
              SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION............................................       1,700,938       1,865,408
 
          TRAINING AND RECRUITING
    270   OFFICER ACQUISITION..................................................         113,722         113,722
    280   RECRUIT TRAINING.....................................................          24,804          24,804
    290   RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS (ROTC)...............................          95,733          95,733
    320   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING...........................................         395,476         395,476
    330   FLIGHT TRAINING......................................................         501,599         501,599
    340   PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION...................................         287,500         287,500
    350   TRAINING SUPPORT.....................................................          91,384          91,384
    370   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING...........................................         166,795         166,795
    380   EXAMINING............................................................           4,134           4,134
    390   OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION.....................................         222,691         222,691
    400   CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING......................................         171,974         171,974
    410   JUNIOR ROTC..........................................................          60,070          60,070
              SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................       2,135,882       2,135,882
 
          ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
    420   LOGISTICS OPERATIONS.................................................         805,453         808,453
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                          [3,000]
    430   TECHNICAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES.........................................         127,379         127,379
    470   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................         911,283         911,283
    480   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS...........................................         432,172         422,172
              Program decrease.................................................                        [-10,000]
    490   OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES.........................................       1,175,658       1,166,658
              Program decrease.................................................                         [-9,000]
    500   CIVIL AIR PATROL.....................................................          26,719          29,819
              Civil Air Patrol.................................................                          [3,100]
    530   INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT................................................          76,878          76,878
    535   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..................................................       1,244,653       1,244,653
              SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES................................       4,800,195       4,787,295
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    540   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                        -389,600
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                       [-135,400]
              Foreign Currency adjustments.....................................                        [-84,300]
              Historical unobligated balances..................................                       [-169,900]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                        -389,600
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE........................      39,429,232      40,384,058
 
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................................................       1,801,007       1,801,007
    020   MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS...........................................         210,642         210,642
    030   DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE.................................         403,867         403,867
    040   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..................         124,951         124,951
    050   CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT......................         240,835         258,635
              C-17 CLS workload................................................                          [5,700]
              C-17 depot-level repairable......................................                         [12,100]
    060   BASE SUPPORT.........................................................         371,878         371,878
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................       3,153,180       3,170,980
 
          ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES
    070   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................          74,153          74,153
    080   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING...........................................          19,522          19,522
    090   MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERS MGMT (ARPC)...............................          12,765          12,765
    100   OTHER PERS SUPPORT (DISABILITY COMP).................................           7,495           7,495
    110   AUDIOVISUAL..........................................................             392             392
              SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES...............         114,327         114,327
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    120   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                         -21,900
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                        [-21,900]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                         -21,900
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE.......................       3,267,507       3,263,407
 
          OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   AIRCRAFT OPERATIONS..................................................       3,175,055       3,265,955
              Additional training man days.....................................                         [54,900]
              Two C-130 simulators.............................................                         [36,000]
    020   MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS...........................................         746,082         801,682
              Additional training man days.....................................                         [37,100]
              Restore support operations.......................................                         [18,500]
    030   DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE.................................         867,063         867,063
    040   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..................         325,090         325,090
    050   CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT......................       1,100,829       1,152,129
              C-130 propulsion improvements....................................                         [16,100]
              Maintenance for RC-26 a/c........................................                         [28,700]
              Sustain DCGS.....................................................                          [6,500]
    060   BASE SUPPORT.........................................................         583,664         593,464
              Additional training man days.....................................                          [9,800]
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................       6,797,783       7,005,383
 
          ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
    070   ADMINISTRATION.......................................................          44,955          44,955
    080   RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING...........................................          97,230          97,230
              SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES..............         142,185         142,185
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    090   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                         -43,300
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                        [-43,300]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                         -43,300
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG..............................       6,939,968       7,104,268
 
          OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
          OPERATING FORCES
    010   JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF................................................         440,853         440,853
    020   JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF--CE2T2.........................................         551,511         551,511
    040   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND/OPERATING FORCES..........................       5,008,274       5,104,244
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [95,970]
              SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES........................................       6,000,638       6,096,608
 
          TRAINING AND RECRUITING
    050   DEFENSE ACQUISITION UNIVERSITY.......................................         144,970         144,970
    060   JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF................................................          84,402          84,402
    080   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND/TRAINING AND RECRUITING...................         379,462         379,462
              SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING.................................         608,834         608,834
 
          ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
    090   CIVIL MILITARY PROGRAMS..............................................         183,000         209,500
              National Guard Youth Challenge...................................                          [1,500]
              STARBASE.........................................................                         [20,000]
              World War I Centennial Commission................................                          [5,000]
    110   DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY........................................         597,836         597,836
    120   DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY...................................       1,439,010       1,439,010
    130   DEFENSE HUMAN RESOURCES ACTIVITY.....................................         807,754         807,754
    140   DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY...................................       2,009,702       2,009,702
    160   DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY........................................          24,207          24,207
    170   DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY.............................................         400,422         414,922
              Procurement Technical Assistance Program (PTAP)..................                         [14,500]
    180   DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY...............................................         217,585         215,454
              Program decrease.................................................                         [-2,500]
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                            [369]
    190   DEFENSE PERSONNEL ACCOUNTING AGENCY..................................         131,268         131,268
    200   DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION AGENCY..................................         722,496         872,496
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                        [150,000]
    210   DEFENSE SECURITY SERVICE.............................................         683,665         703,665
              Joint Acquisition Protection and Exploitation Cell (JAPEC).......                         [20,000]
    230   DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY SECURITY ADMINISTRATION...........................          34,712          34,712
    240   DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY......................................         542,604         517,604
              Efficiencies from DTRA/JIDO integration..........................                        [-25,000]
    260   DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EDUCATION ACTIVITY.............................       2,794,389       2,844,389
              Impact Aid.......................................................                         [50,000]
    270   MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY...............................................         504,058         504,058
    290   OFFICE OF ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT........................................          57,840          57,840
    300   OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE...................................       1,488,344       1,515,110
              Implementation of Military Housing Fall Prevention...............                         [16,000]
              Implementation of transparency of Defense Business System Data...                         [25,000]
              Program decrease.................................................                        [-17,234]
              Support for Commission to Assess the Threat from Electromagnetic                           [3,000]
              Pulse Attacks and Events.........................................
    310   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND/ADMIN & SVC-WIDE ACTIVITIES...............          94,273          94,273
    320   WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS SERVICES.....................................         436,776         436,776
    325   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS..................................................      14,806,404      14,861,724
              Realign European Reassurance Initiative to Base..................                         [55,320]
              SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES..............................      27,976,345      28,292,300
 
          UNDISTRIBUTED
    330   UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................                        -204,900
              Excessive standard price for fuel................................                         [-6,500]
              Foreign Currency adjustments.....................................                        [-19,400]
              Historical unobligated balances..................................                       [-179,000]
              SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED...........................................                        -204,900
 
               TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE...................      34,585,817      34,792,842
 
          MISCELLANEOUS APPROPRIATIONS
    010   US COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES, DEFENSE....................          14,538          14,538
    020   OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER AND CIVIC AID........................         104,900         104,900
    030   COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION.........................................         324,600         324,600
    050   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY......................................         215,809         215,809
              Department of Defense Cleanup and Removal of Petroleum, Oil, and                           [6,000]
              Lubricant associated with the Prinz Eugen........................
              Program decrease.................................................                         [-6,000]
    060   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY......................................         281,415         323,649
              PFOA/PFOS Remediation............................................                         [30,000]
              Program increase.................................................                         [12,234]
    070   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE.................................         293,749         323,749
              PFOA/PFOS Remediation............................................                         [30,000]
    080   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE...................................           9,002           9,002
    090   ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION FORMERLY USED SITES........................         208,673         208,673
              TOTAL MISCELLANEOUS APPROPRIATIONS...............................       1,452,686       1,524,920
 
               TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE...................................     188,570,298     192,294,497
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 4302. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY 
              OPERATIONS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4302. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
                        (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             FY 2018          House
  Line                Item                   Request        Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
         OPERATING FORCES
   010   MANEUVER UNITS................         828,225         144,634
             Realign European                                 [-683,591]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   030   ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE........          25,474          25,474
   040   THEATER LEVEL ASSETS..........       1,778,644       1,778,644
   050   LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT         260,575         260,575
   060   AVIATION ASSETS...............         284,422         134,322
             Realign European                                 [-150,100]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   070   FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS           2,784,525       2,775,556
          SUPPORT......................
             Realign European                                   [-8,969]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   080   LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS.         502,330         502,330
   090   LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE.         104,149               0
             Realign European                                 [-104,149]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   100   BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.......          80,249          31,542
             Realign European                                  [-48,707]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   110   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT,                 32,000               0
          RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
             Realign European                                  [-32,000]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   140   ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES.........       6,151,378       6,025,128
             Realign European                                 [-126,250]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   150   COMMANDERS EMERGENCY RESPONSE            5,000           5,000
          PROGRAM......................
   160   RESET.........................         864,926         864,926
   180   US AFRICA COMMAND.............         186,567         186,567
   190   US EUROPEAN COMMAND...........          44,250               0
             Realign European                                  [-44,250]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.      13,932,714      12,734,698
 
         MOBILIZATION
   230   ARMY PREPOSITIONED STOCKS.....          56,500               0
             Realign European                                  [-56,500]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
             SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION.....          56,500               0
 
         ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
   390   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION....         755,029         658,879
             Realign European                                  [-96,150]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   400   CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES.....          16,567           5,118
             Realign European                                  [-11,449]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   410   LOGISTIC SUPPORT ACTIVITIES...           6,000           6,000
   420   AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT.........           5,207           5,207
   460   OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.......         107,091         107,091
   490   REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT........         165,280         165,280
   565   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...........       1,082,015       1,016,190
             Realign European                                  [-65,825]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
             SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE         2,137,189       1,963,765
             ACTIVITIES................
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &              16,126,403      14,698,463
              MAINTENANCE, ARMY........
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
          RES
         OPERATING FORCES
   020   ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE........           4,179          19,822
             Training and operations of                         [15,643]
             USAR early deploying units
   030   THEATER LEVEL ASSETS..........                           4,718
             Training and operations of                          [4,718]
             USAR early deploying units
   040   LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT           2,132          15,050
             Training and operations of                         [12,918]
             USAR early deploying units
   060   FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS                 779             779
          SUPPORT......................
   090   BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.......          17,609          17,609
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.          24,699          57,978
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                  24,699          57,978
              MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES....
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG
         OPERATING FORCES
   010   MANEUVER UNITS................          41,731          41,731
   020   MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES......             762             762
   030   ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE........          11,855          11,855
   040   THEATER LEVEL ASSETS..........             204             204
   060   AVIATION ASSETS...............          27,583          27,583
   070   FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS               5,792           5,792
          SUPPORT......................
   100   BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.......          18,507          18,507
   120   MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL                 937             937
          HEADQUARTERS.................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.         107,371         107,371
 
         ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
   150   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS....             740             740
             SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD                 740             740
             ACTIVITIES................
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                 108,111         108,111
              MAINTENANCE, ARNG........
 
         AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES
          FUND
         MINISTRY OF DEFENSE
   010   SUSTAINMENT...................       2,660,855       2,660,855
   020   INFRASTRUCTURE................          21,000          21,000
   030   EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION..         684,786         684,786
   040   TRAINING AND OPERATIONS.......         405,117         405,117
             SUBTOTAL MINISTRY OF             3,771,758       3,771,758
             DEFENSE...................
 
         MINISTRY OF INTERIOR
   050   SUSTAINMENT...................         955,574         955,574
   060   INFRASTRUCTURE................          39,595          39,595
   070   EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION..          75,976          75,976
   080   TRAINING AND OPERATIONS.......          94,612          94,612
             SUBTOTAL MINISTRY OF             1,165,757       1,165,757
             INTERIOR..................
 
              TOTAL AFGHANISTAN               4,937,515       4,937,515
              SECURITY FORCES FUND.....
 
         COUNTER-ISIS TRAIN & EQUIP
          FUND
         COUNTER-ISIS TRAIN AND EQUIP
          FUND (CTEF)
   010   IRAQ..........................       1,269,000       1,269,000
   020   SYRIA.........................         500,000         500,000
             SUBTOTAL COUNTER-ISIS            1,769,000       1,769,000
             TRAIN AND EQUIP FUND
             (CTEF)....................
 
              TOTAL COUNTER-ISIS TRAIN        1,769,000       1,769,000
              & EQUIP FUND.............
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
         OPERATING FORCES
   010   MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT               412,710         407,960
          OPERATIONS...................
             Realign European                                   [-4,750]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   030   AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA &                1,750           1,750
          ENGINEERING SERVICES.........
   040   AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY                2,989           2,989
          SUPPORT......................
   050   AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT...........         144,030         144,030
   060   AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE....         211,196         211,196
   070   AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS                1,921           1,921
          SUPPORT......................
   080   AVIATION LOGISTICS............         102,834         102,834
   090   MISSION AND OTHER SHIP                 855,453         851,776
          OPERATIONS...................
             Realign European                                   [-3,677]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   100   SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT &               19,627          19,627
          TRAINING.....................
   110   SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE........       2,483,179       2,548,179
             Repairs related to USS                             [65,000]
             Fitzgerald................
   130   COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS AND               58,886          53,486
          ELECTRONIC WARFARE...........
             Realign European                                   [-5,400]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   150   SPACE SYSTEMS AND SURVEILLANCE           4,400               0
             Realign European                                   [-4,400]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   160   WARFARE TACTICS...............          21,550          21,550
   170   OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND             21,104          21,104
          OCEANOGRAPHY.................
   180   COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES.........         605,936         599,952
             Realign European                                   [-5,984]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   190   EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE AND               11,433          11,433
          DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.....
   280   WEAPONS MAINTENANCE...........         325,011         323,711
             Realign European                                   [-1,300]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   290   OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT..           9,598           9,598
   310   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND            31,898          31,898
          MODERNIZATION................
   320   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT........         228,246         228,246
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.       5,553,751       5,593,240
 
         MOBILIZATION
   360   SHIP ACTIVATIONS/INACTIVATIONS           1,869           1,869
   370   EXPEDITIONARY HEALTH SERVICES           11,905          11,905
          SYSTEMS......................
   390   COAST GUARD SUPPORT...........         161,885         161,885
             SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION.....         175,659         175,659
 
         TRAINING AND RECRUITING
   430   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING....          43,369          43,369
             SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND               43,369          43,369
             RECRUITING................
 
         ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
   510   ADMINISTRATION................           3,217           3,217
   540   MILITARY MANPOWER AND                    7,356           7,356
          PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT.........
   590   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION....          67,938          67,938
   620   ACQUISITION, LOGISTICS, AND              9,446           9,446
          OVERSIGHT....................
   660   INVESTIGATIVE AND SECURITY               1,528           1,528
          SERVICES.....................
   775   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...........          12,751          12,751
             SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD             102,236         102,236
             ACTIVITIES................
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &               5,875,015       5,914,504
              MAINTENANCE, NAVY........
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE,
          MARINE CORPS
         OPERATING FORCES
   010   OPERATIONAL FORCES............         710,790         546,057
             Realign European                                 [-164,733]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   020   FIELD LOGISTICS...............         242,150         242,150
   030   DEPOT MAINTENANCE.............          52,000          52,000
   070   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT........          17,529          17,529
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.       1,022,469         857,736
 
         TRAINING AND RECRUITING
   120   TRAINING SUPPORT..............          29,421          29,421
             SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND               29,421          29,421
             RECRUITING................
 
         ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
   160   SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION....          61,600          61,600
   215   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...........           3,150           3,150
             SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD              64,750          64,750
             ACTIVITIES................
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &               1,116,640         951,907
              MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
          RES
         OPERATING FORCES
   030   AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE....          14,964          14,964
   080   COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES.........           9,016           9,016
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.          23,980          23,980
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                  23,980          23,980
              MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES....
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC
          RESERVE
         OPERATING FORCES
   010   OPERATING FORCES..............           2,548           2,548
   040   BASE OPERATING SUPPORT........             819             819
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.           3,367           3,367
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                   3,367           3,367
              MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE..
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR
          FORCE
         OPERATING FORCES
   010   PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES.........         248,235         248,235
   020   COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES.....       1,394,962       1,298,440
             Realign European                                  [-96,522]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   030   AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING (OJT,            5,450           5,450
          MAINTAIN SKILLS).............
   040   DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT               699,860         719,339
          MAINTENANCE..................
             Realign European                                  [-18,521]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
             Restoration of Damaged U-2                         [38,000]
             Aircraft..................
   050   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT,                113,131          90,431
          RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
             Realign European                                  [-22,700]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   060   CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT         2,039,551       2,035,272
          AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...........
             Realign European                                   [-4,279]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   070   FLYING HOUR PROGRAM...........       2,059,363       1,992,696
             Realign European                                  [-66,667]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   080   BASE SUPPORT..................       1,088,946       1,075,241
             Realign European                                  [-13,705]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   090   GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING..          15,274          13,274
             Realign European                                   [-2,000]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   100   OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS.         198,090         178,528
             Realign European                                  [-19,562]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   120   LAUNCH FACILITIES.............             385             385
   130   SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS.........          22,020          22,020
   160   US NORTHCOM/NORAD.............             381             381
   170   US STRATCOM...................             698             698
   180   US CYBERCOM...................          35,239          35,239
   190   US CENTCOM....................         159,520         159,520
   200   US SOCOM......................          19,000          19,000
   215   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...........          58,098          58,098
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.       8,158,203       7,952,247
 
         MOBILIZATION
   220   AIRLIFT OPERATIONS............       1,430,316       1,425,716
             Realign European                                   [-4,600]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   230   MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS.....         213,827         113,957
             Realign European                                  [-99,870]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
             SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION.....       1,644,143       1,539,673
 
         TRAINING AND RECRUITING
   270   OFFICER ACQUISITION...........             300             300
   280   RECRUIT TRAINING..............             298             298
   290   RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING                   90              90
          CORPS (ROTC).................
   320   SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING....          25,675          25,675
   330   FLIGHT TRAINING...............             879             879
   340   PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT                 1,114           1,114
          EDUCATION....................
   350   TRAINING SUPPORT..............           1,426           1,426
             SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND               29,782          29,782
             RECRUITING................
 
         ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
   420   LOGISTICS OPERATIONS..........         151,847         148,847
             Realign European                                   [-3,000]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   430   TECHNICAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES..           8,744           8,744
   470   ADMINISTRATION................           6,583           6,583
   480   SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS....         129,508         129,508
   490   OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES..          84,110          84,110
   530   INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT.........             120             120
   535   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...........          53,255          53,255
             SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD             434,167         431,167
             ACTIVITIES................
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &              10,266,295       9,952,869
              MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE...
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF
          RESERVE
         OPERATING FORCES
   030   DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT                52,323          52,323
          MAINTENANCE..................
   060   BASE SUPPORT..................           6,200           6,200
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.          58,523          58,523
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                  58,523          58,523
              MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE..
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG
         OPERATING FORCES
   020   MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS....           3,468           3,468
   060   BASE SUPPORT..................          11,932          11,932
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.          15,400          15,400
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                  15,400          15,400
              MAINTENANCE, ANG.........
 
         OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE,
          DEFENSE-WIDE
         OPERATING FORCES
   010   JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF.........           4,841           4,841
   040   SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND/          3,305,234       3,236,404
          OPERATING FORCES.............
             Realign European                                  [-95,970]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
             Unfunded Requirement-                               [6,300]
             Joint Task Force Platform
             Expansion.................
             Unfunded Requirement-                              [20,840]
             Publicly Available
             Information (PAI)
             Capability Acceleration...
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.       3,310,075       3,241,245
 
         ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
   110   DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY.           9,853           9,853
   120   DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT             21,317          21,317
          AGENCY.......................
   140   DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS             64,137          64,137
          AGENCY.......................
   160   DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY.         115,000         115,000
   180   DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY........          13,255          12,886
             Realign European                                     [-369]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
   200   DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION         2,312,000       2,012,000
          AGENCY.......................
             Realign European                                 [-150,000]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
             Transfer of funds to                             [-150,000]
             Ukraine Security
             Assistance................
   260   DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE                   31,000          31,000
          EDUCATION ACTIVITY...........
   300   OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF              34,715          34,715
          DEFENSE......................
   320   WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS                  3,179           3,179
          SERVICES.....................
   325   CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS...........       1,797,549       1,742,229
             Realign European                                  [-55,320]
             Reassurance Initiative to
             Base......................
             SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE         4,402,005       4,046,316
             ACTIVITIES................
 
              TOTAL OPERATION AND             7,712,080       7,287,561
              MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
 
         UKRAINE SECURITY ASSISTANCE
         UKRAINE SECURITY ASSISTANCE
   010   UKRAINE SECURITY ASSISTANCE...                         150,000
             Transfer from DSCA........                        [150,000]
             SUBTOTAL UKRAINE SECURITY                          150,000
             ASSISTANCE................
 
