[Congressional Bills 116th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. 1790 Reported in Senate (RS)]
<DOC>
Calendar No. 114
116th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 1790
[Report No. 116-48]
To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2020 for military
activities of the Department of Defense, for military construction, and
for defense activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe
military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other
purposes.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
June 11, 2019
Mr. Inhofe, from the Committee on Armed Services, reported the
following original bill; which was read twice and placed on the
calendar
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2020 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 2020''.
SEC. 2. ORGANIZATION OF ACT INTO DIVISIONS; TABLE OF CONTENTS.
(a) Divisions.--This Act is organized into four divisions as
follows:
(1) Division A--Department of Defense Authorizations.
(2) Division B--Military Construction Authorizations.
(3) Division C--Department of Energy National Security
Authorizations and Other Authorizations.
(4) Division D--Funding Tables.
(b) Table of Contents.--The table of contents for this Act is as
follows:
Sec. 1. Short title.
Sec. 2. Organization of Act into divisions; table of contents.
Sec. 3. Congressional defense committees.
Sec. 4. Budgetary effects of this Act.
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. Sense of Senate on Army's approach to Capability Drops 1 and
2 of the Distributed Common Ground System-
Army program.
Sec. 112. Authority of the Secretary of the Army to waive certain
limitations related to the Distributed
Common Ground System-Army Increment 1.
Subtitle C--Navy Programs
Sec. 121. Modification of prohibition on availability of funds for Navy
waterborne security barriers.
Sec. 122. Capabilities based assessment for naval vessels that carry
fixed-wing aircraft.
Sec. 123. Ford-class aircraft carrier cost limitation baselines.
Sec. 124. Design and construction of amphibious transport dock
designated LPD-31.
Sec. 125. LHA Replacement Amphibious Assault Ship Program.
Sec. 126. Limitation on availability of funds for the Littoral Combat
Ship.
Sec. 127. Limitation on the next new class of Navy large surface
combatants.
Sec. 128. Refueling and complex overhauls of the U.S.S. John C. Stennis
and U.S.S. Harry S. Truman.
Sec. 129. Report on carrier wing composition.
Subtitle D--Air Force Programs
Sec. 141. Requirement to align Air Force fighter force structure with
National Defense Strategy and reports.
Sec. 142. Requirement to establish the use of an Agile DevOps software
development solution as an alternative for
Joint Strike Fighter Autonomic Logistics
Information System.
Sec. 143. Report on feasibility of multiyear contract for procurement
of JASSM-ER missiles.
Sec. 144. Air Force aggressor squadron modernization.
Sec. 145. Air Force plan for Combat Rescue Helicopter fielding.
Sec. 146. Military type certification for AT-6 and A-29 light attack
experimentation aircraft.
Subtitle E--Defense-wide, Joint, and Multiservice Matters
Sec. 151. Limitation on availability of funds for communications
systems lacking certain resiliency
features.
Sec. 152. F-35 sustainment cost.
Sec. 153. Economic order quantity contracting authority for F-35 Joint
Strike Fighter program.
Sec. 154. Repeal of tactical unmanned vehicle common data link
requirement.
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. Development and acquisition strategy to procure secure, low
probability of detection data link network
capability.
Sec. 212. Establishment of secure next-generation wireless network (5G)
infrastructure for the Nevada Test and
Training Range and base infrastructure.
Sec. 213. Limitation and report on Indirect Fire Protection Capability
Increment 2 enduring capability.
Sec. 214. Electromagnetic spectrum sharing research and development
program.
Sec. 215. Sense of the Senate on the Advanced Battle Management System.
Sec. 216. Modification of proof of concept commercialization program.
Sec. 217. Modification of Defense quantum information science and
technology research and development
program.
Sec. 218. Technology and National Security Fellowship.
Sec. 219. Direct Air Capture and Blue Carbon Removal Technology
Program.
Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters
Sec. 231. National security emerging biotechnologies research and
development program.
Sec. 232. Cyber science and technology activities roadmap and reports.
Sec. 233. Requiring certain microelectronics products and services meet
trusted supply chain and operational
security standards.
Sec. 234. Technical correction to Global Research Watch Program.
Sec. 235. Additional technology areas for expedited access to technical
talent.
Sec. 236. Sense of the Senate and periodic briefings on the security
and availability of fifth-generation (5G)
wireless network technology and production.
Sec. 237. Transfer of Combating Terrorism Technical Support Office.
Sec. 238. Briefing on cooperative defense technology programs and risks
of technology transfer to China or Russia.
Sec. 239. Modification of authority for prizes for advanced technology
achievements.
Sec. 240. Use of funds for Strategic Environmental Research Program,
Environmental Security Technical
Certification Program, and Operational
Energy Capability Improvement.
Sec. 241. Funding for the Sea-Launched Cruise Missile-Nuclear analysis
of alternatives.
Sec. 242. Review and assessment pertaining to transition of Department
of Defense-originated dual-use technology.
TITLE III--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 301. Authorization of appropriations.
Subtitle B--Energy and Environment
Sec. 311. Use of operational energy cost savings of Department of
Defense.
Sec. 312. Use of proceeds from sales of electrical energy generated
from geothermal resources.
Sec. 313. Energy resilience programs and activities.
Sec. 314. Native American Indian lands environmental mitigation
program.
Sec. 315. Reimbursement of Environmental Protection Agency for certain
costs in connection with the Twin Cities
Army Ammunition Plant, Minnesota.
Sec. 316. Prohibition on use of perfluoroalkyl substances and
polyfluoroalkyl substances for land-based
applications of firefighting foam.
Sec. 317. Transfer authority for funding of study and assessment on
health implications of per- and
polyfluoroalkyl substances contamination in
drinking water by Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry.
Sec. 318. Cooperative agreements with States to address contamination
by perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl
substances.
Sec. 319. Modification of Department of Defense environmental
restoration authorities to include Federal
Government facilities used by National
Guard.
Sec. 320. Budgeting of Department of Defense relating to extreme
weather.
Sec. 321. Pilot program for availability of working-capital funds for
increased combat capability through energy
optimization.
Sec. 322. Report on efforts to reduce high energy intensity at military
installations.
Sec. 323. Technical and grammatical corrections and repeal of obsolete
provisions relating to energy.
Subtitle C--Logistics and Sustainment
Sec. 331. Requirement for memoranda of understanding between the Air
Force and the Navy regarding depot
maintenance.
Sec. 332. Modification to limitation on length of overseas forward
deployment of naval vessels.
Subtitle D--Reports
Sec. 341. Report on modernization of Joint Pacific Alaska Range
Complex.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
Sec. 351. Strategy to improve infrastructure of certain depots of the
Department of Defense.
Sec. 352. Limitation on use of funds regarding the basing of KC-46A
aircraft outside the continental United
States.
Sec. 353. Prevention of encroachment on military training routes and
military operations areas.
Sec. 354. Expansion and enhancement of authorities on transfer and
adoption of military animals.
Sec. 355. Limitation on contracting relating to Defense Personal
Property Program.
Sec. 356. Prohibition on subjective upgrades by commanders of unit
ratings in monthly readiness reporting on
military units.
Sec. 357. Extension of temporary installation reutilization authority
for arsenals, depots, and plants.
Sec. 358. Clarification of food ingredient requirements for food or
beverages provided by the Department of
Defense.
Sec. 359. Technical correction to deadline for transition to Defense
Readiness Reporting System Strategic.
TITLE IV--MILITARY PERSONNEL AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Active Forces
Sec. 401. End strengths for active forces.
Subtitle B--Reserve Forces
Sec. 411. End strengths for Selected Reserve.
Sec. 412. End strengths for Reserves on active duty in support of the
reserves.
Sec. 413. End strengths for military technicians (dual status).
Sec. 414. Maximum number of reserve personnel authorized to be on
active duty for operational support.
Sec. 415. Authorized strengths for Marine Corps Reserves on active
duty.
Subtitle C--Authorization of Appropriations
Sec. 421. Military personnel.
TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY
Subtitle A--Officer Personnel Policy
Sec. 501. Repeal of codified specification of authorized strengths of
certain commissioned officers on active
duty.
Sec. 502. Maker of original appointments in a regular or reserve
component of commissioned officers
previously subject to original appointment
in other type of component.
Sec. 503. Furnishing of adverse information on officers to promotion
selection boards.
Sec. 504. Limitation on number of officers recommendable for promotion
by promotion selection boards.
Sec. 505. Expansion of authority for continuation on active duty of
officers in certain military specialties
and career tracks.
Sec. 506. Higher grade in retirement for officers following reopening
of determination or certification of
retired grade.
Sec. 507. Availability on the Internet of certain information about
officers serving in general or flag officer
grades.
Subtitle B--Reserve Component Management
Sec. 511. Repeal of requirement for review of certain Army Reserve
officer unit vacancy promotions by
commanders of associated active duty units.
Subtitle C--General Service Authorities
Sec. 515. Modification of authorities on management of deployments of
members of the Armed Forces and related
unit operating and personnel tempo matters.
Sec. 516. Repeal of requirement that parental leave be taken in one
increment.
Sec. 517. Digital engineering as a core competency of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 518. Modification of notification on manning of afloat naval
forces.
Sec. 519. Report on expansion of the Close Airman Support team approach
of the Air Force to the other Armed Forces.
Subtitle D--Military Justice and Related Matters
PART I--Matters Relating to Investigation, Prosecution, and Defense of
Sexual Assault Generally
Sec. 521. Department of Defense-wide policy and military department-
specific programs on reinvigoration of the
prevention of sexual assault involving
members of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 522. Enactment and expansion of policy on withholding of initial
disposition authority for certain offenses
under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
Sec. 523. Training for Sexual Assault Initial Disposition Authorities
on exercise of disposition authority for
sexual assault and collateral offenses.
Sec. 524. Expansion of responsibilities of commanders for victims of
sexual assault committed by another member
of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 525. Training for commanders in the Armed Forces on their role in
all stages of military justice in
connection with sexual assault.
Sec. 526. Notice to victims of alleged sexual assault of pendency of
further administrative action following a
determination not to refer to trial by
court-martial.
Sec. 527. Safe to report policy applicable across the Armed Forces.
Sec. 528. Report on expansion of Air Force safe to report policy across
the Armed Forces.
Sec. 529. Proposal for separate punitive article in the Uniform Code of
Military Justice on sexual harassment.
Sec. 530. Treatment of information in Catch a Serial Offender Program
for certain purposes.
Sec. 531. Report on preservation of recourse to restricted report on
sexual assault for victims of sexual
assault following certain victim or third-
party communications.
Sec. 532. Authority for return of personal property to victims of
sexual assault who file a Restricted Report
before conclusion of related proceedings.
Sec. 533. Extension of Defense Advisory Committee on Investigation,
Prosecution, and Defense of Sexual Assault
in the Armed Forces.
Sec. 534. Defense Advisory Committee for the Prevention of Sexual
Misconduct.
Sec. 535. Independent reviews and assessments on race and ethnicity in
the investigation, prosecution, and defense
of sexual assault in the Armed Forces.
Sec. 536. Report on mechanisms to enhance the integration and
synchronization of activities of Special
Victim Investigation and Prosecution
personnel with activities of military
criminal investigative organizations.
Sec. 537. Comptroller General of the United States report on
implementation by the Armed Forces of
recent statutory requirements on sexual
assault prevention and response in the
military.
PART II--Special Victims' Counsel Matters
Sec. 541. Legal assistance by Special Victims' Counsel for victims of
alleged domestic violence offenses.
Sec. 542. Other Special Victims' Counsel matters.
Sec. 543. Availability of Special Victims' Counsel at military
installations.
Sec. 544. Training for Special Victims' Counsel on civilian criminal
justice matters in the States of the
military installations to which assigned.
PART III--Boards for Correction of Military Records and Discharge
Review Board Matters
Sec. 546. Repeal of 15-year statute of limitations on motions or
requests for review of discharge or
dismissal from the Armed Forces.
Sec. 547. Reduction in required number of members of discharge review
boards.
Sec. 548. Enhancement of personnel on boards for the correction of
military records and discharge review
boards.
Sec. 549. Inclusion of intimate partner violence and spousal abuse
among supporting rationales for certain
claims for corrections of military records
and discharge review.
Sec. 550. Advice and counsel of trauma experts in review by boards for
correction of military records and
discharge review boards of certain claims.
Sec. 551. Training of members of boards for correction of military
records and discharge review boards on
sexual trauma, intimate partner violence,
spousal abuse, and related matters.
Sec. 552. Limitations and requirements in connection with separations
for members of the Armed Forces who suffer
from mental health conditions in connection
with a sex-related, intimate partner
violence-related, or spousal-abuse offense.