              TOTAL UKRAINE SECURITY                            150,000
              ASSISTANCE...............
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &              48,037,028      45,929,178
              MAINTENANCE..............
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 4303. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY 
              OPERATIONS FOR BASE REQUIREMENTS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4303. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
            FOR BASE REQUIREMENTS  (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             FY 2018          House
  Line                Item                   Request        Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
         OPERATING FORCES
   110   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT,                                629,047
          RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
             Demolition of excess                               [50,000]
             facilities................
             Restore restoration and                           [154,500]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                               [424,547]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                         629,047
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                 629,047
              MAINTENANCE, ARMY........
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
          RES
         OPERATING FORCES
   100   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT,                                 82,619
          RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
             Demolition of excess                               [25,000]
             facilities................
             Restore restoration and                            [12,300]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                                [45,319]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                          82,619
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                  82,619
              MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES....
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG
         OPERATING FORCES
   110   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT,                                173,900
          RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
             Demolition of excess                               [25,000]
             facilities................
             Restore restoration and                            [35,200]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                               [113,700]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                         173,900
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                 173,900
              MAINTENANCE, ARNG........
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
         OPERATING FORCES
   310   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND                           414,200
          MODERNIZATION................
             Demolition of excess                               [50,000]
             facilities................
             Restore restoration and                            [87,200]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                               [277,000]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                         414,200
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                 414,200
              MAINTENANCE, NAVY........
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE,
          MARINE CORPS
         OPERATING FORCES
   060   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION &                             217,487
          MODERNIZATION................
             Demolition of excess                               [50,000]
             facilities................
             Restore restoration and                            [35,300]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                               [132,187]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                         217,487
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                 217,487
              MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
          RES
         OPERATING FORCES
   110   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND                            11,500
          MODERNIZATION................
             Restore restoration and                             [1,500]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                                [10,000]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                          11,500
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                  11,500
              MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES....
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC
          RESERVE
         OPERATING FORCES
   030   SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND                             7,246
          MODERNIZATION................
             Restore restoration and                             [3,900]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                                 [3,346]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                           7,246
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                   7,246
              MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE..
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR
          FORCE
         OPERATING FORCES
   050   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT,                                507,700
          RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
             Demolition of excess                               [50,000]
             facilities................
             Restore restoration and                           [153,300]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                               [304,400]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                         507,700
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                 507,700
              MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE...
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF
          RESERVE
         OPERATING FORCES
   040   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT,                                 15,300
          RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
             Restore restoration and                             [5,600]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                                 [9,700]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                          15,300
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                  15,300
              MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE..
 
         OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG
         OPERATING FORCES
   040   FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT,                                 47,600
          RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION..
             Restore restoration and                            [14,600]
             modernization shortfalls..
             Restore sustainment                                [33,000]
             shortfalls................
             SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES.                          47,600
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                                  47,600
              MAINTENANCE, ANG.........
 
              TOTAL OPERATION &                               2,106,599
              MAINTENANCE..............
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                     TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL

SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
         SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            FY 2018           House
                 Item                       Request         Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Military Personnel Appropriations.....     133,881,636      134,066,025
     Military Personnel Pay Raise.....                         [206,400]
     Realign European Reassurance                              [214,289]
     Initiative to Base...............
     Freeze BAH reduction for Military                         [125,000]
     Housing Privatization Initiative.
     Historical unobligated balances..                        [-363,300]
     Department of Defense State                                 [2,000]
     Partnership Program..............
 
Medicare-Eligible Retiree Health Fund        7,804,427        7,804,427
 Contributions........................
 
  Total, Military Personnel...........     141,686,063      141,870,452
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 4402. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SEC. 4402. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In
                          Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              FY 2018          House
                  Item                        Request       Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Military Personnel Appropriations.......      4,276,276       4,061,987
     Realign European Reassurance                             [-214,289]
     Initiative to Base.................
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 4403. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS FOR 
              BASE REQUIREMENTS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SEC. 4403. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS FOR
              BASE REQUIREMENTS. (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              FY 2018          House
                  Item                        Request       Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Military Personnel Appropriations.......                      1,017,700
     Increase Active Army end strength                         [829,400]
     by 10k.............................
     Increase Army National Guard end                          [105,500]
     strength by 4k.....................
     Increase Army Reserve end strength                         [82,800]
     by 3k..............................
 
Medicare-Eligible Retiree Health Fund                            44,140
 Contributions..........................
     Accrual payment associated with                            [44,140]
     increased Army end strength........
 
  Total, Military Personnel.............                      1,061,840
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                    TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS

SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
        SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              FY 2018          House
                  Item                        Request       Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY
INDUSTRIAL OPERATIONS...................         43,140          43,140
SUPPLY MANAGEMENT--ARMY.................         40,636          90,747
     Realign European Reassurance                               [50,111]
     Initiative to Base.................
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY.....         83,776         133,887
 
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR FORCE
SUPPLY MANAGEMENT.......................         66,462          66,462
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR FORCE         66,462          66,462
 
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DECA
COMMISSARY OPERATIONS...................      1,389,340       1,344,340
     Civilian Personnel Compensation and                       [-20,000]
     Benefits...........................
     Commissary operations..............                       [-25,000]
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DECA.....      1,389,340       1,344,340
 
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-WIDE
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT--DEFENSE........         47,018          47,018
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-          47,018          47,018
   WIDE.................................
 
NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND
LG MED SPD RO/RO MAINTENANCE............        135,800         135,800
DOD MOBILIZATION ALTERATIONS............         11,197          11,197
TAH MAINTENANCE.........................         54,453          54,453
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT................         18,622          18,622
READY RESERVE FORCES....................        289,255         296,255
     Strategic Sealift SLEP.............                         [7,000]
   TOTAL NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND..        509,327         516,327
 
CHEM AGENTS & MUNITIONS DESTRUCTION
CHEM DEMILITARIZATION--O&M..............        104,237         104,237
CHEM DEMILITARIZATION--RDT&E............        839,414         839,414
CHEM DEMILITARIZATION--PROC.............         18,081          18,081
   TOTAL CHEM AGENTS & MUNITIONS                961,732         961,732
   DESTRUCTION..........................
 
DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG ACTIVITIES,
 DEF
DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG              674,001         691,001
 ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE....................
     Administrative Overhead............                        [-2,000]
     SOUTHCOM ISR.......................                        [21,000]
     Travel, Infrastructure, Support....                        [-2,000]
DRUG DEMAND REDUCTION PROGRAM...........        116,813         116,813
   TOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG           790,814         807,814
   ACTIVITIES, DEF......................
 
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE...............        334,087         334,087
RDT&E...................................          2,800           2,800
   TOTAL OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL        336,887         336,887
 
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE
IN-HOUSE CARE...........................      9,457,768       9,475,768
     Maintenance of inpatient                                   [10,000]
     capabilities of OCONUS MTFs........
     Pre-mobilization health care under                          [8,000]
     section 12304b.....................
PRIVATE SECTOR CARE.....................     15,317,732      15,317,732
CONSOLIDATED HEALTH SUPPORT.............      2,193,045       2,193,045
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT..................      1,803,733       1,803,733
MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES...................        330,752         321,752
     Program decrease...................                        [-9,000]
EDUCATION AND TRAINING..................        737,730         737,730
BASE OPERATIONS/COMMUNICATIONS..........      2,255,163       2,255,163
 
RDT&E
RESEARCH................................          9,796           9,796
EXPLORATRY DEVELOPMENT..................         64,881          64,881
ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT....................        246,268         276,268
     Program increase for hypoxia                                [5,000]
     research...........................
     Research of chronic traumatic                              [25,000]
     encephalopathy.....................
DEMONSTRATION/VALIDATION................         99,039          99,039
ENGINEERING DEVELOPMENT.................        170,602         170,602
MANAGEMENT AND SUPPORT..................         69,191          69,191
CAPABILITIES ENHANCEMENT................         13,438          13,438
 
PROCUREMENT
INITIAL OUTFITTING......................         26,978          26,978
REPLACEMENT & MODERNIZATION.............        360,831         360,831
THEATER MEDICAL INFORMATION PROGRAM
JOINT OPERATIONAL MEDICINE INFORMATION            8,326           8,326
 SYSTEM.................................
DOD HEALTHCARE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM                499,193         499,193
 MODERNIZATION..........................
 
UNDISTRIBUTED
UNDISTRIBUTED...........................                       -149,600
     Foreign Currency adjustments.......                       [-15,500]
     Historical unobligated balances....                      [-134,100]
   TOTAL DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.........     33,664,466      33,545,866
 
   TOTAL OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS...........     37,849,822      37,760,333
------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 4502. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
 SEC. 4502. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In
                          Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 FY 2018        House
                    Item                         Request     Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY
INDUSTRIAL OPERATIONS
SUPPLY MANAGEMENT--ARMY.....................       50,111       -50,111
     Realign European Reassurance Initiative                   [-50,111]
     to Base................................
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY.........       50,111       -50,111
 
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-WIDE
ENERGY MANAGEMENT--DEFENSE..................       70,000        70,000
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT--DEFENSE............       28,845        28,845
   TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-WIDE.       98,845        98,845
 
DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEF
DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG                196,300       196,300
 ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE........................
   TOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG             196,300       196,300
   ACTIVITIES, DEF..........................
 