Sec. 553. Liberal consideration of evidence in certain claims by boards
for the correction of military records and
discharge review boards.
PART IV--Other Military Justice Matters
Sec. 555. Expansion of pre-referral matters reviewable by military
judges and military magistrates in the
interest of efficiency in military justice.
Sec. 556. Policies and procedures on registration at military
installations of civilian protective orders
applicable to members of the Armed Forces
assigned to such installations and certain
other individuals.
Sec. 557. Increase in number of digital forensic examiners for the
military criminal investigative
organizations.
Sec. 558. Survey of members of the Armed Forces on their experiences
with military investigations and military
justice.
Sec. 559. Public access to dockets, filings, and court records of
courts-martial or other records of trial of
the military justice system.
Sec. 560. Pilot programs on defense investigators in the military
justice system.
Sec. 561. Report on military justice system involving alternative
authority for determining whether to prefer
or refer changes for felony offenses under
the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
Sec. 562. Report on standardization among the military departments in
collection and presentation of information
on matters within the military justice
system.
Sec. 563. Report on establishment of guardian ad litem program for
certain military dependents who are a
victim or witness of offenses under the
Uniform Code of Military Justice involving
abuse or exploitation.
Subtitle E--Member Education, Training, Transition, and Resilience
Sec. 566. Consecutive service of service obligation in connection with
payment of tuition for off-duty training or
education for commissioned officers of the
Armed Forces with any other service
obligations.
Sec. 567. Authority for detail of certain enlisted members of the Armed
Forces as students at law schools.
Sec. 568. Connections of members retiring or separating from the Armed
Forces with community-based organizations
and related entities.
Subtitle F--Defense Dependents' Education and Military Family Readiness
Matters
PART I--Defense Dependents' Education Matters
Sec. 571. Continuation of authority to assist local educational
agencies that benefit dependents of members
of the Armed Forces and Department of
Defense civilian employees.
Sec. 572. Impact aid for children with severe disabilities.
Sec. 573. Ri'katak Guest Student Program at United States Army
Garrison-Kwajalein Atoll.
PART II--Military Family Readiness Matters
Sec. 576. Two-year extension of authority for reimbursement for State
licensure and certification costs of
spouses of members of the Armed Forces
arising from relocation to another State.
Sec. 577. Improvement of occupational license portability for military
spouses through interstate compacts.
Sec. 578. Modification of responsibility of the Office of Special Needs
for individualized service plans for
members of military families with special
needs.
Sec. 579. Clarifying technical amendment on direct hire authority for
the Department of Defense for childcare
services providers for Department child
development centers.
Sec. 580. Pilot program on information sharing between Department of
Defense and designated relatives and
friends of members of the Armed Forces
regarding the experiences and challenges of
military service.
Sec. 581. Briefing on use of Family Advocacy Programs to address
domestic violence.
Subtitle G--Decorations and Awards
Sec. 585. Authorization for award of the Medal of Honor to John J.
Duffy for acts of valor in Vietnam.
Sec. 586. Standardization of honorable service requirement for award of
military decorations.
Sec. 587. Authority to award or present a decoration not previously
recommended in a timely fashion following a
review requested by Congress.
Sec. 588. Authority to make posthumous and honorary promotions and
appointments following a review requested
by Congress.
Subtitle H--Other Matters
Sec. 591. Military funeral honors matters.
Sec. 592. Inclusion of homeschooled students in Junior Reserve
Officers' Training Corps units.
Sec. 593. Sense of Senate on the Junior Reserve Officers' Training
Corps.
TITLE VI--COMPENSATION AND OTHER PERSONNEL BENEFITS
Subtitle A--Pay and Allowances
Sec. 601. Expansion of eligibility for exceptional transitional
compensation for dependents to dependents
of current members.
Subtitle B--Bonuses and Special and Incentive Pays
Sec. 611. One-year extension of certain expiring bonus and special pay
authorities.
Subtitle C--Travel and Transportation Allowances
Sec. 621. Extension of pilot program on a Government lodging program.
Sec. 622. Reinvestment of travel refunds by the Department of Defense.
Subtitle D--Disability Pay, Retired Pay, and Survivor Benefits
Sec. 631. Contributions to Department of Defense Military Retirement
Fund based on pay costs per Armed Force
rather than on Armed Forces-wide basis.
Sec. 632. Modification of authorities on eligibility for and
replacement of gold star lapel buttons.
Subtitle E--Commissary and Non-Appropriated Fund Instrumentality
Benefits and Operations
Sec. 641. Defense resale system matters.
Sec. 642. Treatment of fees on services provided as supplemental funds
for commissary operations.
Sec. 643. Procurement by commissary stores of certain locally sourced
products.
TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--TRICARE and Other Health Care Benefits
Sec. 701. Contraception coverage parity under the TRICARE program.
Sec. 702. TRICARE payment options for retirees and their dependents.
Sec. 703. Lead level screening and testing for children.
Sec. 704. Provision of blood testing for firefighters of Department of
Defense to determine exposure to
perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl
substances.
Subtitle B--Health Care Administration
Sec. 711. Modification of organization of military health system.
Sec. 712. Support by military health system of medical requirements of
combatant commands.
Sec. 713. Tours of duty of commanders or directors of military
treatment facilities.
Sec. 714. Expansion of strategy to improve acquisition of managed care
support contracts under TRICARE program.
Sec. 715. Establishment of regional medical hubs to support combatant
commands.
Sec. 716. Monitoring of adverse event data on dietary supplement use by
members of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 717. Enhancement of recordkeeping with respect to exposure by
members of the Armed Forces to certain
occupational and environmental hazards
while deployed overseas.
Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters
Sec. 721. Extension and clarification of authority for Joint Department
of Defense-Department of Veterans Affairs
Medical Facility Demonstration Fund.
Sec. 722. Appointment of non-ex officio members of the Henry M. Jackson
Foundation for the Advancement of Military
Medicine.
Sec. 723. Officers authorized to command Army dental units.
Sec. 724. Establishment of Academic Health System in National Capital
Region.
Sec. 725. Provision of veterinary services by veterinary professionals
of the Department of Defense in
emergencies.
Sec. 726. Five-year extension of authority to continue the DOD-VA
Health Care Sharing Incentive Fund.
Sec. 727. Pilot Program on civilian and military partnerships to
enhance interoperability and medical surge
capability and capacity of National
Disaster Medical System.
Sec. 728. Modification of requirements for longitudinal medical study
on blast pressure exposure of members of
the Armed Forces.
TITLE VIII--ACQUISITION POLICY, ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT, AND RELATED
MATTERS
Subtitle A--Contracting and Acquisition Provisions
Sec. 801. Pilot program on intellectual property evaluation for
acquisition programs.
Sec. 802. Pilot program to use alpha contracting teams for complex
requirements.
Sec. 803. Modification of written approval requirement for task and
delivery order single contract awards.
Sec. 804. Extension of authority to acquire products and services
produced in countries along a major route
of supply to Afghanistan.
Sec. 805. Modification of Director of Operational Test and Evaluation
report.
Sec. 806. Department of Defense use of fixed-price contracts.
Sec. 807. Pilot program to accelerate contracting and pricing
processes.
Sec. 808. Pilot program to streamline decision-making processes for
weapon systems.
Sec. 809. Documentation of market research related to commercial item
determinations.
Sec. 810. Modification to small purchase threshold exception to
sourcing requirements for certain articles.
Subtitle B--Provisions Relating to Major Defense Acquisition Programs
Sec. 821. Naval vessel certification required before Milestone B
approval.
Subtitle C--Industrial Base Matters
Sec. 831. Modernization of acquisition processes to ensure integrity of
industrial base.
Sec. 832. Assessment of precision-guided missiles for reliance on
foreign-made microelectronic components.
Sec. 833. Mitigating risks related to foreign ownership, control, or
influence of Department of Defense
contractors or subcontractors.
Sec. 834. Extension and revisions to Never Contract With the Enemy.
Subtitle D--Small Business Matters
Sec. 841. Reauthorization and improvement of Department of Defense
Mentor-Protege Program.
Sec. 842. Modification of justification and approval requirement for
certain Department of Defense contracts.
Subtitle E--Provisions Related to Software-Driven Capabilities
Sec. 851. Improved management of information technology and cyberspace
investments.
Sec. 852. Special pathways for rapid acquisition of software
applications and upgrades.
Subtitle F--Other Matters
Sec. 861. Notification of Navy procurement production disruptions.
Sec. 862. Modification to acquisition authority of the Commander of the
United States Cyber Command.
Sec. 863. Prohibition on operation or procurement of foreign-made
unmanned aircraft systems.
Sec. 864. Prohibition on contracting with persons that have business
operations with the Maduro regime.
Sec. 865. Comptroller General of the United States report on Department
of Defense efforts to combat human
trafficking through procurement practices.
TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT
Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of Defense and Related Matters
901. Headquarters activities of the Department of Defense matters.
902. Responsibility of Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and
Sustainment for Procurement Technical
Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program.
903. Return to Chief Information Officer of the Department of Defense
of responsibility for business systems and
related matters.
904. Senior Military Advisor for Cyber Policy and Deputy Principal
Cyber Advisor.
905. Limitation on transfer of Strategic Capabilities Office.
Subtitle B--Organization and Management of Other Department of Defense
Offices and Elements
911. Assistant Secretaries of the military departments for Energy,
Installations, and Environment.
912. Repeal of conditional designation of Explosive Ordnance Disposal
Corps as a basic branch of the Army.
Subtitle C--Other Matters
921. Exclusion from limitations on personnel in the Office of the
Secretary of Defense and Department of
Defense headquarters of fellows appointed
under the John S. McCain Defense Fellows
Program.
922. Report on resources to implement the civilian casualty policy of
the Department of Defense.
TITLE X--GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Financial Matters
Sec. 1001. General transfer authority.
Sec. 1002. Modification of required elements of annual reports on
emergency and extraordinary expenses of the
Department of Defense.
Sec. 1003. Inclusion of military construction projects in annual
reports on unfunded priorities of the Armed
Forces and the combatant commands.
Sec. 1004. Prohibition on delegation of responsibility for submittal to
Congress of Out-Year Unconstrained Total
Munitions Requirements and Out-Year
Inventory numbers.
Sec. 1005. Element in annual reports on the Financial Improvement and
Audit Remediation Plan on activities with
respect to classified programs.
Sec. 1006. Modification of semiannual briefings on the consolidated
corrective action plan of the Department of
Defense for financial management
information.
Sec. 1007. Update of authorities and renaming of Department of Defense
Acquisition Workforce Development Fund.
Subtitle B--Counterdrug Activities
Sec. 1011. Modification of authority to support a unified counterdrug
and counterterrorism campaign in Colombia.
Sec. 1012. Two-year extension of authority for joint task forces to
provide support to law enforcement agencies
conducting counter-terrorism activities.
Subtitle C--Naval Vessels and Shipyards
Sec. 1016. Modification of authority to purchase vessels using funds in
National Defense Sealift Fund.
Sec. 1017. Senior Technical Authority for each naval vessel class.
Sec. 1018. Permanent authority for sustaining operational readiness of
Littoral Combat Ships on extended
deployment.
Subtitle D--Counterterrorism
Sec. 1021. Extension of 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. 1022. Extension of 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. 1023. Extension of prohibition on use of funds for transfer or
release of individuals detained at United
States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
to certain countries.
Sec. 1024. Extension of prohibition on use of funds to close or
relinquish control of United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Sec. 1025. Authority to transfer individuals detained at United States
Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to the
United States temporarily for emergency or
critical medical treatment.
Sec. 1026. Chief Medical Officer at United States Naval Station,
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
Subtitle E--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations
Sec. 1031. Clarification of authority of military commissions under
chapter 47A of title 10, United States
Code, to punish contempt.
Sec. 1032. Comprehensive Department of Defense policy on collective
self-defense.
Sec. 1033. Oversight of Department of Defense execute orders.
Sec. 1034. Prohibition on ownership or trading of stocks in certain
companies by Department of Defense officers
and employees.
Sec. 1035. Policy regarding the transition of data and applications to
the cloud.
Sec. 1036. Modernization of inspection authorities applicable to the
National Guard and extension of inspection
authority to the Chief of the National
Guard Bureau.
Sec. 1037. Enhancement of authorities on forfeiture of Federal benefits
by the National Guard.
Sec. 1038. Modernization of authorities on property and fiscal officers
of the National Guard.
Sec. 1039. Limitation on placement by the Under Secretary of Defense
for Personnel and Readiness of work with
federally funded research and development
centers.
Sec. 1040. Termination of requirement for Department of Defense
facility access clearances for joint
ventures composed of previously-cleared
entities.