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE...................       24,692        24,692
   TOTAL OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL....       24,692        24,692
 
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE
IN-HOUSE CARE...............................       61,857        61,857
PRIVATE SECTOR CARE.........................      331,968       331,968
CONSOLIDATED HEALTH SUPPORT.................        1,980         1,980
   TOTAL DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.............      395,805       395,805
 
   TOTAL OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS...............      765,753       715,642
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                   TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION

SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                State/Country and                                     FY 2018          House
          Account                 Installation               Project Title            Request        Agreement
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                            Alabama
Army                          Fort Rucker             Training Support Facility.          38,000          38,000
                            Arizona
Army                          Davis-Monthan AFB       General Instruction                 22,000          22,000
                                                       Building.
Army                          Fort Huachuca           Ground Transport Equipment          30,000          30,000
                                                       Building.
                            California
Army                          Fort Irwin              Land Acquisition..........           3,000           3,000
                            Colorado
Army                          Fort Carson             Ammunition Supply Point...          21,000          21,000
Army                          Fort Carson             Battlefield Weather                  8,300           8,300
                                                       Facility.
                            Florida
Army                          Eglin AFB               Multipurpose Range Complex          18,000          18,000
                            Georgia
Army                          Fort Benning            Air Traffic Control Tower.               0          10,800
Army                          Fort Benning            Training Support Facility.          28,000          28,000
Army                          Fort Gordon             Access Control Point......          33,000          33,000
Army                          Fort Gordon             Automation-Aided                    18,500          18,500
                                                       Instructional Building.
                            Germany
Army                          Stuttgart               Commissary................          40,000          40,000
Army                          Wiesbaden               Administrative Building...          43,000          43,000
                            Hawaii
Army                          Fort Shafter            Command and Control                 90,000          90,000
                                                       Facility, Incr 3.
                            Indiana
Army                          Crane Army Ammunition   Shipping and Receiving              24,000          24,000
                               Plant                   Building.
                            Korea
Army                          Kunsan AB               Unmanned Aerial Vehicle             53,000          53,000
                                                       Hangar.
                            New York
Army                          U.S. Military Academy   Cemetery..................          22,000          22,000
                            South Carolina
Army                          Fort Jackson            Reception Barracks                  60,000          60,000
                                                       Complex, Ph1.
Army                          Shaw AFB                Mission Training Complex..          25,000          25,000
                            Texas
Army                          Camp Bullis             Vehicle Maintenance Shop..          13,600          13,600
Army                          Fort Hood               Vehicle Maintenance Shop..               0          33,000
Army                          Fort Hood, Texas        Battalion Headquarters              37,000          37,000
                                                       Complex.
                            Turkey
Army                          Turkey Various          Forward Operating Site....           6,400               0
                            Virginia
Army                          Fort Belvoir            Secure Admin/Operations             14,124          14,124
                                                       Facility, Incr 3.
Army                          Joint Base Langley-     Aircraft Maintenance                34,000          34,000
                               Eustis                  Instructional Bldg.
Army                          Joint Base Myer-        Security Fence............          20,000          20,000
                               Henderson
                            Washington
Army                          Joint Base Lewis-       Confinement Facility......          66,000          66,000
                               McChord
Army                          Yakima                  Fire Station..............          19,500          19,500
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Army                          Unspecified Worldwide   Host Nation Support.......          28,700          28,700
                               Locations
Army                          Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......          72,770          72,770
                               Locations
Army                          Unspecified Worldwide   Prior Year Savings:                      0         -10,000
                               Locations               Unspecified Minor
                                                       Construction, Army.
Army                          Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                   31,500          41,500
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Army Total                                                  920,394         957,794
                              ......................
                            Arizona
Navy                          Yuma                    Enlisted Dining Facility &          36,358          36,358
                                                       Community Bldgs.
                            California
Navy                          Barstow                 Combat Vehicle Repair               36,539          36,539
                                                       Facility.
Navy                          Camp Pendleton          Ammunition Supply Point             61,139          61,139
                                                       Upgrade.
Navy                          Coronado                Undersea Rescue Command                             36,000
                                                       Operations Building.
Navy                          Lemoore                 F/A 18 Avionics Repair              60,828          60,828
                                                       Facility Replacement.
Navy                          Miramar                 Aircraft Maintenance                39,600          39,600
                                                       Hangar (Inc 2).
Navy                          Miramar                 F-35 Simulator Facility...               0          47,600
Navy                          Twentynine Palms        Potable Water Treatment/            55,099          55,099
                                                       Blending Facility.
                            District of Columbia
Navy                          NSA Washington          Electronics Science and             37,882          37,882
                                                       Technology Laboratory.
Navy                          NSA Washington          Washington Navy Yard AT/FP          60,000          14,810
                            Djibouti
Navy                          Camp Lemonnier          Aircraft Parking Apron              13,390               0
                                                       Expansion.
                            Florida
Navy                          Mayport                 Advanced Wastewater                 74,994          74,994
                                                       Treatment Plant (AWWTP).
Navy                          Mayport                 Missile Magazines.........           9,824           9,824
                            Georgia
Navy                          Albany                  Combat Vehicle Warehouse..               0          43,300
                            Greece
Navy                          Souda Bay               Strategic Aircraft Parking          22,045          22,045
                                                       Apron Expansion.
                            Guam
Navy                          Joint Region Marianas   Aircraft Maintenance                75,233          75,233
                                                       Hangar #2.
Navy                          Joint Region Marianas   Corrosion Control Hangar..          66,747          66,747
Navy                          Joint Region Marianas   MALS Facilities...........          49,431          49,431
Navy                          Joint Region Marianas   Navy-Commercial Tie-in              37,180          37,180
                                                       Hardening.
Navy                          Joint Region Marianas   Water Well Field..........          56,088          56,088
                            Hawaii
Navy                          Joint Base Pearl        Sewer Lift Station &                73,200          73,200
                               Harbor-Hickam           Relief Sewer Line.
Navy                          Kaneohe Bay             LHD Pad Conversions MV-22           19,012          19,012
                                                       Landing Pads.
Navy                          Wahiawa                 Communications/Crypto               65,864          65,864
                                                       Facility.
                            Japan
Navy                          Iwakuni                 KC-130J Enlisted Aircrew            21,860          21,860
                                                       Trainer Facility.
                            Maine
Navy                          Kittery                 Paint, Blast, and Rubber            61,692          61,692
                                                       Facility.
                            North Carolina
Navy                          Camp Lejeune            Bachelor Enlisted Quarters          37,983          37,983
Navy                          Camp Lejeune            Water Treatment Plant               65,784          65,784
                                                       Replacement Hadnot Pt.
Navy                           Marine Corps Air       F-35B Vertical Lift Fan             15,671          15,671
                               Station Cherry Point    Test Facility.
                            Virginia
Navy                          Dam Neck                ISR Operations Facility             29,262          29,262
                                                       Expansion.
Navy                          Joint Expeditionary     ACU-4 Electrical Upgrades.           2,596           2,596
                               Base Little Creek--
                               Story
Navy                          Norfolk                 Chambers Field Magazine             34,665          34,665
                                                       Recap PH 1.
Navy                          Portsmouth              Ship Repair Training                72,990          72,990
                                                       Facility.
Navy                          Yorktown                Bachelor Enlisted Quarters          36,358          36,358
                            Washington
Navy                          Indian Island           Missile Magazines.........          44,440          44,440
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Navy                          Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......         219,069         219,069
                               Locations
Navy                          Unspecified Worldwide   Prior Year Savings:                      0         -10,000
                               Locations               Unspecified Minor
                                                       Construction.
Navy                          Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                   23,842          23,842
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Navy Total                                                1,616,665       1,674,985
                              ......................
                            Alaska
AF                            Eielson AFB             F-35A ADAL Conventional              2,500           2,500
                                                       Munitions Facility.
AF                            Eielson AFB             F-35A Age Facility /                21,000          21,000
                                                       Fillstand.
AF                            Eielson AFB             F-35A Consolidated                  27,000          27,000
                                                       Munitions Admin Facility.
AF                            Eielson AFB             F-35A Extend Utiliduct to           48,000          48,000
                                                       South Loop.
AF                            Eielson AFB             F-35A OSS/Weapons/Intel             11,800          11,800
                                                       Facility.
AF                            Eielson AFB             F-35A R-11 Fuel Truck                9,600           9,600
                                                       Shelter.
AF                            Eielson AFB             F-35A Satellite Dining               8,000           8,000
                                                       Facility.
AF                            Eielson AFB             Repair Central Heat/Power           41,000          41,000
                                                       Plant Boiler PH 4.
                            Australia
AF                            Darwin                  APR--Bulk Fuel Storage              76,000          76,000
                                                       Tanks.
                            California
AF                            Travis Air Force Base   KC-46A ADAL B14 Fuel Cell                0           1,400
                                                       Hangar.
AF                            Travis Air Force Base   KC-46A Aircraft 3-Bay                    0         107,000
                                                       Maintenance Hangar.
AF                            Travis Air Force Base   KC-46A Alter B181/185/187                0           6,400
                                                       Squad Ops/AMU.
AF                            Travis Air Force Base   KC-46A Alter B811                        0           7,700
                                                       Corrosion Control Hangar.
                            Colorado
AF                            Buckley Air Force Base  SBIRS Operations Facility.          38,000          38,000
AF                            Fort Carson, Colorado   13 ASOS Expansion.........          13,000          13,000
AF                            U.S. Air Force Academy  Air Force Cyberworx.......          30,000          30,000
                            Florida
AF                            Eglin AFB               F-35A Armament Research              8,700           8,700
                                                       Fac Addition (B614).
AF                            Eglin AFB               Long-Range Stand-Off                38,000          38,000
                                                       Acquisition Fac.
AF                            Eglin AFB               Dormitories (288 RM)......               0          44,000
AF                            MacDill AFB             KC-135 Beddown OG/MXG HQ..           8,100           8,100
AF                            Tyndall AFB             Fire Station..............               0          17,000
                            Georgia
AF                            Robins AFB              Commercial Vehicle Visitor           9,800           9,800
                                                       Control Facility.
                            Italy
AF                            Aviano AB               Guardian Angel Operations           27,325               0
                                                       Facility.
                            Kansas
AF                            McConnell AFB           Combat Arms Facility......          17,500          17,500
                            Mariana Islands
AF                            Tinian                  APR Land Acquisition......          12,900          12,900
                            Maryland
AF                            Joint Base Andrews      PAR Land Acquisition......          17,500          17,500
AF                            Joint Base Andrews      Presidential Aircraft              254,000         124,000
                                                       Recap Complex.
                            Massachusetts
AF                            Hanscom AFB             Vandenberg Gate Complex...          11,400          11,400
                            Nevada
AF                            Nellis AFB              Red Flag 5th Gen Facility           23,000          23,000
                                                       Addition.
AF                            Nellis AFB              Virtual Warfare Center              38,000          38,000
                                                       Operations Facility.
                            New Jersey
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A ADAL B1749 for ATGL               0           2,000
                                                       & LST Servicing.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A ADAL B1816 for                    0           6,900
                                                       Supply.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A ADAL B2319 for Boom               0           6,100
                                                       Operator Trainer.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A ADAL B2324 Regional               0          18,000
                                                       Mx Training Fac.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A ADAL B3209 for                    0           3,300
                                                       Fuselage Trainer.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A Add to B1837 for                  0           2,300
                                                       Body Tanks Storage.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A Aerospace Ground                  0           4,100
                                                       Equipment Storage.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A Alter Apron & Fuel                0          17,000
                                                       Hydrants.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A Alter Bldgs for Ops               0           9,000
                                                       and TFI AMU-AMXS.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A Alter Facilities                  0           5,800
                                                       for Maintenance.
AF                            McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst   KC-46A Two-Bay General                   0          72,000
                                                       Purpose Maintenance
                                                       Hangar.
                            New Mexico
AF                            Cannon AFB              Dangerous Cargo Pad                 42,000          42,000
                                                       Relocate CATM.
AF                            Holloman AFB            RPA Fixed Ground Control             4,250           4,250
                                                       Station Facility.
AF                            Kirtland Air Force      Fire Station..............               0           9,300
                               Base
                            North Dakota
AF                            Minot AFB               Indoor Firing Range.......          27,000          27,000
                            Oklahoma
AF                            Altus AFB               KC-46A FTU Fuselage                  4,900           4,900
                                                       Trainer Phase 2.
                            Qatar
AF                            Al Udeid, Qatar         Consolidated Squadron               15,000               0
                                                       Operations Facility.
                            Texas
AF                            Joint Base San Antonio  Air Traffic Control Tower.          10,000          10,000
AF                            Joint Base San Antonio  BMT Classrooms/Dining               38,000          38,000
                                                       Facility 4.
AF                            Joint Base San Antonio  BMT Recruit Dormitory 7...          90,130          90,130
AF                            Joint Base San Antonio  Camp Bullis Dining                  18,500          18,500
                                                       Facility.
                            Turkey
AF                            Incirlik AB             Dormitory--216 PN.........          25,997               0
                            United Kingdom
AF                            Royal Air Force         EIC RC-135 Infrastructure.           2,150           2,150
                               Fairford
AF                            Royal Air Force         EIC RC-135 Intel and Squad          38,000          38,000
                               Fairford                Ops Facility.
AF                            Royal Air Force         EIC RC-135 Runway Overrun            5,500           5,500
                               Fairford                Reconfiguration.
AF                            Royal Air Force         Consolidated Corrosion              20,000          20,000