Sec. 1041. Designation of Department of Defense Strategic Arctic Ports.
Sec. 1042. Extension of National Security Commission on Artificial
Intelligence.
Sec. 1043. Authority to transfer funds for Bien Hoa dioxin cleanup.
Sec. 1044. Limitation on use of funds to house children separated from
parents.
Subtitle F--Studies and Reports
Sec. 1051. Modification of annual reporting requirements on defense
manpower.
Sec. 1052. Report on Department of Defense efforts to implement a force
planning process in support of
implementation of the 2018 National Defense
Strategy.
Sec. 1053. Extension of annual reports on civilian casualties in
connection with United States military
operations.
Sec. 1054. Report on joint force plan for implementation of strategies
of the Department of Defense for the
Arctic.
Sec. 1055. Report on use of Northern Tier bases in implementation of
Arctic strategy of the United States.
Sec. 1056. Report on the Department of Defense plan for mass-casualty
disaster response operations in the Arctic.
Sec. 1057. Annual reports on approval of employment or compensation of
retired general or flag officers by foreign
governments for Emoluments Clause purposes.
Sec. 1058. Transmittal to Congress of requests for assistance received
by the Department of Defense from other
departments.
Sec. 1059. Semiannual report on Consolidated Adjudication Facility of
the Defense Counterintelligence and
Security Agency.
Sec. 1060 Comptroller General of the United States report on post-
government employment of former Department
of Defense officials.
Subtitle G--Treatment of Contaminated Water Near Military Installations
Sec. 1071. Short title.
Sec. 1072. Definitions.
Sec. 1073. Provision of water uncontaminated with perfluorooctanoic
acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate
(PFOS) for agricultural purposes.
Sec. 1074. Acquisition of real property by Air Force.
Sec. 1075. Remediation plan.
Subtitle H--Other Matters
Sec. 1081. Revision to authorities relating to mail service for members
of the Armed Forces and Department of
Defense civilians overseas.
Sec. 1082. Access to and use of military post offices by United States
citizens employed overseas by the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization who perform
functions in support of military operations
of the Armed Forces.
Sec. 1083. Guarantee of residency for spouses of members of uniformed
services.
Sec. 1084. Extension of requirement for briefings on the national
biodefense strategy.
Sec. 1085. Extension of National Commission on Military Aviation
Safety.
TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL MATTERS
Sec. 1101. Modification of temporary assignments of Department of
Defense employees to a private-sector
organization.
Sec. 1102. Modification of number of available appointments for certain
agencies under personnel management
authority to attract experts in science and
engineering.
Sec. 1103. One-year extension of temporary authority to grant
allowances, benefits, and gratuities to
civilian personnel on official duty in a
combat zone.
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. Reimbursement of Federal employees for Federal, State, and
local income taxes incurred during travel,
transportation, and relocation.
TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS
Subtitle A--Assistance and Training
Sec. 1201. Extension of support of special operations for irregular
warfare.
Sec. 1202. Extension of authority for cross servicing agreements for
loan of personnel protection and personnel
survivability equipment in coalition
operations.
Sec. 1203. Two-year extension of program authority for Global Security
Contingency Fund.
Sec. 1204. Modification of reporting requirement for use of funds for
security cooperation programs and
activities.
Sec. 1205. Institutional legal capacity building initiative for foreign
defense forces.
Sec. 1206. Department of Defense support for stabilization activities
in national security interest of the United
States.
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. Afghanistan Security Forces Fund.
Sec. 1213. Extension of Commanders' Emergency Response Program.
Sec. 1214. Extension and modification of reimbursement of certain
coalition nations for support provided to
United States military operations.
Sec. 1215. Support for reconciliation activities led by the Government
of Afghanistan.
Sec. 1216. Sense of Senate on special immigrant visa program for Afghan
allies.
Subtitle C--Matters Relating to Syria, Iraq, and Iran
Sec. 1221. Modification of authority to provide assistance to vetted
Syrian groups.
Sec. 1222. Extension of authority and limitation on use of funds to
provide assistance to counter the Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria.
Sec. 1223. Extension and modification of authority to support
operations and activities of the Office of
Security Cooperation in Iraq.
Sec. 1224. Coordinator of United States Government activities and
matters in connection with detainees who
are members of the Islamic State of Iraq
and Syria.
Sec. 1225. Report on lessons learned from efforts to liberate Mosul and
Raqqah from control of the Islamic State of
Iraq and Syria.
Subtitle D--Matters Relating to Europe and the Russian Federation
Sec. 1231. Prohibition on availability of funds relating to sovereignty
of the Russian Federation over Crimea.
Sec. 1232. Prohibition on use of funds for withdrawal of Armed Forces
from Europe in the event of United States
withdrawal from the North Atlantic Treaty.
Sec. 1233. Extension of limitation on military cooperation between the
United States and the Russian Federation.
Sec. 1234. Modification and extension of Ukraine Security Assistance
Initiative.
Sec. 1235. Extension of authority for training for Eastern European
national security forces in the course of
multilateral exercises.
Sec. 1236. Limitation on transfer of F-35 aircraft to the Republic of
Turkey.
Sec. 1237. Modifications of briefing, notification, and reporting
requirements relating to non-compliance by
the Russian Federation with its obligations
under the INF Treaty.
Sec. 1238. Extension and modification of security assistance for Baltic
nations for joint program for
interoperability and deterrence against
aggression.
Sec. 1239. Report on North Atlantic Treaty Organization Readiness
Initiative.
Sec. 1240. Reports on contributions to the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization.
Sec. 1241. Future years plans for European Deterrence Initiative.
Sec. 1242. Modification of reporting requirements relating to the Open
Skies Treaty.
Sec. 1243. Report on nuclear weapons of the Russian Federation and
nuclear modernization of the People's
Republic of China.
Sec. 1244. Sense of Senate on the 70th anniversary of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Sec. 1245. Sense of Senate on United States force posture in Europe and
the Republic of Poland.
Sec. 1246. Sense of Senate on United States partnership with the
Republic of Georgia.
Subtitle E--Matters Relating to the Indo-Pacific Region
Sec. 1251. Limitation on use of funds to reduce the total number of
members of the Armed Forces in the
territory of the Republic of Korea.
Sec. 1252. Expansion of Indo-Pacific Maritime Security Initiative.
Sec. 1253. Modification of annual report on military and security
developments involving the People's
Republic of China.
Sec. 1254. Report on resourcing United States defense requirements for
the Indo-Pacific region.
Sec. 1255. Report on distributed lay-down of United States forces in
the Indo-Pacific region.
Sec. 1256. Sense of Senate on the United States-Japan alliance and
defense cooperation.
Sec. 1257. Sense of Senate on enhancement of the United States-Taiwan
defense relationship.
Sec. 1258. Sense of Senate on United States-India defense relationship.
Sec. 1259. Sense of Senate on security commitments to the Governments
of Japan and the Republic of Korea and
trilateral cooperation among the United
States, Japan, and the Republic of Korea.
Sec. 1260. Sense of Senate on enhanced cooperation with Pacific Island
countries to establish open-source
intelligence fusion centers in the Indo-
Pacific region.
Sec. 1261. Sense of Senate on enhancing defense and security
cooperation with the Republic of Singapore.
Subtitle F--Reports
Sec. 1271. Report on cost imposition strategy.
Subtitle G--Other Matters
Sec. 1281. NATO Special Operations Headquarters.
Sec. 1282. Modifications of authorities relating to acquisition and
cross-servicing agreements.
Sec. 1283. Modification of authority for United States-Israel anti-
tunnel cooperation activities.
Sec. 1284. United States-Israel cooperation to counter unmanned aerial
systems.
Sec. 1285. Modification of initiative to support protection of national
security academic researchers from undue
influence and other security threats.
Sec. 1286. Independent assessment of human rights situation in
Honduras.
Sec. 1287. United States Central Command posture review.
Sec. 1288. Reports on expenses incurred for in-flight refueling of
Saudi coalition aircraft conducting
missions relating to civil war in Yemen.
Sec. 1289. Sense of Senate on security concerns with respect to leasing
arrangements for the Port of Haifa in
Israel.
TITLE XIII--COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION
Sec. 1301. Funding allocations for Department of Defense Cooperative
Threat Reduction Program.
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.
Subtitle B--National Defense Stockpile
Sec. 1411. Modification of prohibition on acquisition of sensitive
materials from non-allied foreign nations.
Subtitle C--Armed Forces Retirement Home
Sec. 1421. Authorization of appropriations for Armed Forces Retirement
Home.
Sec. 1422. Expansion of eligibility for residence at the Armed Forces
Retirement Home.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
Sec. 1431. 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.
TITLE XV--AUTHORIZATION OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR OVERSEAS
CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
Subtitle A--Authorization of Additional Appropriations
Sec. 1501. Purpose.
Sec. 1502. Overseas contingency operations.
Sec. 1503. Procurement.
Sec. 1504. Research, development, test, and evaluation.
Sec. 1505. Operation and maintenance.
Sec. 1506. Military personnel.
Sec. 1507. Working capital funds.
Sec. 1508. Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide.
Sec. 1509. Defense Inspector General.
Sec. 1510. Defense Health Program.
Subtitle B--Financial Matters
Sec. 1521. Treatment as additional authorizations.
Sec. 1522. Special transfer authority.
TITLE XVI--STRATEGIC PROGRAMS, CYBER, AND INTELLIGENCE MATTERS
Subtitle A--Space Activities
PART I--United States Space Force
Sec. 1601. Assistant Secretary of Defense for Space Policy.
Sec. 1602. Principal Assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force for
Space Acquisition and Integration.
Sec. 1603. Military space forces within the Air Force.
Sec. 1604. Redesignation of Air Force Space Command as United States
Space Force.
Sec. 1605. Assignment of personnel to the National Reconnaissance
Office for mission needs.
Sec. 1606. Report on establishment of position of Under Secretary of
the Air Force for Space.
Sec. 1607. Report on enhanced integration of capabilities of the
National Security Agency, the National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and the
United States Space Command for joint
operations.
Sec. 1608. Limitation on availability of funds.
PART II--Other Space Matters
Sec. 1611. Repeal of requirement to establish Space Command as a
subordinate unified command of the United
States Strategic Command.
Sec. 1612. Program to enhance and improve launch support and
infrastructure.
Sec. 1613. Modification of enhancement of positioning, navigation, and
timing capacity.
Sec. 1614. Modification of term of Commander of Air Force Space
Command.
Sec. 1615. Annual report on Space Command and Control program.
Sec. 1616. Requirements for phase 2 of acquisition strategy for
National Security Space Launch program.
Subtitle B--Defense Intelligence and Intelligence-related Activities
Sec. 1621. Redesignation of Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence
as Under Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence and Security.
Sec. 1622. Repeal of certain requirements relating to integration of
Department of Defense intelligence,
surveillance, and reconnaissance
capabilities.
Sec. 1623. Improving the onboarding methodology for certain
intelligence personnel.
Sec. 1624. Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency activities
on facilitating access to local criminal
records historical data.
Subtitle C--Cyberspace-related Matters
Sec. 1631. Reorientation of Big Data Platform program.
Sec. 1632. Zero-based review of Department of Defense cyber and
information technology personnel.
Sec. 1633. Study on improving cyber career paths in the Navy.
Sec. 1634. Framework to enhance cybersecurity of the United States
defense industrial base.
Sec. 1635. Role of Chief Information Officer in improving enterprise-
wide cybersecurity.
Sec. 1636. Quarterly assessments of the readiness of cyber forces.
Sec. 1637. Control and analysis of Department of Defense data stolen
through cyberspace.
Sec. 1638. Accreditation standards and processes for cybersecurity and
information technology products and
services.
Sec. 1639. Extension of authorities for Cyberspace Solarium Commission.
Sec. 1640. Modification of elements of assessment required for
termination of dual-hat arrangement for
Commander of the United States Cyber
Command.
Sec. 1641. Use of National Security Agency cybersecurity expertise to
support acquisition of commercial
cybersecurity products.
Sec. 1642. Study on future cyber warfighting capabilities of Department
of Defense.
Sec. 1643. Authority to use operation and maintenance funds for cyber
operations-peculiar capability development
projects.
Sec. 1644. Expansion of authority for access and information relating
to cyberattacks on Department of Defense
operationally critical contractors.
Sec. 1645. Briefing on memorandum of understanding relating to joint
operational planning and control of cyber
attacks of national scale.
Sec. 1646. Study to determine the optimal strategy for structuring and
manning elements of the Joint Force
Headquarters-Cyber organizations, Joint
Mission Operations Centers, and Cyber
Operations-Integrated Planning Elements.