                               Lakenheath              Control Facility.
AF                            Royal Air Force         F-35A 6-Bay Hangar........          24,000          24,000
                               Lakenheath
AF                            Royal Air Force         F-35A F-15 Parking........          10,800          10,800
                               Lakenheath
AF                            Royal Air Force         F-35A Field Training                12,492          12,492
                               Lakenheath              Detachment Facility.
AF                            Royal Air Force         F-35A Flight Simulator              22,000          22,000
                               Lakenheath              Facility.
AF                            Royal Air Force         F-35A Infrastructure......           6,700           6,700
                               Lakenheath
AF                            Royal Air Force         F-35A Squadron Operations           41,000          41,000
                               Lakenheath              and AMU.
                            Utah
AF                            Hill AFB                UTTR Consolidated Mission           28,000          28,000
                                                       Control Center.
                            Worldwide
AF                            Unspecified Worldwide   KC-46A Main Operating Base         269,000               0
                               Locations               4.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
AF                            Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......          97,852          97,852
                               Locations
AF                            Various Worldwide       Unspecified Minor                   31,400          31,400
                               Locations               Construction.
                            Wyoming
AF                            F. E. Warren AFB        Consolidated HELO/TRF OPS//         62,000          62,000
                                                       AMU and Alert Facility.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Air Force Total                                           1,738,796       1,610,774
                              ......................
                            California
Def-Wide                      Camp Pendleton          Ambulatory Care Center              26,400          26,400
                                                       Replacement.
Def-Wide                      Camp Pendleton          SOF Marine Battalion                 9,958           9,958
                                                       Company/Team Facilities.
Def-Wide                      Camp Pendleton          SOF Motor Transport                  7,284           7,284
                                                       Facility Expansion.
Def-Wide                      Coronado                SOF Basic Training Command          96,077          96,077
Def-Wide                      Coronado                SOF Logistics Support Unit          46,175          46,175
                                                       One Ops Fac. #3.
Def-Wide                      Coronado                SOF Seal Team Ops Facility          66,218          66,218
Def-Wide                      Coronado                SOF Seal Team Ops Facility          50,265          50,265
                            Colorado
Def-Wide                      Schriever AFB           Ambulatory Care Center/             10,200          10,200
                                                       Dental Add./Alt..
                            CONUS Classified
Def-Wide                      Classified Location     Battalion Complex, PH 1...          64,364          64,364
                            Florida
Def-Wide                      Eglin AFB               SOF Simulator Facility....           5,000           5,000
Def-Wide                      Eglin AFB               Upgrade Open Storage Yard.           4,100           4,100
Def-Wide                      Hurlburt Field          SOF Combat Aircraft                 34,700          34,700
                                                       Parking Apron.
Def-Wide                      Hurlburt Field          SOF Simulator & Fuselage            11,700          11,700
                                                       Trainer Facility.
                            Georgia
Def-Wide                      Fort Gordon             Blood Donor Center                  10,350          10,350
                                                       Replacement.
                            Germany
Def-Wide                      Rhine Ordnance          Medical Center Replacement         106,700         106,700
                               Barracks                Incr 7.
Def-Wide                      Spangdahlem AB          Spangdahlem Elementary              79,141          79,141
                                                       School Replacement.
Def-Wide                      Stuttgart               Robinson Barracks Elem.             46,609          46,609
                                                       School Replacement.
                            Greece
Def-Wide                      Souda Bay               Construct Hydrant System..          18,100          18,100
                            Guam
Def-Wide                      Andersen AFB            Construct Truck Load &              23,900          23,900
                                                       Unload Facility.
                            Hawaii
Def-Wide                      Kunia                   NSAH Kunia Tunnel Entrance           5,000           5,000
                            Italy
Def-Wide                      Sigonella               Construct Hydrant System..          22,400               0
Def-Wide                      Vicenza                 Vicenza High School                 62,406          62,406
                                                       Replacement.
                            Japan
Def-Wide                      Iwakuni                 Construct Bulk Storage              30,800          30,800
                                                       Tanks PH 1.
Def-Wide                      Kadena AB               SOF Maintenance Hangar....           3,972           3,972
Def-Wide                      Kadena AB               SOF Special Tactics                 27,573          27,573
                                                       Operations Facility.
Def-Wide                      Okinawa                 Replace Mooring System....          11,900          11,900
Def-Wide                      Sasebo                  Upgrade Fuel Wharf........          45,600          45,600
Def-Wide                      Torri Commo Station     SOF Tactical Equipment              25,323          25,323
                                                       Maintenance Fac.
Def-Wide                      Yokota AB               Airfield Apron............          10,800          10,800
Def-Wide                      Yokota AB               Hangar/Aircraft                     12,034          12,034
                                                       Maintenance Unit.
Def-Wide                      Yokota AB               Operations and Warehouse             8,590           8,590
                                                       Facilities.
Def-Wide                      Yokota AB               Simulator Facility........           2,189           2,189
                            Maryland
Def-Wide                      Bethesda Naval          Medical Center Addition/           123,800         123,800
                               Hospital                Alteration Incr 2.
Def-Wide                      Fort Meade              NSAW Recapitalize Building         313,968         313,968
                                                       #2 Incr 3.
                            Missouri
Def-Wide                      Fort Leonard Wood       Blood Processing Center             11,941               0
                                                       Replacement.
Def-Wide                      Fort Leonard Wood       Hospital Replacement......         250,000         150,000
Def-Wide                      St Louis                Next NGA West (N2W)                381,000         200,000
                                                       Complex.
                            New Mexico
Def-Wide                      Cannon AFB              SOF C-130 AGE Facility....           8,228           8,228
                            North Carolina
Def-Wide                      Camp Lejeune            Ambulatory Care Center              15,300          15,300
                                                       Addition/Alteration.
Def-Wide                      Camp Lejeune            Ambulatory Care Center/             21,400          21,400
                                                       Dental Clinic.
Def-Wide                      Camp Lejeune            Ambulatory Care Center/             22,000          22,000
                                                       Dental Clinic.
Def-Wide                      Camp Lejeune            SOF Human Performance               10,800          10,800
                                                       Training Center.
Def-Wide                      Camp Lejeune            SOF Motor Transport                 20,539          20,539
                                                       Maintenance Expansion.
Def-Wide                      Fort Bragg              SOF Human Performance               20,260          20,260
                                                       Training Ctr.
Def-Wide                      Fort Bragg              SOF Support Battalion               13,518          13,518
                                                       Admin Facility.
Def-Wide                      Fort Bragg              SOF Tactical Equipment              20,000          20,000
                                                       Maintenance Facility.
Def-Wide                      Fort Bragg              SOF Telecomm Reliability             4,000           4,000
                                                       Improvements.
Def-Wide                      Seymour Johnson AFB     Construct Tanker Truck              20,000          20,000
                                                       Delivery System.
                            Puerto Rico
Def-Wide                      Punta Borinquen         Ramey Unit School                   61,071          61,071
                                                       Replacement.
                            South Carolina
Def-Wide                      Shaw AFB                Consolidate Fuel                    22,900          22,900
                                                       Facilities.
                            Texas
Def-Wide                      Fort Bliss              Blood Processing Center...           8,300               0
Def-Wide                      Fort Bliss              Hospital Replacement Incr          251,330         251,330
                                                       8.
                            United Kingdom
Def-Wide                      Menwith Hill Station    RAFMH Main Gate                     11,000          11,000
                                                       Rehabilitation.
                            Utah
Def-Wide                      Hill AFB                Replace POL Facilities....          20,000          20,000
                            Virginia
Def-Wide                      Joint Expeditionary     SOF SATEC Range Expansion.          23,000          23,000
                               Base Little Creek--
                               Story
Def-Wide                      Norfolk                 Replace Hazardous                   18,500          18,500
                                                       Materials Warehouse.
Def-Wide                      Pentagon                Pentagon Corr 8 Pedestrian           8,140           8,140
                                                       Access Control Pt.
Def-Wide                      Pentagon                S.E. Safety Traffic and             28,700          28,700
                                                       Parking Improvements.
Def-Wide                      Pentagon                Security Updates..........          13,260          13,260
Def-Wide                      Portsmouth              Replace Hazardous                   22,500          22,500
                                                       Materials Warehouse.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Contingency Construction..          10,000               0
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Energy Resilience and              150,000         150,000
                               Locations               Conserv. Invest. Prog..
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   ERCIP Design..............          10,000          10,000
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Exercise Related Minor              11,490          11,490
                               Locations               Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning & Design.........          23,012          23,012
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning & Design MDA East               0          10,000
                               Locations               Coast Site.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......          26,147          26,147
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......          39,746          39,746
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......           1,942           1,942
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......           1,150           1,150
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......          40,220          40,220
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......          20,000          20,000
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......          13,500          13,500
                               Locations
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Prior Year Savings:                      0         -27,440
                               Locations               Defense Wide Unspecified
                                                       Minor Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    3,000           3,000
                               Locations               Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    7,384           7,384
                               Locations               Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    3,000           3,000
                               Locations               Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    3,000           3,000
                               Locations               Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    8,000           8,000
                               Locations               Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    2,039           2,039
                               Locations               Construction.
Def-Wide                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                   10,000          10,000
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Defense-Wide Total                                        3,114,913       2,763,832
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
NATO                          NATO Security           NATO Security Investment           154,000         177,932
                               Investment Program      Program.
NATO                          NATO Security           Prior Year Savings: NATO                 0         -25,000
                               Investment Program      Security Investment
                                                       Program.
                            ........................
      NATO Security Investment Program Total                                             154,000         152,932
                              ......................
                            Delaware
Army NG                       New Castle              Combined Support                    36,000          36,000
                                                       Maintenance Shop.
                            Idaho
Army NG                       MTC Gowen               Enlisted Barracks                        0           9,000
                                                       Transient Training.
Army NG                       Orchard Training Area   Digital Air/Ground                  22,000          22,000
                                                       Integration Range.
                            Maine
Army NG                       Presque Isle            National Guard Readiness            17,500          17,500
                                                       Center.
                            Maryland
Army NG                       Sykesville              National Guard Readiness            19,000          19,000
                                                       Center.
                            Minnesota
Army NG                       Arden Hills             National Guard Readiness            39,000          39,000
                                                       Center.
                            Missouri
Army NG                       Springfield             Aircraft Maintenance                     0          32,000
                                                       Center.
                            New Mexico
Army NG                       Las Cruces              National Guard Readiness             8,600           8,600
                                                       Center Addition.
                            Virginia
Army NG                       Fort Belvoir            Readiness Center Add/Alt..               0          15,000
Army NG                       Fort Pickett            Training Aids Center......           4,550           4,550
                            Washington
Army NG                       Turnwater               National Guard Readiness            31,000          31,000
                                                       Center.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Army NG                       Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......          16,271          16,271
                               Locations
Army NG                       Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                   16,731          16,731
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Army National Guard Total                                   210,652         266,652
                              ......................
                            California
Army Res                      Fallbrook               Army Reserve Center.......          36,000          36,000
                            Puerto Rico
Army Res                      Aguadilla               Army Reserve Center.......          12,400          12,400
Army Res                      Fort Buchanan           Reserve Center............               0          26,000
                            Washington
Army Res                      Lewis-McCord            Reserve Center............               0          30,000
                            Wisconsin
Army Res                      Fort McCoy              AT/MOB Dining Facility-             13,000          13,000
                                                       1428 PN.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Army Res                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......           6,887           6,887
                               Locations
Army Res                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    5,425           5,425
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Army Reserve Total                                           73,712         129,712
                              ......................
                            California
N/MC Res                      Lemoore                 Naval Operational Support           17,330          17,330
                                                       Center Lemoore.
                            Georgia
N/MC Res                      Fort Gordon             Naval Operational Support           17,797          17,797
                                                       Center Fort Gordon.
                            New Jersey
N/MC Res                       McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst  Aircraft Apron, Taxiway &           11,573          11,573
                                                       Support Facilities.
                            Texas
N/MC Res                      Fort Worth              KC130-J EACTS Facility....          12,637          12,637
                            Worldwide Unspecified
N/MC Res                      Unspecified Worldwide   Planning & Design.........           4,430           4,430
                               Locations
N/MC Res                      Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    1,504           1,504
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Naval Reserve Total                                          65,271          65,271
                              ......................
                            California
Air NG                        March AFB               TFI Construct RPA Flight            15,000          15,000
                                                       Training Unit.
                            Colorado
Air NG                        Peterson AFB            Space Control Facility....           8,000           8,000
                            Connecticut
Air NG                        Bradley IAP             Construct Base Entry                 7,000           7,000
                                                       Complex.
                            Indiana
Air NG                        Fort Wayne              Add to Building 764 for                  0           1,900
                               International Airport   Weapons Release.
Air NG                        Hulman Regional         Construct Small Arms Range               0           8,000
                               Airport
                            Kentucky
Air NG                        Louisville IAP          Add/Alter Response Forces            9,000           9,000
                                                       Facility.
                            Mississippi
Air NG                        Jackson International   Construct Small Arms Range               0           8,000
                               Airport
                            Missouri
Air NG                        Rosecrans Memorial      Replace Communications              10,000          10,000
                               Airport                 Facility.
                            New York