Sec. 1647. Cyber governance structures and Principal Cyber Advisors on
military cyber force matters.
Sec. 1648. Designation of test networks for testing and accreditation
of cybersecurity products and services.
Sec. 1649. Consortia of universities to advise Secretary of Defense on
cybersecurity matters.
Subtitle D--Nuclear Forces
Sec. 1661. Modification of authorities relating to nuclear command,
control, and communications system.
Sec. 1662. Expansion of officials required to conduct biennial
assessments of delivery platforms for
nuclear weapons and nuclear command and
control system.
Sec. 1663. Conforming amendment to Council on Oversight of the National
Leadership Command, Control, and
Communications System.
Sec. 1664. Prohibition on reduction of the intercontinental ballistic
missiles of the United States.
Sec. 1665. Briefing on long-range standoff weapon and sea-launched
cruise missile.
Sec. 1666. Sense of the Senate on industrial base for Ground-Based
Strategic Deterrent program.
Sec. 1667. Sense of the Senate on nuclear deterrence commitments of the
United States.
Subtitle E--Missile Defense Programs
Sec. 1671. Iron Dome short-range rocket defense system and Israeli
cooperative missile defense program co-
development and co-production.
Sec. 1672. Expansion of national missile defense policy and program
redesignation.
Sec. 1673. Acceleration of the deployment of persistent space-based
sensor architecture.
Sec. 1674. Nonstandard acquisition processes of Missile Defense Agency.
Sec. 1675. Plan for the Redesigned Kill Vehicle.
Sec. 1676. Report on improving ground-based midcourse defense element
of ballistic missile defense system.
Sec. 1677. Sense of the Senate on recent Missile Defense Agency tests.
Sec. 1678. Sense of the Senate on missile defense technology
development priorities.
Sec. 1679. Publication of environmental impact statement prepared for
certain potential future missile defense
sites.
Subtitle F--Other Matters
Sec. 1681. Matters relating to military operations in the information
environment.
Sec. 1682. Extension of authorization for protection of certain
facilities and assets from unmanned
aircraft.
Sec. 1683. Hard and deeply buried targets.
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. Authorization of appropriations, Army.
Sec. 2104. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2019 project.
TITLE XXII--NAVY MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2201. Authorized Navy construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2202. Family housing.
Sec. 2203. Improvements to military family housing units.
Sec. 2204. Authorization of appropriations, Navy.
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
2015 project.
Sec. 2306. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2016 project.
Sec. 2307. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2017 project.
Sec. 2308. Additional authority to carry out certain fiscal year 2018
projects.
Sec. 2309. Modification of authority to carry out certain fiscal year
2019 projects.
TITLE XXIV--DEFENSE AGENCIES MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2401. Authorized Defense Agencies construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2402. Authorized Energy Resilience and Conservation Investment
Program projects.
Sec. 2403. Authorization of appropriations, Defense Agencies.
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.
TITLE XXVI--GUARD AND RESERVE FORCES FACILITIES
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.
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.
TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Military Construction Program
Sec. 2801. Military installation resilience plans and projects of
Department of Defense.
Sec. 2802. Prohibition on use of funds to reduce air base resiliency or
demolish protected aircraft shelters in the
European theater without creating a similar
protection from attack.
Sec. 2803. Prohibition on use of funds to close or return to the host
nation any existing air base.
Sec. 2804. Increased authority for certain unspecified minor military
construction projects.
Sec. 2805. Technical corrections and improvements to installation
resilience.
Subtitle B--Land Conveyances
Sec. 2811. Release of interests retained in Camp Joseph T. Robinson,
Arkansas, for use of such land as a
veterans cemetery.
Sec. 2812. Transfer of administrative jurisdiction over certain parcels
of Federal land in Arlington, Virginia.
Sec. 2813. Modification of requirements relating to land acquisition in
Arlington County, Virginia.
Sec. 2814. White Sands Missile Range Land Enhancements.
Subtitle C--Other Matters
Sec. 2821. Equal treatment of insured depository institutions and
credit unions operating on military
installations.
Sec. 2822. Expansion of temporary authority for acceptance and use of
contributions for certain construction,
maintenance, and repair projects mutually
beneficial to the Department of Defense and
Kuwait military forces.
Sec. 2823. Designation of Sumpter Smith Joint National Guard Base.
Sec. 2824. Prohibition on use of funds to privatize temporary lodging
on installations of Department of Defense.
Sec. 2825. Pilot program to extend service life of roads and runways
under the jurisdiction of the Secretaries
of the military departments.
TITLE XXIX--OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 2901. Authorized Army construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2902. Authorized Navy construction and land acquisition projects.
Sec. 2903. Authorized Air Force construction and land acquisition
projects.
Sec. 2904. Authorized Defense Agencies construction and land
acquisition projects.
Sec. 2905. Disaster recovery projects.
Sec. 2906. Replenishment of certain military constructions funds.
Sec. 2907. Authorization of appropriations.
TITLE XXX--MILITARY HOUSING PRIVATIZATION REFORM
Sec. 3001. Definitions.
Subtitle A--Accountability and Oversight
Sec. 3011. Tenant bill of rights for privatized military housing.
Sec. 3012. Designation of Chief Housing Officer for privatized military
housing.
Sec. 3013. Command oversight of military privatized housing as element
of performance evaluations.
Sec. 3014. Consideration of history of landlord in contract renewal
process for privatized military housing.
Sec. 3015. Treatment of breach of contract for privatized military
housing.
Sec. 3016. Uniform code of basic standards for privatized military
housing and plan to conduct inspections and
assessments.
Sec. 3017. Repeal of supplemental payments to lessors and requirement
for use of funds in connection with the
Military Housing Privatization Initiative.
Sec. 3018. Standard for common credentials for health and environmental
inspectors of privatized military housing.
Sec. 3019. Improvement of privatized military housing.
Sec. 3020. Access to maintenance work order system of landlords of
privatized military housing.
Sec. 3021. Access by tenants of privatized military housing to work
order system of landlord.
Subtitle B--Prioritizing Families
Sec. 3031. Dispute resolution process for landlord-tenant disputes
regarding privatized military housing and
requests to withhold payments.
Sec. 3032. Suspension of Resident Energy Conservation Program.
Sec. 3033. Access by tenants to historical maintenance information for
privatized military housing.
Sec. 3034. Prohibition on use of call centers outside the United States
for maintenance calls by tenants of
privatized military housing.
Sec. 3035. Radon testing for privatized military housing.
Sec. 3036. Expansion of windows covered by requirement to use window
fall prevention devices in privatized
military housing.
Sec. 3037. Requirements relating to move out and maintenance with
respect to privatized military housing.
Subtitle C--Long-Term Quality Assurance
Sec. 3041. Development of standardized documentation, templates, and
forms for privatized military housing.
Sec. 3042. Council on privatized military housing.
Sec. 3043. Requirements relating to management of privatized military
housing.
Sec. 3044. Requirements relating to contracts for privatized military
housing.
Sec. 3045. Withholding of incentive fees for landlords of privatized
military housing for failure to remedy a
health or environmental hazard.
Sec. 3046. Expansion of direct hire authority for Department of Defense
for childcare services providers for
Department child development centers to
include direct hire authority for
installation military housing office
personnel.
Sec. 3047. Plan on establishment of Department of Defense jurisdiction
over off-base privatized military housing.
Subtitle D--Other Housing Matters
Sec. 3051. Lead-based paint testing and reporting.
Sec. 3052. Satisfaction survey for tenants of military housing.
Sec. 3053. Information on legal services provided to members of the
Armed Forces harmed by health or
environmental hazards at military housing.
Sec. 3054. Mitigation of risks posed by certain items in military
family housing units.
Sec. 3055. Technical correction to certain payments for lessors of
privatized military housing.
Sec. 3056. Pilot program to build and monitor use of single family
homes.
DIVISION C--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY AUTHORIZATIONS AND
OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE XXXI--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
Subtitle A--National Security Programs and 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. Technical corrections to National Nuclear Security
Administration Act and Atomic Energy
Defense Act.
Sec. 3112. National Nuclear Security Administration Personnel System.
Sec. 3113. Contracting, program management, scientific, engineering,
and technical positions at National Nuclear
Security Administration.
Sec. 3114. Prohibition on use of laboratory-directed research and
development funds for general and
administrative overhead costs.
Sec. 3115. Prohibition on use of funds for advanced naval nuclear fuel
system based on low-enriched uranium.
Subtitle C--Plans and Reports
Sec. 3121. Estimation of costs of meeting defense environmental cleanup
milestones required by consent orders.
Sec. 3122. Extension of suspension of certain assessments relating to
nuclear weapons stockpile.
Sec. 3123. Repeal of requirement for review relating to enhanced
procurement authority.
Sec. 3124. Determination of effect of treaty obligations with respect
to producing tritium.
Sec. 3125. Assessment of high energy density physics.
TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD
Sec. 3201. Authorization.
Sec. 3202. Improvement of management and organization of Defense
Nuclear Facilities Safety Board.
Sec. 3203. Membership of Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board.
TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION
Sec. 3501. Maritime Administration.
DIVISION D--FUNDING TABLES
Sec. 4001. Authorization of amounts in funding tables.
TITLE XLI--PROCUREMENT
Sec. 4101. Procurement.
Sec. 4102. Procurement for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLII--RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION
Sec. 4201. Research, development, test, and evaluation.
Sec. 4202. Research, development, test, and evaluation for overseas
contingency operations.
TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Sec. 4301. Operation and maintenance.
Sec. 4302. Operation and maintenance for overseas contingency
operations.
TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL
Sec. 4401. Military personnel.
Sec. 4402. Military personnel for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
Sec. 4501. Other authorizations.
Sec. 4502. Other authorizations for overseas contingency operations.
TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
Sec. 4601. Military construction.
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.
SEC. 4. BUDGETARY EFFECTS OF THIS ACT.
The budgetary effects of this Act, for the purposes of complying
with the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010, shall be determined by
reference to the latest statement titled ``Budgetary Effects of PAYGO
Legislation'' for this Act, jointly submitted for printing in the
Congressional Record by the Chairmen of the House and Senate Budget
Committees, provided that such statement has been submitted prior to
the vote on passage in the House acting first on the conference report
or amendment between the Houses.
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 2020
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. SENSE OF SENATE ON ARMY'S APPROACH TO CAPABILITY DROPS 1 AND
2 OF THE DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND SYSTEM-ARMY PROGRAM.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the Senate approves of the approach of the Army to
Capability Drops 1 and 2 of the Distributed Common Ground
System-Army program, which has been in compliance with section
2377 of title 10, United States Code; and
(2) the Senate encourages the Under Secretary of Defense
for Acquisition and Sustainment and other military departments
and commands in the Department of Defense to review the efforts
of the Army with Capability Drops 1 and 2 to inform future
decisions about how to integrate commercial technology into the
Distributed Common Ground System Enterprise and other national
security systems.
SEC. 112. AUTHORITY OF THE SECRETARY OF THE ARMY TO WAIVE CERTAIN
LIMITATIONS RELATED TO THE DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND
SYSTEM-ARMY INCREMENT 1.
Section 113(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2028) is amended by striking
``Secretary of Defense'' both places it appears and inserting
``Secretary of the Army''.
Subtitle C--Navy Programs
SEC. 121. MODIFICATION OF PROHIBITION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR NAVY
WATERBORNE SECURITY BARRIERS.
Section 130 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended--
(1) in subsection (a) by striking ``for fiscal year 2019
may be obligated or expended to procure legacy waterborne
security barriers for Navy ports'' and inserting ``for fiscal
year 2019 or fiscal year 2020 may be obligated or expended to
procure legacy waterborne security barriers for Navy ports,
including as replacements for legacy barriers''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(d) Notification.--Not later than 15 days after an exception is
made pursuant to subsection (c)(2), the Secretary of the Navy shall
submit a written notification to the congressional defense committees
that includes--
``(1) the name and position of the government official who
determined exigent circumstances exist;
``(2) a description of the exigent circumstances; and
``(3) a description of how waterborne security will be
maintained until new waterborne security barriers are procured
and installed.''.
SEC. 122. CAPABILITIES BASED ASSESSMENT FOR NAVAL VESSELS THAT CARRY
FIXED-WING AIRCRAFT.
(a) In General.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Navy shall initiate a
capabilities based assessment to begin the process of identifying
requirements for the naval vessels that will carry fixed-wing aircraft
following the ships designated CVN-81 and LHA-9.
(b) Elements.--The assessment shall--
(1) conform with the Joint Capabilities Integration and
Development System, including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff Instruction 5123.01H; and
(2) consider options for the vessels described under
subsection (a) that would enable greater commonality and
interoperability of naval aircraft embarked on such naval
vessels, including aircraft arresting gear and launch
catapults.