Air NG                        Hancock Field           Add to Flight Training               6,800           6,800
                                                       Unit, Building 641.
                            Ohio
Air NG                        Rickenbacker            Construct Small Arms Range               0           8,000
                               International Airport
Air NG                        Toledo Express Airport  NORTHCOM--Construct Alert           15,000          15,000
                                                       Hangar.
                            Oklahoma
Air NG                        Tulsa International     Construct Small Arms Range               0           8,000
                               Airport
                            Oregon
Air NG                        Klamath Falls IAP       Construct Corrosion                 10,500          10,500
                                                       Control Hangar.
Air NG                        Klamath Falls IAP       Construct Indoor Range....           8,000           8,000
                            South Dakota
Air NG                        Joe Foss Field          Aircraft Maintenance Shops          12,000          12,000
                            Tennessee
Air NG                        McGhee-Tyson Airport    Replace KC-135 Maintenance          25,000          25,000
                                                       Hangar and Shops.
                            Wisconsin
Air NG                        Dane County Regional    Construct Small Arms Range               0           8,000
                               Airport/Truax Field
                            Worldwide Unspecified
Air NG                        Unspecified Worldwide   Planning and Design.......          18,000          18,000
                               Locations
Air NG                        Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                   17,191          17,191
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Air National Guard Total                                    161,491         203,391
                              ......................
                            Florida
AF Res                        Patrick AFB             Guardian Angel Facility...          25,000          25,000
                            Georgia
AF Res                        Robins Air Force Base   Consolidated Mission                     0          32,000
                                                       Complex Phase 2.
                            Guam
AF Res                        Joint Region Marianas   Reserve Medical Training             5,200           5,200
                                                       Facility.
                            Hawaii
AF Res                        Joint Base Pearl        Consolidated Training                5,500           5,500
                               Harbor-Hickam           Facility.
                            Massachusetts
AF Res                        Westover ARB            Indoor Small Arms Range...          10,000          10,000
                            Minnesota
AF Res                        Minneapolis- St Paul    Indoor Small Arms Range...               0           9,000
                               IAP
                            North Carolina
AF Res                        Seymour Johnson AFB     KC-46A ADAL for Alt                  6,400           6,400
                                                       Mission Storage.
                            Texas
AF Res                        NAS JRB Fort Worth      Munitions Training/Admin                 0           3,100
                                                       Facility.
                            Utah
AF Res                        Hill AFB                Add/Alter Life Support               3,100           3,100
                                                       Facility.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
AF Res                        Unspecified Worldwide   Planning & Design.........           4,725           4,725
                               Locations
AF Res                        Unspecified Worldwide   Unspecified Minor                    3,610           3,610
                               Locations               Construction.
                            ........................
      Military Construction, Air Force Reserve Total                                      63,535         107,635
                              ......................
                            Georgia
FH Con Army                   Fort Gordon             Family Housing New                   6,100           6,100
                                                       Construction.
                            Germany
FH Con Army                   Baumholder              Construction Improvements.          34,156          34,156
FH Con Army                   South Camp Vilseck      Family Housing New                  22,445          22,445
                                                       Construction (36 Units).
                            Korea
FH Con Army                   Camp Humphreys          Family Housing New                  34,402          34,402
                                                       Construction Incr 2.
                            Kwajalein
FH Con Army                   Kwajalein Atoll         Family Housing Replacement          31,000          31,000
                                                       Construction.
                            Massachusetts
FH Con Army                   Natick                  Family Housing Replacement          21,000          21,000
                                                       Construction.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Con Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Planning & Design.........          33,559          33,559
                               Locations
FH Con Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Prior Year Savings: Family               0         -18,000
                               Locations               Housing Construction,
                                                       Army.
                            ........................
      Family Housing Construction, Army Total                                            182,662         164,662
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............          12,816          12,816
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Housing Privatization               20,893          20,893
                               Locations               Support.
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing...................         148,538         148,538
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Maintenance...............          57,708          57,708
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Management................          37,089          37,089
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Miscellaneous.............             400             400
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Services..................           8,930           8,930
                               Locations
FH Ops Army                   Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities.................          60,251          60,251
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Operation And Maintenance, Army Total                               346,625         346,625
                              ......................
                            Bahrain Island
FH Con Navy                   SW Asia                 Construct on-Base GFOQ....           2,138           2,138
                            Mariana Islands
FH Con Navy                   Guam                    Replace Andersen Housing            40,875          40,875
                                                       PH II.
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Con Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Construction Improvements.          36,251          36,251
                               Locations
FH Con Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Planning & Design.........           4,418           4,418
                               Locations
FH Con Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Prior Year Savings: Family               0          -8,000
                               Locations               Housing Construction, N/
                                                       MC.
                            ........................
      Family Housing Construction, Navy And Marine Corps Total                            83,682          75,682
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............          14,529          14,529
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Housing Privatization               27,587          27,587
                               Locations               Support.
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing...................          61,921          61,921
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Maintenance...............          95,104          95,104
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Management................          50,989          50,989
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Miscellaneous.............             336             336
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Services..................          15,649          15,649
                               Locations
FH Ops Navy                   Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities.................          62,167          62,167
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Operation And Maintenance, Navy And Marine Corps Total              328,282         328,282
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Con AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Construction Improvements.          80,617          80,617
                               Locations
FH Con AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Planning & Design.........           4,445           4,445
                               Locations
FH Con AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Prior Year Savings: Family               0         -20,000
                               Locations               Housing Construction.
                            ........................
      Family Housing Construction, Air Force Total                                        85,062          65,062
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............          29,424          29,424
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Housing Privatization.....          21,569          21,569
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing...................          16,818          16,818
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Maintenance...............         134,189         134,189
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Management................          53,464          53,464
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Miscellaneous.............           1,839           1,839
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Services..................          13,517          13,517
                               Locations
FH Ops AF                     Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities.................          47,504          47,504
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Operation And Maintenance, Air Force Total                          318,324         318,324
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............             407             407
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............             641             641
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Furnishings...............               6               6
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing...................          12,390          12,390
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Leasing...................          39,716          39,716
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Maintenance...............             567             567
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Maintenance...............             655             655
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Management................             319             319
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Services..................              14              14
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities.................             268             268
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities.................           4,100           4,100
                               Locations
FH Ops DW                     Unspecified Worldwide   Utilities.................              86              86
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Family Housing Operation And Maintenance, Defense-Wide Total                        59,169          59,169
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
FHIF                          Unspecified Worldwide   Administrative Expenses--            2,726           2,726
                               Locations               FHIF.
                            ........................
      DOD Family Housing Improvement Fund Total                                            2,726           2,726
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
UHIF                          Unaccompanied Housing   Administrative Expenses--              623             623
                               Improvement Fund        UHIF.
                            ........................
      Unaccompanied Housing Improvement Fund Total                                           623             623
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
BRAC                          Base Realignment &      Base Realignment and                58,000          58,000
                               Closure, Army           Closure.
                            ........................
      Base Realignment and Closure--Army Total                                            58,000          58,000
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
BRAC                          Base Realignment &      Base Realignment & Closure          93,474         128,474
                               Closure, Navy
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   DON-100: Planning, Design            8,428           8,428
                               Locations               and Management.
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   DON-101: Various Locations          23,753          23,753
                               Locations
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   DON-138: NAS Brunswick, ME             647             647
                               Locations
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   DON-157: MCSA Kansas City,              40              40
                               Locations               MO.
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   DON-172: NWS Seal Beach,             5,355           5,355
                               Locations               Concord, CA.
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   DON-84: JRB Willow Grove &           4,737           4,737
                               Locations               Cambria Reg AP.
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   Undistributed.............           7,210           7,210
                               Locations
                            ........................
      Base Realignment and Closure--Navy Total                                           143,644         178,644
                              ......................
                            Worldwide Unspecified
BRAC                          Unspecified Worldwide   DOD BRAC Activities--Air            54,223          54,223
                               Locations               Force.
                            ........................
      Base Realignment and Closure--Air Force Total                                       54,223          54,223
                              ......................
      Total, Military Construction                                                     9,782,451       9,585,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SEC. 4602. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         SEC. 4602. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                  State/Country and                                      FY 2018        House
           Account                   Installation                Project Title           Request      Agreement
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                               Cuba
Army                            Guantanamo Bay           OCO: Barracks...............      115,000       115,000
                              Turkey
Army                            Various Locations        Forward Operating Site......            0         6,400
                              Worldwide Unspecified
Army                            Unspecified Worldwide    ERI: Planning and Design....       15,700        15,700
                                 Locations
Army                            Unspecified Worldwide    OCO: Planning and Design....        9,000         9,000
                                 Locations
                              .........................
      Military Construction, Army Total                                                    139,700       146,100
                                .......................
                              Djibouti
Navy                            Camp Lemonnier           Aircraft Parking Apron                  0        13,390
                                                          Expansion.
                              Worldwide Unspecified
Navy                            Unspecified Worldwide    ERI: Planning and Design....       18,500        18,500
                                 Locations
                              .........................
      Military Construction, Navy Total                                                     18,500        31,890
                                .......................
                              Estonia
AF                              Amari Air Base           ERI: POL Capacity Phase II..        4,700         4,700
AF                              Amari Air Base           ERI: Tactical Fighter               9,200         9,200
                                                          Aircraft Parking Apron.
                              Hungary
AF                              Kecskemet AB             ERI: Airfield Upgrades......       12,900             0
AF                              Kecskemet AB             ERI: Construct Parallel            30,000             0
                                                          Taxiway.
AF                              Kecskemet AB             ERI: Increase POL Storage          12,500             0
                                                          Capacity.
                              Iceland
AF                              Keflavik                 ERI: Airfield Upgrades......       14,400        14,400
                              Italy
AF                              Aviano AB                Guardian Angel Operations               0        27,325
                                                          Facility.
                              Jordan
AF                              Azraq                    OCO: MSAB Development.......      143,000       143,000
                              Latvia
AF                              Lielvarde Air Base       ERI: Expand Strategic Ramp          3,850         3,850
                                                          Parking.
                              Luxembourg
AF                              Sanem                    ERI: ECAOS Deployable              67,400        67,400
                                                          Airbase System Storage.
                              Norway
AF                              Rygge                    ERI: Replace/Expand Quick          10,300             0
                                                          Reaction Alert Pad.
                              Qatar
AF                              Al Udeid                 Consolidated Squadron                   0        15,000
                                                          Operations Facility.
                              Romania
AF                              Campia Turzii            ERI: Upgrade Utilities              2,950         2,950
                                                          Infrastructure.
                              Slovakia
AF                              Malacky                  ERI: Airfield Upgrades......        4,000             0
AF                              Malacky                  ERI: Increase POL Storage          20,000             0
                                                          Capacity.
AF                              Sliac Airport            ERI: Airfield Upgrades......       22,000             0
                              Turkey
AF                              Incirlik AB              Dormitory--216PN............            0        25,997
AF                              Incirlik AB              OCO: Relocate Base Main            14,600        14,600
                                                          Access Control Point.
AF                              Incirlik AB              OCO: Replace Perimeter Fence        8,100         8,100
                              Worldwide Unspecified
AF                              Unspecified Worldwide    ERI: Planning and Design....       56,630        56,630
                                 Locations
AF                              Unspecified Worldwide    OCO--Planning and Design....       41,500        41,500
                                 Locations
                              .........................
      Military Construction, Air Force Total                                               478,030       434,652
                                .......................
                              Italy
Def-Wide                        Sigonella                Construct Hydrant System....            0        22,400
                              Worldwide Unspecified
Def-Wide                        Unspecified Worldwide    ERI: Planning and Design....        1,900         1,900
                                 Locations
                              .........................
      Military Construction, Defense-Wide Total                                              1,900        24,300
                                .......................
      Total, Military Construction                                                         638,130       636,942
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