(c) Notification Requirement.--Not later than 15 days after
initiating the assessment required under subsection (a), the Secretary
of the Navy shall notify the congressional defense committees of such
action and the associated schedule for completing the assessment and
generating an Initial Capabilities Document.
SEC. 123. FORD-CLASS AIRCRAFT CARRIER COST LIMITATION BASELINES.
(a) In General.--Chapter 633 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 8692. Ford-class aircraft carrier cost limitation baselines
``(a) Limitation.--The total amounts obligated or expended from
funds authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made available for
Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, or for any other procurement
account, may not exceed the following amounts for the following
aircraft carriers:
``(1) $13,027,000,000 for the construction of the aircraft
carrier designated CVN-78.
``(2) $11,398,000,000 for the construction of the aircraft
carrier designated CVN-79.
``(3) $12,202,000,000 for the construction of the aircraft
carrier designated CVN-80.
``(4) $12,451,000,000 for the construction of the aircraft
carrier designated CVN-81.
``(b) Adjustment of Limitation Amount.--The Secretary of the Navy
may adjust an amount set forth in subsection (a) by the following:
``(1) The amounts of increases or decreases in costs
attributable to economic inflation after September 30, 2019.
``(2) The amounts of increases or decreases in costs
attributable to compliance with changes in Federal, State, or
local laws enacted after September 30, 2019.
``(3) The amounts of outfitting costs and post-delivery
costs incurred for that ship.
``(4) The amounts of increases or decreases in costs of
that ship that are attributable to insertion of new technology
into that ship, as compared to the technology baseline as it
was defined prior to October 1, 2019.
``(5) The amounts of increases or decreases to cost
required to correct deficiencies that may affect the safety of
the ship and personnel or otherwise preclude the ship from safe
operations and crew certification.
``(6) With respect to the aircraft carrier designated as
CVN-78, the amounts of increases or decreases in costs of that
ship that are attributable solely to an urgent and unforeseen
requirement identified as a result of the shipboard test
program.
``(7) With respect to the aircraft carrier designated as
CVN-79, the amounts of increases not exceeding $100,000,000 if
the Chief of Naval Operations determines that achieving the
amount set forth in subsection (a)(2) would result in
unacceptable reductions to the operational capability of the
ship.
``(c) Limitation on Technology Insertion Cost Adjustment.--The
Secretary of the Navy may use the authority under paragraph (4) of
subsection (b) to adjust the amount set forth in subsection (a) for a
ship referred to in that subsection with respect to insertion of new
technology into that ship only if--
``(1) the Secretary determines, and certifies to the
congressional defense committees, that insertion of the new
technology would lower the life-cycle cost of the ship; or
``(2) the Secretary determines, and certifies to the
congressional defense committees, that insertion of the new
technology is required to meet an emerging threat and the
Secretary of Defense certifies to those committees that such
threat poses grave harm to national security.
``(d) Limitation on Shipboard Test Program Cost Adjustment.--The
Secretary of the Navy may use the authority under paragraph (6) of
subsection (b) to adjust the amount set forth in subsection (a) for the
aircraft carrier designated CVN-78 for reasons relating to an urgent
and unforeseen requirement identified as a result of the shipboard test
program only if--
``(1) the Secretary determines, and certifies to the
congressional defense committees, that such requirement was not
known before the date of the submittal to Congress of the
budget for fiscal year 2020 (as submitted pursuant to section
1105 of title 31, United States Code);
``(2) the Secretary determines, and certifies to the
congressional defense committees, that waiting on an action by
Congress to raise the cost cap specified in subsection (a)(1)
to account for such requirement will result in a delay in the
date of initial operating capability of that ship; and
``(3) the Secretary submits to the congressional defense
committees a report setting forth a description of such
requirement before the obligation of additional funds pursuant
to such authority.
``(e) Exclusion of Battle and Interim Spares From Cost
Limitation.--The Secretary of the Navy shall exclude from the
determination of the amounts set forth in subsection (a), the costs of
the following items:
``(1) CVN-78 class battle spares.
``(2) Interim spares.
``(f) Written Notice of Change in Amount.--The Secretary of the
Navy shall submit to the congressional defense committees written
notice of any change in the amount set forth in subsection (a)
determined to be associated with a cost covered in subsection (b) not
less than 30 days prior to making such change.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such chapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to section
8691 the following new item:
``Sec. 8692. Ford-class aircraft carrier cost limitation baselines.''.
(c) Repeal of Superseded Provision.--Section 122 of the John Warner
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law
109-364; 120 Stat. 2104) is repealed.
SEC. 124. DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF AMPHIBIOUS TRANSPORT DOCK
DESIGNATED LPD-31.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of the Navy may enter into a
contract for the design and construction of the amphibious transport
dock designated LPD-31 using amounts authorized to be appropriated for
the Department of Defense for Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy.
(b) Use of Incremental Funding.--With respect to the contract
entered into under subsection (a), the Secretary may use incremental
funding to make payments under the contract with amounts authorized to
be appropriated in fiscal years 2019, 2020, and 2021.
(c) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--The contract
entered into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of
the United States to make a payment under such contract for any fiscal
year after fiscal year 2020 is subject to the availability of
appropriations for that purpose for such fiscal year.
SEC. 125. LHA REPLACEMENT AMPHIBIOUS ASSAULT SHIP PROGRAM.
(a) Authority to Use Incremental Funding.--The Secretary of the
Navy may enter into and incrementally fund a contract for detail design
and construction of the LHA replacement ship designated LHA 9 and,
subject to subsection (b), funds for payments under the contract may be
provided from amounts authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy, for fiscal years 2019
through 2025.
(b) Condition for Out-year Contract Payments.--A contract entered
into under subsection (a) shall provide that any obligation of the
United States to make a payment under the contract for any subsequent
fiscal year is subject to the availability of appropriations for that
purpose for such subsequent fiscal year.
(c) Repeal of Obsolete Authority.--Section 125 of the John Warner
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 (Public Law
109-364; 120 Stat. 2106) is repealed.
SEC. 126. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR THE LITTORAL COMBAT
SHIP.
(a) Limitation.--None of the amounts authorized to be appropriated
by this Act or otherwise made available for the Department of Defense
for fiscal year 2020 may be used to exceed the total procurement
quantity listed in revision five of the Littoral Combat Ship
acquisition strategy unless the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment submits to the congressional defense
committees the certification described in subsection (b).
(b) Certification.--The certification described in this subsection
is a certification by the Under Secretary that awarding a contract for
the procurement of a Littoral Combat Ship that exceeds the total
procurement quantity listed in revision five of the Littoral Combat
Ship acquisition strategy--
(1) is in the national security interests of the United
States;
(2) will not result in exceeding the low-rate initial
production quantity approved in the Littoral Combat Ship
acquisition strategy in effect as of the date of the
certification; and
(3) is necessary to maintain a full and open competition
for the Guided Missile Frigate (FFG(X)) with a single source
award in fiscal year 2020.
(c) Definition.--The term ``revision five of the Littoral Combat
Ship acquisition strategy'' means the fifth revision of the Littoral
Combat Ship acquisition strategy approved by the Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment on March 26, 2018.
SEC. 127. LIMITATION ON THE NEXT NEW CLASS OF NAVY LARGE SURFACE
COMBATANTS.
(a) In General.--Milestone B approval may not be granted for the
next new class of Navy large surface combatants unless the class of
Navy large surface combatants incorporates prior to such approval--
(1) design changes identified during the full duration of
the combat system ship qualification trials and operational
test periods of the first Arleigh Burke-class destroyer in the
Flight III configuration to complete such events; and
(2) final results of test programs of engineering
development models or prototypes for critical systems specified
by the Senior Technical Authority pursuant to section 8669b of
title 10, United States Code, as added by section 1017 of this
Act, in their final form, fit, and function and in a realistic
environment, which shall include a land-based engineering site
if the propulsion system will utilize integrated electric power
technology, including electric drive propulsion.
(b) Limitation.--The Secretary of the Navy may not release a detail
design or construction request for proposals or obligate funds from the
Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy account for the next new class of
Navy large surface combatants until the class of Navy large surface
combatants receives Milestone B approval and the milestone decision
authority notifies the congressional defense committees, in writing, of
the actions taken to comply with the requirements under subsection (a).
(c) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) The term ``Milestone B approval'' has the meaning given
the term in section 2366(e)(7) of title 10, United States Code.
(2) The term ``milestone decision authority'' means the
official within the Department of Defense designated with the
overall responsibility and authority for acquisition decisions
for the program, including authority to approve entry of the
program into the next phase of the acquisition process.
(3) The term ``large surface combatants'' means Navy
surface ships that are designed primarily to engage in attacks
against airborne, surface, subsurface, and shore targets,
excluding frigates and littoral combat ships.
SEC. 128. REFUELING AND COMPLEX OVERHAULS OF THE U.S.S. JOHN C. STENNIS
AND U.S.S. HARRY S. TRUMAN.
(a) Refueling and Complex Overhaul.--The Secretary of the Navy
shall carry out the nuclear refueling and complex overhaul of the
U.S.S. John C. Stennis (CVN-74) and U.S.S. Harry S. Truman (CVN-75).
(b) Use of Incremental Funding.--With respect to any contract
entered into under subsection (a) for the nuclear refueling and complex
overhauls of the U.S.S. John C. Stennis (CVN-74) and U.S.S. Harry S.
Truman (CVN-75), 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 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 2020 is subject to the availability of appropriations
for that purpose for that later fiscal year.
SEC. 129. REPORT ON CARRIER WING COMPOSITION.
(a) In General.--Not later than May 1, 2020, the Secretary of the
Navy shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report on
the optimal composition of the carrier air wing in 2030 and 2040,
including alternative force design concepts.
(b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a) shall
include the following elements:
(1) Analysis and justification for the Navy's stated goal
of a 50/50 mix of 4th and 5th generation aircraft for 2030.
(2) Analysis and justification for an optimal mix of
carrier aircraft for 2040.
(3) A plan for incorporating unmanned aerial vehicles and
associated communication capabilities to effectively implement
the future force design.
(c) Briefing.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the Secretary of the
Navy shall provide the congressional defense committees a briefing on
the report required under subsection (a).
Subtitle D--Air Force Programs
SEC. 141. REQUIREMENT TO ALIGN AIR FORCE FIGHTER FORCE STRUCTURE WITH
NATIONAL DEFENSE STRATEGY AND REPORTS.
(a) Required Submission of Strategy.--Not later than March 1, 2020,
the Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a fighter force structure acquisition strategy that
is aligned with the results of the reports submitted under subtitle D
of title I of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2018 (Public Law 115-91) and the Air Force's stated requirements to
meet the National Defense Strategy.
(b) Alignment With Strategy.--The Secretary of the Air Force may
not deviate from the strategy submitted under subsection (a) until--
(1) the Secretary receives a waiver and justification from
the Secretary of Defense; and
(2) 30 days after notifying the congressional defense
committees of the proposed deviation.
SEC. 142. REQUIREMENT TO ESTABLISH THE USE OF AN AGILE DEVOPS SOFTWARE
DEVELOPMENT SOLUTION AS AN ALTERNATIVE FOR JOINT STRIKE
FIGHTER AUTONOMIC LOGISTICS INFORMATION SYSTEM.
(a) Establishment of an Alternative Agile DevOps Software
Development Program.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish a
software development activity using Agile DevOps to create an
alternative solution for the Joint Strike Fighter Autonomic Logistics
Information System (ALIS).
(b) Competitive Analysis.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out
a competitive analysis of the efforts between Autonomic Logistics
Information System, Autonomic Logistics Information System-Next, and
Madhatter, including with respect to transition opportunities and
timelines.
(c) Briefing.--Not later than September 30, 2020, the Secretary of
Defense, in consultation with the Secretary of the Air Force, shall
provide the congressional defense committees a briefing on the findings
of the Secretary of Defense with respect to the competitive analysis
carried out under subsection (b).
SEC. 143. REPORT ON FEASIBILITY OF MULTIYEAR CONTRACT FOR PROCUREMENT
OF JASSM-ER MISSILES.
(a) In General.--Not later than March 31, 2020, the Secretary of
the Air Force shall submit a report to the congressional defense
committees assessing the feasibility of entering into a multiyear
contract for procurement of JASSM-ER missiles starting in fiscal year
2022.
(b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a) shall
include the following elements:
(1) An initial assessment of cost savings to the Air Force
from a multiyear contract.
(2) An analysis of at least two different multiyear
contract options that vary in either duration or quantity, at
least one of which assumes a maximum procurement of 550
missiles per year for 5 years.
(3) An assessment of how a multiyear contract will impact
the industrial base.
(4) An assessment of how a multiyear contract will impact
the Long Range Anti-Ship Missile.
(5) An assessment of how a multiyear contract will impact
the ability of the Air Force to develop additional capabilities
for the JASSM-ER missile.
SEC. 144. AIR FORCE AGGRESSOR SQUADRON MODERNIZATION.
(a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) it is critical that the Air Force has the capability to
train against an advanced air adversary in order to be prepared
for conflicts against a modern enemy force, and that in order
to have this capability, the Air Force must have access to an
advanced adversary force prior to United States adversaries
fielding a 5th-generation operational capability; and
(2) the Air Force's plan to use low-rate initial production
F-35As as aggressor aircraft reflects a recognition of the need
to field a modernized aggressor fleet.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of the Air Force may not
transfer any low-rate initial production F-35 aircraft for use
as aggressor aircraft until the Chief of Staff of the Air Force
submits to the congressional defense committees a comprehensive
plan and report on the strategy for modernizing its organic
aggressor fleet.
(2) Elements.--The report required under paragraph (1)
shall include the following elements:
(A) Potential locations for F-35A aggressor
aircraft, including an analysis of installations that--
(i) have the size and availability of
airspace necessary to meet flying operations
requirements;
(ii) have sufficient capacity and
availability of range space;
(iii) are capable of hosting advanced-
threat training exercises; and
(iv) meet or require minimal addition to
the environmental requirements associated with
the basing action.
(B) An analysis of the potential cost and benefits
of expanding aggressor squadrons currently operating 18
Primary Assigned Aircraft (PAA) to a level of 24 PAA
each.
(C) An analysis of the cost and timelines
associated with modernizing the current Air Force
aggressor squadrons to include upgrading aircraft
radar, infrared search-and-track systems, radar warning
receiver, tactical datalink, threat-representative
jamming pods, and other upgrades necessary to provide a
realistic advanced adversary threat.
SEC. 145. AIR FORCE PLAN FOR COMBAT RESCUE HELICOPTER FIELDING.
(a) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that, given
delays to Operational Loss Replacement (OLR) program fielding and the
on-time fielding of Combat Rescue Helicopter (CRH), the Air National
Guard should retain additional HH-60G helicopters at Air National Guard
locations to meet their recommended primary aircraft authorized (PAA)
per the Air Force's June 2018 report on Air National Guard HH-60
requirements.
(b) Report on Fielding Plan.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 45 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 on its
fielding plan for the CRH program.
(2) Elements.--The report required under paragraph (1)
shall include the following elements:
(A) A description of the differences in
capabilities between the HH-60G, OLR, and CRH
helicopters.
(B) A description of the costs and risks associated
with changing the CRH fielding plan to reduce or
eliminate inventory shortfalls.
(C) A description of the measures for accelerating
the program available within the current contract.
(D) A description of the operational risks and
benefits associated with fielding the CRH to the active
component first, including--
(i) how the differing fielding plan may
affect deployment schedules;
(ii) what capabilities active-component
units deploying with the CRH will have that
reserve component units deploying with OLR will
not; and
(iii) an analysis of the potential costs
and benefits that could result from
accelerating CRH fielding to all units through
additional funding in the future years defense
program.
(c) Report on Training Plan.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 45 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 on the
plan to sustain training for initial-entry reserve component
HH-60G pilots once the active component of the Air Force has
received all of its CRH helicopters.
(2) Elements.--The report required under paragraph (1)
shall include the following elements:
(A) Projected reserve component aircrew initial HH-
60G/OLR qualification training requirements, by year.
(B) The number of legacy HH-60G/OLR helicopters
required to continue providing initial HH-60G
qualification training through the 150th Special
Operations Wing at Kirtland Air Force Base.
(C) The number of personnel required to continue
providing initial HH-60G/OLR qualification training
through the 150th Special Operations Wing at Kirtland
Air Force Base.
(D) The number of flying hours required per pilot
to perform ``differences training'' at home station for
initial entry HH-60 pilots receiving CRH training at
Kirtland Air Force Base to become qualified in the HH-
60G/OLR at their home station.
(E) The projected effect of using local flying
training hours at reserve component units on overall
unit training readiness and ability to meet Ready
Aircrew Program requirements.
SEC. 146. MILITARY TYPE CERTIFICATION FOR AT-6 AND A-29 LIGHT ATTACK
EXPERIMENTATION AIRCRAFT.
The Secretary of the Air Force shall conduct a military type
certification for the AT-6 and A-29 light attack experimentation
aircraft pursuant to the DoD Directive on Military Type Certificates,
5030.61.
Subtitle E--Defense-wide, Joint, and Multiservice Matters
SEC. 151. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS FOR COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS LACKING CERTAIN RESILIENCY FEATURES.
(a) In General.--Except as provided under 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 2020 may be
used for the procurement of a current or future Department of Defense
communication program of record unless the communications equipment--
(1) provides the ability to deny geolocation of a
transmission that would allow enemy targeting of the force;
(2) provides the ability to securely communicate classified
information in a jamming environment of like-echelon forces;
and
(3) utilizes a waveform that is made available in the
Department of Defense Waveform Information Repository.
(b) Waiver.--The Secretary of a military department may waive the
requirement under subsection (a) with respect to a communications
system upon certifying to the congressional defense committees that the
system will not require resiliency due to its expected use.
SEC. 152. F-35 SUSTAINMENT COST.
(a) Quarterly Report.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment shall include in the quarterly report
required under section 155 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232)--
(1) sustainment cost data related to the F-35 program,
including a comparison in itemized format of the cost of legacy
aircraft and the cost of the F-35 program, based on a
standardized set of criteria; and
(2) a progress report on the extent to which the goals
developed pursuant to subsection (b) are being achieved.
(b) Cost Reduction Plan.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment shall develop a plan for achieving
significant reductions in the cost to operate and maintain the
F-35 aircraft.
(2) Elements.--The plan required under paragraph (1) shall
include the following elements:
(A) Specific changes in the management of operation
and support (O&S) cost to engender continuous process
improvement.
(B) Specific actions the Department will implement
in the near term to reduce O&S cost.
(C) Concrete timelines for implementing the
specific actions and process changes.
(3) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Under Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the baseline plan
for achieving operation and support cost savings.
SEC. 153. ECONOMIC ORDER QUANTITY CONTRACTING AUTHORITY FOR F-35 JOINT
STRIKE FIGHTER PROGRAM.
The Secretary of Defense is authorized to award multiyear contracts
for the procurement of F-35 aircraft in economic order quantities for
fiscal year 2021 (Lot 15) through fiscal year 2023 (Lot 17).
SEC. 154. REPEAL OF TACTICAL UNMANNED VEHICLE COMMON DATA LINK
REQUIREMENT.
Section 141 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2006 (Public Law 109-163; 119 Stat. 3163) is hereby repealed.
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 2020
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. DEVELOPMENT AND ACQUISITION STRATEGY TO PROCURE SECURE, LOW
PROBABILITY OF DETECTION DATA LINK NETWORK CAPABILITY.
(a) Strategy Required.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the Chief of
Staff of the Air Force and Chief of Naval Operations shall jointly
submit to the congressional defense committees a joint development and
acquisition strategy to procure a secure, low probability of detection
data link network capability, with the ability to effectively operate
in hostile jamming environments while preserving the low observability
characteristics of the relevant platforms, including both existing and
planned platforms.
(b) Network Characteristics.--The data link network capability to
be procured pursuant to the development and acquisition strategy
submitted under subsection (a) shall--
(1) ensure that any network made with such capability will
be low risk and affordable, with minimal impact or change to
existing host platforms and minimal overall integration costs;
(2) use a non-proprietary and open systems approach
compatible with the Rapid Capabilities Office Open Mission
Systems initiative of the Air Force and the Future Airborne
Capability Environment initiative of the Navy; and
(3) provide for an architecture to connect, with
operationally relevant throughput and latency--
(A) fifth-generation combat aircraft;
(B) fifth-generation and fourth-generation combat
aircraft;
(C) fifth-generation and fourth-generation combat
aircraft and appropriate support aircraft and other
network nodes for command, control, communications,
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance
purposes; and
(D) fifth-generation and fourth-generation combat
aircraft and their associated network-enabled precision
weapons.
(c) Limitation.--Of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this
Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year 2020 for operation and
maintenance for the Office of the Secretary of the Air Force and for
operations and maintenance for the Office of the Secretary of the Navy,
not more than 50 percent may be obligated or expended until the date
that is 15 days after the date on which the Chief of Staff of the Air
Force and Chief of Naval Operations submit the development and
acquisition strategy required by subsection (a).
SEC. 212. ESTABLISHMENT OF SECURE NEXT-GENERATION WIRELESS NETWORK (5G)
INFRASTRUCTURE FOR THE NEVADA TEST AND TRAINING RANGE AND
BASE INFRASTRUCTURE.
(a) Establishment Required.--Not later than one year after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish
secure fifth-generation wireless network components and capabilities at
no fewer than two Department of Defense installations in accordance
with this section.
(b) First Installation.--
(1) Location.--The Secretary shall establish components and
capabilities under subsection (a) at the Nevada Test and
Training Range, which shall serve as the Department's Major
Range and Test Facility Base (MRTFB) for fifth-generation
wireless networking.
(2) Objective.--The Secretary shall ensure that the
establishment of components and capabilities under subsection
(a) at the range described in paragraph (1) of this subsection
will allow the Department to explore and demonstrate the
utility of using fifth-generation wireless networking
technology to enhance combat operations.
(3) Purpose.--The purpose of the establishment of
components and capabilities under subsection (a) at the range
described in paragraph (1) of this subsection is to demonstrate
the following:
(A) The potential military utility of high
bandwidth, scalable, and low latency fifth-generation
wireless networking technology.
(B) Advanced security technology that is applicable
to fifth-generation networks as well as legacy
Department command and control networks.
(C) Secure interoperability with fixed and wireless
systems (legacy and future systems).
(D) Enhancements such as spectrum and waveform
diversity, frequency hopping and spreading, and beam
forming for military requirements.
(E) Technology for dynamic network slicing for
specific use cases and applications requiring varying
levels of latency, scale, and throughput.
(F) Technology for dynamic spectrum sharing and
network isolation.
(c) Second and Additional Installations.--
(1) Location.--The location of the second and any
additional installations for establishment of components and
capabilities under subsection (a) shall be at such Department
installation or installations as the Secretary considers
appropriate for the purpose set forth in paragraph (2) of this
subsection.
(2) Purposes.--The purpose of the second and any additional
installations for establishment of components and capabilities
under subsection (a) is to explore and demonstrate
infrastructure implementations of the following:
(A) Base infrastructure installation of high
bandwidth, scalable, and low latency fifth-generation
wireless networking technology.
(B) Applications for secure fifth-generation
wireless network capabilities for the Department, such
as the following:
(i) Interactive augmented reality or
synthetic training environments.
(ii) Internet of things devices.
(iii) Autonomous systems.
(iv) Advanced manufacturing through the
following:
(I) Department-sponsored centers
for manufacturing innovation (as
defined in section 34(c) of the
National Institute of Standards and
Technology Act (15 U.S.C. 278s(c))).
(II) Department research and
development organizations.
(III) Manufacturers in the defense
industrial base of the United States.
SEC. 213. LIMITATION AND REPORT ON INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION CAPABILITY
INCREMENT 2 ENDURING CAPABILITY.
(a) Limitation and Report.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated by this Act or otherwise made available for fiscal year
2020 for the Army may be obligated or expended for research,
development, test, and evaluation for the Indirect Fire Protection
Capability Increment 2 enduring capability until the Secretary of the
Army submits to the congressional defense committees a report on the
Indirect Fire Protection Capability Increment 2 program that contains
the following:
(1) An assessment of whether the requirements previously
established for the program meet the anticipated threat at the
time of planned initial operating capability and fully
operating capability.
(2) A list of candidate systems considered to meet the
Indirect Fire Protection Capability Increment 2 requirement,
including those fielded or in development by the Army, the
Missile Defense Agency, and other elements of the Department of
Defense.
(3) An assessment of each candidate system's capability
against representative threats.
(4) An assessment of other relevant specifications of each
candidate system, including cost of development, cost per round
if applicable, technological maturity, and logistics and
sustainment.
(5) A plan for how the Army will integrate the chosen
system or systems into the Integrated Air and Missile Defense
Battle Command System.