      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 2018         House
                  Program                      Request      Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discretionary Summary By Appropriation
  Energy And Water Development, And
   Related Agencies
  Appropriation Summary:
    Energy Programs
      Nuclear Energy......................       133,000        133,000
 
    Atomic Energy Defense Activities
      National nuclear security
       administration:
        Weapons activities................    10,239,344     10,423,544
        Defense nuclear nonproliferation..     1,793,310      1,873,310
        Naval reactors....................     1,479,751      1,479,751
        Federal salaries and expenses.....       418,595        407,595
  Total, National nuclear security            13,931,000     14,184,200
   administration.........................
 
      Environmental and other defense
       activities:
        Defense environmental cleanup.....     5,537,186      5,607,186
        Other defense activities..........       815,512        818,512
        Defense nuclear waste disposal....        30,000         30,000
  Total, Environmental & other defense         6,382,698      6,455,698
   activities.............................
  Total, Atomic Energy Defense Activities.    20,313,698     20,639,898
  Total, Discretionary Funding............    20,446,698     20,772,898
 
Nuclear Energy
  Idaho sitewide safeguards and security..       133,000        133,000
  Total, Nuclear Energy...................       133,000        133,000
 
Weapons Activities
  Directed stockpile work
    Life extension programs
      B61 Life extension program..........       788,572        788,572
      W76 Life extension program..........       224,134        224,134
      W88 Alteration program..............       332,292        332,292
      W80-4 Life extension program........       399,090        399,090
  Total, Life extension programs..........     1,744,088      1,744,088
 
    Stockpile systems
      B61 Stockpile systems...............        59,729         59,729
      W76 Stockpile systems...............        51,400         51,400
      W78 Stockpile systems...............        60,100         60,100
      W80 Stockpile systems...............        80,087         80,087
      B83 Stockpile systems...............        35,762         35,762
      W87 Stockpile systems...............        83,200         83,200
      W88 Stockpile systems...............       131,576        131,576
  Total, Stockpile systems................       501,854        501,854
 
    Weapons dismantlement and disposition
      Operations and maintenance..........        52,000         52,000
 
    Stockpile services
      Production support..................       470,400        470,400
      Research and development support....        31,150         31,150
      R&D certification and safety........       196,840        196,840
      Management, technology, and                285,400        285,400
       production.........................
  Total, Stockpile services...............       983,790        983,790
 
    Strategic materials
      Uranium sustainment.................        20,579         20,579
      Plutonium sustainment...............       210,367        210,367
      Tritium sustainment.................       198,152        198,152
      Domestic uranium enrichment.........        60,000         60,000
      Strategic materials sustainment.....       206,196        206,196
  Total, Strategic materials..............       695,294        695,294
  Total, Directed stockpile work..........     3,977,026      3,977,026
 
  Research, development, test and
   evaluation (RDT&E)
    Science
      Advanced certification..............        57,710         57,710
      Primary assessment technologies.....        89,313         89,313
      Dynamic materials properties........       122,347        122,347
      Advanced radiography................        37,600         37,600
      Secondary assessment technologies...        76,833         74,833
        Program decrease..................                      [-2,000]
      Academic alliances and partnerships.        52,963         52,963
      Enhanced Capabilities for                   50,755         50,755
       Subcritical Experiments............
  Total, Science..........................       487,521        485,521
 
    Engineering
      Enhanced surety.....................        39,717         39,717
      Weapon systems engineering                  23,029         23,029
       assessment technology..............
      Nuclear survivability...............        45,230         49,230
        Program increase..................                       [4,000]
      Enhanced surveillance...............        45,147         45,147
      Stockpile Responsiveness............        40,000         40,000
  Total, Engineering .....................       193,123        197,123
 
    Inertial confinement fusion ignition
     and high yield
      Ignition............................        79,575         76,575
        Program decrease..................                      [-3,000]
      Support of other stockpile programs.        23,565         23,565
      Diagnostics, cryogenics and                 77,915         77,915
       experimental support...............
      Pulsed power inertial confinement            7,596          7,596
       fusion.............................
      Joint program in high energy density         9,492          9,492
       laboratory plasmas.................
      Facility operations and target             334,791        331,791
       production.........................
        Program decrease..................                      [-3,000]
  Total, Inertial confinement fusion and         532,934        526,934
   high yield.............................
 
    Advanced simulation and computing
      Advanced simulation and computing...       709,244        709,244
      Construction:
        18-D-670, Exascale Class Computer         22,000         22,000
         Cooling Equipment, LNL...........
        18-D-620, Exascale Computing               3,000          3,000
         Facility Modernization Project...
  Total, Construction.....................        25,000         25,000
  Total, Advanced simulation and computing       734,244        734,244
 
    Advanced manufacturing
      Additive manufacturing..............        12,000         12,000
      Component manufacturing development.        38,644         38,644
      Processing technology development...        29,896         29,896
  Total, Advanced manufacturing...........        80,540         80,540
  Total, RDT&E............................     2,028,362      2,024,362
 
  Infrastructure and operations (formerly
   RTBF)
    Operations of facilities..............       868,000        868,000
    Safety and environmental operations...       116,000        116,000
    Maintenance and repair of facilities..       360,000        395,000
      Program increase to address high-                         [35,000]
       priority preventative maintenance
       through FIRRP......................
    Recapitalization......................       427,342        542,342
      Program increase to address high-                        [115,000]
       priority deferred maintenance
       through FIRRP......................
 