(b) Certification Required.--Not later than 10 days after the date
on which the President submits the annual budget request of the
President for fiscal year 2021 pursuant to section 1105 of title 31,
United States Code, the Secretary of the Army shall, without
delegation, submit to the congressional defense committees a
certification that identifies a program of record contained within that
budget request that will meet the requirement in Department of Defense
Directive 5100.01 to conduct air and missile defense to support joint
campaigns as it applies to defense against supersonic cruise missiles.
SEC. 214. ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM SHARING RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAM.
(a) Program Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense, in
consultation with the Administrator of the National Telecommunications
and Information Administration, and the Federal Communications
Commission shall jointly establish an electromagnetic spectrum sharing
research and development program to promote the establishment of
innovative technologies and techniques to facilitate electromagnetic
spectrum sharing between fifth-generation wireless networking
technologies, Federal systems, and other non-Federal incumbent systems.
(b) Establishment of Test Beds.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary, in coordination with
the Administrator and the Commission, shall, as part of the
program established under subsection (a), establish at least
two test beds to demonstrate the potential for cohabitation
between fifth-generation wireless networking technologies,
other incumbent non-Federal systems, and Federal systems.
(2) Co-location of test beds.--The test beds established
under paragraph (1) may be co-located, if a single geographic
location can provide a sufficient diversity of Federal systems.
If not, test beds established under this subsection shall
coordinate to share results and best practices identified in
each location.
(c) Development of Department of Defense Integrated Spectrum
Automation Enterprise Strategy.--
(1) In general.--Not later than May 1, 2020, the Secretary
and the Administrator of the National Telecommunications and
Information Administration, in consultation with the Federal
Communications Commission, shall jointly propose an integrated
spectrum automation enterprise strategy for the Department of
Defense to address management of electromagnetic spectrum,
including both Federal and non-Federal spectrum that is shared
by the Department of Defense or could be used for national
security missions in the future, including on a shared basis.
(2) Matters encompassed.--The strategy developed under
subparagraph (A) shall encompass cloud-based databases,
artificial intelligence, system certification processes, public
facing application programming interfaces and online tools, and
electromagnetic spectrum compatibility analyses for sharing of
electromagnetic spectrum.
(d) Periodic Briefings.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act and not less frequently than once every 180
days thereafter until the Secretary submits the report required by
subsection (e), the Secretary, in consultation with the Administrator
and the Commission, shall brief the appropriate committees of Congress
on the progress of the test beds established under subsection (b).
(e) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than October 1, 2022, the
Secretary, in consultation with the Administrator and the
Commission, shall submit to the appropriate committees of
Congress a report on the results of the test beds established
under subsection (b).
(2) Recommendations.--The report submitted under paragraph
(1) shall include recommendations to facilitate sharing
frameworks in the bands of electromagnetic spectrum that are
the subject of the test beds.
(f) Appropriate Committees of Congress.--In this subsection, the
term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
Energy and Commerce of the House of Representatives.
SEC. 215. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON THE ADVANCED BATTLE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the Senate supports the vision of the Air Force for the
Advanced Battle Management System (ABMS) as a system of systems
that can integrate air, space, and other systems to detect,
track, target, and direct effects against threats in all
domains;
(2) such a capability will be essential to the ability of
the Air Force to operate effectively as part, and in support,
of the Joint Force, especially in the highly-contested
operating environments established by near-peer competitors;
(3) the Senate is concerned that the Air Force has not
moved quickly enough over the past year to begin defining the
requirements and maturing the technologies that will be
essential for the Advanced Battle Management System, especially
in light of the pending retirement of the Joint Surveillance
and Target Attack Radar System (JSTARS) aircraft that the
Advanced Battle Management System is conceived, in part, to
replace;
(4) the Senate understands that the Air Force is moving
deliberately to analyze alternative concepts for the Advanced
Battle Management System and adopt an architectural approach to
its design;
(5) the Advanced Battle Management System, as a multidomain
system of systems, must have a central command and control
capability that can integrate these systems into a unified
warfighting capability;
(6) emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence
and automated sensor fusion, should be built into the command
and control capability for the Advanced Battle Management
System from the start;
(7) such technologies would improve the ability of the
Advanced Battle Management System to support human operators
with--
(A) the rapid processing and fusion of multidomain
sensor data;
(B) the highly-automated identification,
classification, tracking, and targeting of threats in
all domains;
(C) the creation of a real-time common operating
picture from multidomain intelligence; and the ability
to direct effects on the battlefield at machine-to-
machine speeds from all of the systems comprising the
Advanced Battle Management System; and
(8) for an effort as ambitious and complex as the Advanced
Battle Management System, the Senate encourages the Air Force
to use existing acquisition authorities to begin a rapid
prototyping effort to refine the requirements and software-
intensive technologies that will be integral to the command and
control capability of the Advanced Battle Management System.
SEC. 216. MODIFICATION OF PROOF OF CONCEPT COMMERCIALIZATION PROGRAM.
(a) Making the Program Permanent.--
(1) In general.--Section 1603 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 113-66; 10
U.S.C. 2359 note) is amended by striking subsection (g).
(2) Conforming amendments.--Such section is further
amended--
(A) in the section heading, by striking ``pilot'';
(B) in subsection (a)--
(i) by striking ``Pilot''; and
(ii) by striking ``Pilot''; and
(C) by striking ``pilot'' each place it appears.
(b) Additional Improvements.--Such section, as amended by
subsection (a), is further amended--
(1) in the section heading, by inserting ``of dual-use
technology'' after ``commercialization'';
(2) in subsection (a)--
(A) by inserting ``of Dual-Use Technology'' before
``Program''; and
(B) by inserting ``with a focus on priority defense
technology areas that attract public and private sector
funding, as well as private sector investment capital,
including from venture capital firms in the United
States,'' before ``in accordance'';
(3) in subsection (c)(4)(A)(iv), by inserting ``, which may
include access to venture capital'' after ``award'';
(4) by striking subsection (d);
(5) by redesignating subsection (e) as subsection (d);
(6) by striking subsection (f); and
(7) by adding at the end the following new subsection (e):
``(e) Authorities.--In carrying out this section, the Secretary may
use the following authorities:
``(1) Section 1599g of title 10 of the United States Code,
relating to public-private talent exchanges.
``(2) Section 2368 of such title, relating to Centers for
Science, Technology, and Engineering Partnerships.
``(3) Section 2374a of such title, relating to prizes for
advanced technology achievements.
``(4) Section 2474 of such title, relating to Centers of
Industrial and Technical Excellence.
``(5) Section 2521 of such title, relating to the
Manufacturing Technology Program.
``(6) Section 225 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 10 U.S.C. 2359 note).
``(7) Section 1711 of such Act (Public Law 115-91; 10
U.S.C. 2505 note), relating to a pilot program on strengthening
manufacturing in the defense industrial base.
``(8) Section 12 of the Stevenson-Wydler Technology
Innovation Act of 1980 (15 U.S.C. 3710a) and section 6305 of
title 31, United States Code, relating to cooperative research
and development agreements.''.
SEC. 217. MODIFICATION OF DEFENSE QUANTUM INFORMATION SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.
Section 234 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended--
(1) in subsection (b)--
(A) in paragraph (2)--
(i) by inserting ``and international''
after ``interagency''; and
(ii) by striking ``private sector''
inserting ``private-sector and international'';
and
(B) in paragraph (6), by inserting ``, workforce,''
after ``including facilities'';
(2) in subsection (c)--
(A) in paragraph (2), by striking ``sciences;'' and
inserting the following: ``sciences, including through
coordination with--
``(A) the National Quantum Coordination Office;
``(B) the National Science and Technology Council
Quantum Information Science Subcommittee;
``(C) other Federal agencies;
``(D) other elements and offices of the Department
of Defense; and
``(E) appropriate private-sector organizations;'';
(B) in paragraph (3), by striking ``and'' at the
end;
(C) by redesignating paragraph (4) as paragraph
(5); and
(D) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following
new paragraph (4):
``(4) develop, in coordination with appropriate Federal
entities, a taxonomy for quantum science activities and
requirements for relevant technology and standards; and''; and
(3) in subsection (d)(2)(D), by inserting ``a roadmap and''
after ``including''.
SEC. 218. TECHNOLOGY AND NATIONAL SECURITY FELLOWSHIP.
(a) Fellowship Program.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, acting
through the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering, shall establish a civilian fellowship program
designed to place eligible individuals within the Department of
Defense and Congress to increase the number of national
security professionals with science, technology, engineering,
and mathematics credentials employed by the Department and
Congress.
(2) Designation.--The fellowship program established under
paragraph (1) shall be known as the ``Technology and National
Security Fellowship'' (in this section referred to as the
``fellows program'').
(3) Assignments.--Each individual selected for
participation in the fellows program shall be assigned to a one
year position within--
(A) the Department of Defense; or
(B) a congressional office with emphasis on Armed
Forces and national security matters.
(4) Pay and benefits.--Each individual assigned to a
position under paragraph (3)--
(A) shall be compensated at a rate of basic pay
that is equivalent to the rate of basic pay payable for
a position at level 10 of the General Schedule; and
(B) shall be treated as an employee of the United
States during the assignment.
(b) Eligible Individuals.--For purposes of this section, and
subject to subsection (e), an eligible individual is any individual
who--
(1) is a citizen of the United States; and
(2) either--
(A) expects to be awarded an undergraduate or
graduate degree that, as determined by the Secretary,
focuses on science, technology, engineering, or
mathematics course work not later than 180 days after
the date on which the individual submits an application
for participation in the fellows program; or
(B) possesses an undergraduate or graduate degree
that, as determined by the Secretary, focuses on
science, technology, engineering, or mathematics course
work that was awarded not earlier than one year before
the date on which the individual submits an application
for participation in the fellows program.
(c) Application.--Each individual seeking to participate in the
fellows program shall submit to the Secretary an application therefor
at such time and in such manner as the Secretary shall specify.
(d) Coordination.--In carrying out this section, the Secretary may
consider working through the following entities:
(1) The National Security Innovation Network.
(2) Other Department of Defense or public and private
sector organizations, as determined appropriate by the
Secretary.
(e) Modifications to Fellows Program.--The Secretary may modify the
terms and procedures of the fellows program in order to better achieve
the goals of the program and to support workforce needs of the
Department of Defense.
(f) Consultation.--The Secretary may consult with the heads of the
agencies, components, and other elements of the Department of Defense,
Members and committees of Congress, and such institutions of higher
education and private entities engaged in work on national security and
emerging technologies as the Secretary considers appropriate for
purposes of the fellows program, including with respect to assignments
in the fellows program.
SEC. 219. DIRECT AIR CAPTURE AND BLUE CARBON REMOVAL TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
(a) Program Required.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination
with the Secretary of Homeland Security, the Secretary of
Energy, and the heads of such other Federal agencies as the
Secretary of Defense considers appropriate, shall carry out a
program on research, development, testing, evaluation, study,
and demonstration of technologies related to blue carbon
capture and direct air capture.
(2) Program goals.--The goals of the program established
under paragraph (1) are as follows:
(A) To develop technologies that capture carbon
dioxide from seawater and the air to turn such carbon
dioxide into clean fuels to enhance fuel and energy
security.
(B) To develop and demonstrate technologies that
capture carbon dioxide from seawater and the air to
reuse such carbon dioxide to create products for
military uses.
(C) To develop direct air capture technologies for
use--
(i) at military installations or facilities
of the Department of Defense; or
(ii) in modes of transportation by the Navy
or the Coast Guard.
(3) Phases.--The program established under paragraph (1)
shall be carried out in two phases as follows:
(A) The first phase shall consist of research and
development and shall be carried out as described in
subsection (b).
(B) The second phase shall consist of testing and
evaluation and shall be carried out as described in
subsection (c), if the Secretary determines that the
results of the research and development phase justify
implementing the testing and evaluation phase.
(4) Designation.--The program established under paragraph
(1) shall be known as the ``Direct Air Capture and Blue Carbon
Removal Technology Program'' (in this section referred to as
the ``Program'').
(b) Research and Development Phase.--
(1) In general.--During the research and development phase
of the Program, the Secretary of Defense shall conduct research
and development in pursuit of the goals set forth in subsection
(a)(2).
(2) Direct air capture.--The research and development phase
of the Program may include, with respect to direct air capture,
a front end engineering and design study that includes an
evaluation of direct air capture designs to produce fuel for
use--
(A) at military installations or facilities of the
Department of Defense; or
(B) in modes of transportation by the Navy or the
Coast Guard.
(3) Duration.--The Secretary shall carry out the research
and development phase of the Program during a four-year period
commencing not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act.
(4) Grants authorized.--The Secretary may carry out the
research and development phase of the Program through the award
of grants to private persons and eligible laboratories.