    Construction:
      18-D-670, Material Staging Facility,             0          5,200
       PX.................................
        Project initiation................                       [5,200]
      18-D-660, Fire Station, Y-12........        28,000         28,000
      18-D-650, Tritium Production                 6,800          6,800
       Capability, SRS....................
      17-D-640 U1a Complex Enhancements           22,100         22,100
       Project, NNSS......................
      17-D-630 Expand Electrical                   6,000          6,000
       Distribution System, LLNL..........
      16-D-515 Albuquerque complex project        98,000         98,000
      15-D-613 Emergency Operations                7,000          7,000
       Center, Y-12.......................
      07-D-220 Radioactive liquid waste            2,100          2,100
       treatment facility upgrade project,
       LANL...............................
      07-D-220-04 Transuranic liquid waste        17,895         17,895
       facility, LANL.....................
      06-D-141 Uranium processing facility       663,000        663,000
       Y-12, Oak Ridge, TN................
      04-D-125 Chemistry and metallurgy          180,900        180,900
       research facility replacement
       project, LANL......................
  Total, Construction.....................     1,031,795      1,036,995
  Total, Infrastructure and operations....     2,803,137      2,958,337
 
  Secure transportation asset
    Operations and equipment..............       219,464        219,464
    Program direction.....................       105,600        105,600
  Total, Secure transportation asset......       325,064        325,064
 
  Defense nuclear security
    Operations and maintenance............       686,977        719,977
      Support to physical security                              [33,000]
       infrastructure recapitalization and
       CSTART.............................
  Total, Defense nuclear security.........       686,977        719,977
 
  Information technology and cybersecurity       186,728        186,728
  Legacy contractor pensions..............       232,050        232,050
  Total, Weapons Activities...............    10,239,344     10,423,544
 
 
Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation
  Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation
   Programs
    Global material security
      International nuclear security......        46,339         46,339
      Radiological security...............       146,340        146,340
      Nuclear smuggling detection.........       144,429        139,429
        Program decrease..................                      [-5,000]
  Total, Global material security.........       337,108        332,108
 
    Material management and minimization
      HEU reactor conversion..............       125,500        125,500
      Nuclear material removal............        32,925         37,925
               Acceleration of priority                          [5,000]
               programs...................
      Material disposition................       173,669        173,669
  Total, Material management &                   332,094        337,094
   minimization...........................
 
    Nonproliferation and arms control.....       129,703        129,703
    Defense nuclear nonproliferation R&D..       446,095        451,095
           Acceleration of low-yield                             [5,000]
           detection experiments and 3D
           printing efforts...............
 
    Nonproliferation Construction:
      18-D-150 Surplus Plutonium                   9,000          9,000
       Disposition Project................
      99-D-143 Mixed Oxide (MOX) Fuel            270,000        340,000
       Fabrication Facility, SRS..........
               Program increase...........                      [70,000]
  Total, Nonproliferation construction....       279,000        349,000
  Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation      1,524,000      1,599,000
   Programs...............................
 
  Low Enriched Uranium R&D for Naval                   0          5,000
   Reactors...............................
    Direct support to low-enriched uranium                       [5,000]
     R&D for Naval Reactors...............
 
  Legacy contractor pensions..............        40,950         40,950
  Nuclear counterterrorism and incident          277,360        277,360
   response program.......................
  Rescission of prior year balances.......       -49,000        -49,000
  Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation.     1,793,310      1,873,310
 
 
Naval Reactors
  Naval reactors development..............       473,267        473,267
  Columbia-Class reactor systems                 156,700        156,700
   development............................
  S8G Prototype refueling.................       190,000        190,000
  Naval reactors operations and                  466,884        466,884
   infrastructure.........................
  Construction:
    15-D-904 NRF Overpack Storage                 13,700         13,700
     Expansion 3..........................
    15-D-903 KL Fire System Upgrade.......        15,000         15,000
    14-D-901 Spent fuel handling                 116,000        116,000
     recapitalization project, NRF........
  Total, Construction.....................       144,700        144,700
  Program direction.......................        48,200         48,200
  Total, Naval Reactors...................     1,479,751      1,479,751
 
 
Federal Salaries And Expenses
  Program direction.......................       418,595        407,595
    Program decrease to support maximum of                     [-11,000]
     1,690 employees......................
  Total, Office Of The Administrator......       418,595        407,595
 
 
Defense Environmental Cleanup
  Closure sites:
    Closure sites administration..........         4,889          4,889
 
  Hanford site:
    River corridor and other cleanup              58,692         93,692
     operations...........................
             Acceleration of priority                           [35,000]
             programs.....................
    Central plateau remediation...........       637,879        645,879
             Acceleration of priority                            [8,000]
             programs.....................
    Richland community and regulatory              5,121          5,121
     support..............................
    Construction:
      18-D-404 WESF Modifications and              6,500          6,500
       Capsule Storage....................
      15-D-401 Containerized sludge                8,000          8,000
       removal annex, RL..................
  Total, Construction.....................        14,500         14,500
  Total, Hanford site.....................       716,192        759,192
 
  Idaho National Laboratory:
    SNF stabilization and disposition--           19,975         19,975
     2012.................................
    Solid waste stabilization and                170,101        170,101
     disposition..........................
    Radioactive liquid tank waste                111,352        111,352
     stabilization and disposition........
    Soil and water remediation--2035......        44,727         44,727
    Idaho community and regulatory support         4,071          4,071
  Total, Idaho National Laboratory........       350,226        350,226
 
  NNSA sites
    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory         1,175          1,175
    Separations Process Research Unit.....         1,800          1,800
    Nevada................................        60,136         60,136
    Sandia National Laboratories..........         2,600          2,600
    Los Alamos National Laboratory........       191,629        191,629
  Total, NNSA sites and Nevada off-sites..       257,340        257,340
 
  Oak Ridge Reservation:
    OR Nuclear facility D & D
      OR-0041--D&D - Y-12.................        29,369         29,369
      OR-0042--D&D -ORNL..................        48,110         48,110
      Construction:
        17-D-401 On-site waste disposal            5,000          5,000
         facility.........................
        14-D-403 Outfall 200 Mercury              17,100         17,100
         Treatment facility...............
  Total, OR Nuclear facility D & D........        82,479         82,479
 
    U233 Disposition Program..............        33,784         33,784
      OR cleanup and disposition..........        66,632         66,632
      OR reservation community and                 4,605          4,605
       regulatory support.................
      OR Solid waste stabilization and             3,000          3,000
       disposition technology development.
  Total, Oak Ridge Reservation............       207,600        207,600
 
  Office of River Protection:
    Waste treatment and immobilization
     plant
      Construction:
           01-D-416 A-D WTP Subprojects A-       655,000        655,000
           D..............................
           01-D-416 E--Pretreatment               35,000         35,000
           Facility.......................
  Total, 01-D-416 Construction............       690,000        690,000
 
                   WTP Commissioning......         8,000          8,000
  Total, Waste treatment and                     698,000        698,000
   immobilization plant...................
 
    Tank farm activities
      Rad liquid tank waste stabilization        713,311        713,311
       and disposition....................
      Construction:
        15-D-409 Low activity waste               93,000         93,000
         pretreatment system, ORP.........
  Total, Tank farm activities.............       806,311        806,311
  Total, Office of River protection.......     1,504,311      1,504,311
 
  Savannah River Sites:
    Nuclear Material Management...........       323,482        350,482
             Acceleration of priority                           [27,000]
             programs.....................
 
    Environmental Cleanup
      Environmental Cleanup...............       159,478        159,478
      Construction:
        08-D-402, Emergency Operations               500            500
         Center...........................
  Total, Environmental Cleanup............       159,978        159,978
 
    SR community and regulatory support...        11,249         11,249
 
    Radioactive liquid tank waste:
      Radioactive liquid tank waste              597,258        597,258
       stabilization and disposition......
      Construction:
        18-D-401, SDU #8/9................           500            500
        17-D-402--Saltstone Disposal Unit         40,000         40,000
         #7...............................
        05-D-405 Salt waste processing           150,000        150,000
         facility, Savannah River Site....
  Total, Construction.....................       190,500        190,500
  Total, Radioactive liquid tank waste....       787,758        787,758
  Total, Savannah River site..............     1,282,467      1,309,467
 
  Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
    Operations and maintenance............       206,617        206,617
    Central characterization project......        22,500         22,500
    Transportation........................        21,854         21,854
    Construction:
      15-D-411 Safety significant                 46,000         46,000
       confinement ventilation system,
       WIPP...............................
      15-D-412 Exhaust shaft, WIPP........        19,600         19,600
  Total, Construction.....................        65,600         65,600
  Total, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant......       316,571        316,571
 
  Program direction.......................       300,000        300,000
  Program support.........................         6,979          6,979
  WCF Mission Related Activities..........        22,109         22,109
  Minority Serving Institution Partnership         6,000          6,000
  Safeguards and Security
    Oak Ridge Reservation.................        16,500         16,500
    Paducah...............................        14,049         14,049
    Portsmouth............................        12,713         12,713
    Richland/Hanford Site.................        75,600         75,600
    Savannah River Site...................       142,314        142,314
    Waste Isolation Pilot Project.........         5,200          5,200
    West Valley...........................         2,784          2,784
  Total, Safeguards and Security..........       269,160        269,160
 
  Cyber Security..........................        43,342         43,342
  Technology development..................        25,000         25,000
  HQEF-0040--Excess Facilities............       225,000        225,000
  Total, Defense Environmental Cleanup....     5,537,186      5,607,186
 
 
Other Defense Activities
  Environment, health, safety and security
    Environment, health, safety and              130,693        130,693
     security.............................
    Program direction.....................        68,765         68,765
  Total, Environment, Health, safety and         199,458        199,458
   security...............................
 
  Independent enterprise assessments
    Independent enterprise assessments....        24,068         24,068
    Program direction.....................        50,863         50,863
  Total, Independent enterprise                   74,931         74,931
   assessments............................
 
  Specialized security activities.........       237,912        240,912
    Classified topic......................                       [3,000]
 
  Office of Legacy Management
    Legacy management.....................       137,674        137,674
    Program direction.....................        16,932         16,932
  Total, Office of Legacy Management......       154,606        154,606
 
  Defense-related activities
  Defense related administrative support
    Chief financial officer...............        48,484         48,484
    Chief information officer.............        91,443         91,443
    Project management oversight and               3,073          3,073
     assessments..........................
  Total, Defense related administrative          143,000        143,000
   support................................
 
  Office of hearings and appeals..........         5,605          5,605
  Subtotal, Other defense activities......       815,512        818,512
  Total, Other Defense Activities.........       815,512        818,512
 
 
Defense Nuclear Waste Disposal
  Yucca mountain and interim storage......        30,000         30,000
  Total, Defense Nuclear Waste Disposal...        30,000         30,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------

            Passed the House of Representatives July 14, 2017.

            Attest:

                                                 KAREN L. HAAS,

                                                                 Clerk.
                                                       Calendar No. 175

115th CONGRESS

  1st Session

                               H. R. 2810

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 AN ACT

     To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2018 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.

_______________________________________________________________________

                             July 18, 2017

            Received; read twice and placed on the calendar