(5) Report required.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the completion of the research and development phase of
the Program, the Secretary shall submit to Congress a report on
the research and development carried out under the Program.
(6) Funding for fiscal year 2020.--(A) The amount
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020 by section
201 for research, development, test, and evaluation is hereby
increased by $8,000,000, with the amount of the increase to be
available for the research and development phase of the
Program.
(B) The amount authorized to be appropriated for fiscal
year 2020 by section 301 for operation and maintenance is
hereby decreased by $8,000,000, with the amount of the decrease
to be taken from amounts available for printing.
(7) Authorization of appropriations for future fiscal
years.--There is authorized to be appropriated to carry out the
research and development phase of the Program $10,000,000 for
each of fiscal years 2021 through 2023.
(c) Testing and Evaluation Phase.--
(1) In general.--During the testing and evaluation phase of
the Program, the Secretary shall, in pursuit of the goals set
forth in subsection (a)(2), conduct tests and evaluations of
the technologies researched and developed during the research
and development phase of the Program.
(2) Direct air capture.--The testing and evaluation phase
of the Program may include demonstration projects for direct
air capture to produce fuels for use--
(A) at military installations or facilities of the
Department of Defense; or
(B) in modes of transportation by the Navy or the
Coast Guard.
(3) Duration.--The Secretary shall carry out the testing
and evaluation phase of the Program during the three-year
period commencing on the date of the completion of the research
and development phase described in subsection (b), except that
the testing and evaluation phase of the Program with respect to
direct air capture may commence at such time after a front end
engineering and design study demonstrates to the Secretary that
commencement of such phase is appropriate.
(4) Grants authorized.--The Secretary may carry out the
testing and evaluation phase of the Program through the award
of grants to private persons and eligible laboratories.
(5) Locations.--The Secretary shall carry out the testing
and evaluation phase of the Program at military installations
or facilities of the Department of Defense.
(6) Report required.--Not later than September 30, 2026,
the Secretary shall submit to Congress a report on the findings
of the Secretary with respect to the effectiveness of the
technologies tested and evaluated under the Program.
(7) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized
to be appropriated to carry out the testing and evaluation
phase of the Program $15,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2024
through 2026.
(d) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) The term ``blue carbon capture'' means the removal of
dissolved carbon dioxide from seawater through engineered or
inorganic processes, including filters, membranes, or phase
change systems.
(2)(A) The term ``direct air capture'', with respect to a
facility, technology, or system, means that the facility,
technology, or system uses carbon capture equipment to capture
carbon dioxide directly from the air.
(B) The term ``direct air capture'' does not include any
facility, technology, or system that captures carbon dioxide--
(i) that is deliberately released from a naturally
occurring subsurface spring; or
(ii) using natural photosynthesis.
(3) The term ``eligible laboratory'' means--
(A) a National Laboratory (as defined in section 2
of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (42 U.S.C. 15801)); or
(B) a laboratory of the Department of Defense.
Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters
SEC. 231. NATIONAL SECURITY EMERGING BIOTECHNOLOGIES RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM.
(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out a
research and development program on applications of emerging
biotechnologies for the national security purposes set forth in
subsection (b).
(b) National Security Purposes.--The national security purposes set
forth in this subsection are as follows:
(1) To ensure military understanding and relevancy of
applications of emerging biotechnologies in meeting national
security requirements.
(2) To coordinate all research and development relating to
emerging biotechnologies within the Department of Defense and
to provide for interagency cooperation and collaboration on
research and development relating to emerging biotechnologies
between the Department and other departments and agencies of
the United States and appropriate private sector entities that
are involved in research and development relating to emerging
biotechnologies.
(3) To develop and manage a portfolio of fundamental and
applied emerging biotechnologies research initiatives that is
stable, consistent, and balanced across scientific disciplines.
(4) To collect, synthesize, and disseminate critical
information on research and development relating to emerging
biotechnologies within the national security establishment.
(5) To establish and support appropriate research,
innovation, and the industrial base, including facilities and
infrastructure, to support the needs of Department missions and
scientific workforce relating to emerging biotechnologies.
(6) To develop a technical basis to inform the intelligence
community on the analysis needs of the Department with respect
to emerging biotechnologies.
(c) Administration.--In carrying out the program required by
subsection (a), the Secretary shall act through the Under Secretary of
Defense for Research and Engineering, who shall supervise the planning,
management, and coordination of the program. The Under Secretary, in
consultation with the Secretaries of the military departments and the
heads of participating Defense Agencies and other departments and
agencies of the United States, shall--
(1) prescribe a set of long-term challenges and a set of
broad technical goals for the program;
(2) develop a coordinated and integrated research and
investment plan for meeting near-, mid-, and long-term
challenges for achieving broad technical goals that build upon
the Department's investment in emerging biotechnologies
research and development, commercial sector and global
investments, and other United States Government investments in
emerging biotechnologies fields;
(3) not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, develop and continuously update guidance,
including classification guidance for defense-related emerging
biotechnologies activities, and policies for restricting access
to research to minimize the effects of loss of intellectual
property in basic and applied emerging biotechnologies and
information considered sensitive to the leadership of the
United States in the field of emerging biotechnologies; and
(4) develop memoranda of agreement, joint funding
agreements, and other cooperative arrangements necessary for
meeting long-term challenges and achieving specific technical
goals.
(d) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than December 31, 2020, the
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees
a report on the program carried out under subsection (a).
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) An assessment of the potential national
security risks of emerging biotechnologies
technologies.
(B) An assessment of the efforts of foreign powers
to use emerging biotechnologies for military
applications and other purposes.
(C) A description of the knowledge-base of the
Department with respect to emerging biotechnologies,
plans to defend against potential national security
threats posed by emerging biotechnologies, and any
plans of the Secretary to enhance such knowledge-base.
(D) A plan that describes how the Secretary intends
to use emerging biotechnologies for military
applications and to meet other needs of the Department.
(E) A description of activities undertaken
consistent with this section, including funding for
activities consistent with the section.
(F) Such other matters as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(3) Form.--The report submitted under paragraph (1) shall
be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
(e) Definition of Emerging Biotechnologies.--In this section, the
term ``emerging biotechnologies'' includes the following:
(1) Engineered biology, which is the application of
engineering design principles and practices to biological,
genetic, molecular, and cellular systems to enable novel
functions and capabilities.
(2) Neurotechnology, which refers to central and peripheral
nervous system interfaces that leverage structural,
computational, and mathematical modeling to develop devices
that decode neural activity (identify how it corresponds to a
particular behavior or cognitive state, such as sensorimotor
function, memory, or neuropsychiatric function) and use this
information to deliver targeted interventions or therapies to
facilitate performance.
(3) Performance enhancement, namely technologies that
augment human physiology at the cellular, molecular, and
physiological levels giving the end user novel or enhanced
physical and psychological capabilities.
(4) Gene editing, including tools that facilitate
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequence deletion, replacement, or
insertion into cellular or organismal genetic material, thereby
modulating genetic function for applications that include
treating and preventing disease, and improving function of
biological systems.
(5) Biomolecular sequencing and synthesis, namely the
processes by which biomolecular components (such as
deoxyribonucleic acid and ribonucleic acid) can be measured
(sequencing) or generated (synthesis) for uses in engineering
biology, biomanufacturing, and other medical and nonmedical
applications.
SEC. 232. CYBER SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY ACTIVITIES ROADMAP AND REPORTS.
(a) Roadmap for Science and Technology Activities to Support
Development of Cyber Capabilities.--
(1) Roadmap required.--The Secretary of Defense, acting
through the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering, shall develop a roadmap for science and technology
activities of the Department of Defense to support development
of cyber capabilities to meet Department needs and missions.
(2) Goal of consistency.--The Secretary shall develop the
roadmap required by paragraph (1) to ensure consistency with
appropriate Federal interagency, industry, and academic
activities.
(3) Scope.--The roadmap required by paragraph (1) shall--
(A) cover the development of capabilities that will
likely see operational use within the next 25 years or
earlier; and
(B) address cyber operations and cybersecurity.
(4) Consultation.--The Secretary shall develop the roadmap
required by paragraph (1) in consultation with the following:
(A) The Chief Information Officer of the
Department.
(B) The secretaries and chiefs of the military
departments.
(C) The Director of Operational Test and
Evaluation.
(D) The Commander of the United States Cyber
Command.
(E) The Director of the National Security Agency.
(F) The Director of the Defense Information Systems
Agency.
(G) The Director of the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency.
(H) The Director of the Defense Digital Service.
(5) Form.--The Secretary shall develop the roadmap required
by paragraph (1) in unclassified form, but may include a
classified annex.
(6) Publication.--The Secretary shall make available to the
public the unclassified form of the roadmap developed pursuant
to paragraph (1).
(b) Annual Report on Cyber Science and Technology Activities.--
(1) Annual reports required.--In fiscal years 2021, 2022,
and 2023, the Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering submit to the Congressional Defense Committees a
report on the science and technology activities within the
Department of Defense relating to cyber matters during the
previous fiscal year, the current fiscal year, and the
following fiscal year.
(2) Contents.--Each report submitted pursuant to paragraph
(1) shall include, for the period covered by the report, a
description and listing of the science and technology
activities of the Department relating to cyber matters,
including the following:
(A) Extramural science and technology activities.
(B) Intramural science and technology activities.
(C) Major and minor military construction
activities.
(D) Major prototyping and demonstration programs.
(E) A list of agreements and activities transition
capabilities to acquisition activities, including--
(i) national security systems;
(ii) business systems; and
(iii) enterprise and network systems.
(F) Efforts to enhance the national technical
cybersecurity workforce, including specific programs to
support education, training, internships, and hiring.
(G) Efforts to perform cooperative activities with
international partners.
(H) Efforts under the Small Business Innovation
Research and the Small Business Technology Transfer
Program, including estimated amounts in the request for
the following fiscal year.
(I) Efforts to encourage partnerships between the
Department of Defense and universities participating in
the National Centers of Academic Excellence in Cyber
Operations and Cyber Defense.
(3) Timing.--Each report submitted pursuant to paragraph
(1) shall be submitted concurrently with the annual budget
request of the President submitted pursuant to section 1105 of
title 31, United States Code.
(4) Form.--The report submitted under paragraph (1) shall
be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 233. REQUIRING CERTAIN MICROELECTRONICS PRODUCTS AND SERVICES MEET
TRUSTED SUPPLY CHAIN AND OPERATIONAL SECURITY STANDARDS.
(a) Purchases.--
(1) In general.--To protect the United States from
intellectual property theft and to ensure national security and
public safety in the application of new generations of wireless
network technology and microelectronics, beginning on January
1, 2022, the Secretary of Defense shall--
(A) ensure that each critical microelectronics
product and service that the Department of Defense
purchases on or after such date meets the trusted
supply chain and operational security standards
established pursuant to subsection (b), except in a
case in which the Department seeks to purchase a
critical microelectronics product or service, but--
(i) no such product or service is available
for purchase that meets such standards; or
(ii) no such product or service is
available for purchase that--
(I) meets such standards; and
(II) is available at a price that
the Secretary does not consider
prohibitively expensive; and
(B) to the maximum extent practicable, ensure that
each microelectronics product and service, other than a
critical microelectronics product and service, that is
purchased by the Department of Defense on or after such
date meets the trusted supply chain and operational
security standards established pursuant to subsection
(b).
(2) Critical microelectronics products and services.--For
purposes of this section, a critical microelectronics product
or service is a microelectronics product, or a service based on
such a product, that is designated by the Secretary as critical
to meeting national security needs.
(b) Trusted Supply Chain and Operational Security Standards.--
(1) Standards required.--Not later than January 1, 2021,
the Secretary shall establish trusted supply chain and
operational security standards for the purchase of
microelectronics products and services by the Department.
(2) Consultation required.--In developing standards under
paragraph (1), the Secretary shall consult with the following:
(A) The Secretary of Homeland Security, the
Secretary of State, the Secretary of Commerce, and the
Director of the National Institute of Standards and
Technology.
(B) Suppliers of microelectronics products and
services from the United States and allies and partners
of the United States.
(C) Representatives of major United States industry
sectors that rely on a trusted supply chain and the
operational security of microelectronics products and
services.
(D) Representatives of the United States insurance
industry.
(3) Tiers of trust and security authorized.--In carrying
out paragraph (1), the Secretary may establish tiers of trust
and security within the supply chain and operational security
standards for microelectronics products and services.
(4) General applicability.--The standards established
pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be, to the greatest extent
practicable, generally applicable to the trusted supply chain
and operational security needs and use cases of the United
States Government and commercial industry, such that the
standards could be widely adopted by government and commercial
industry.
(5) Annual review.--Not later than October 1 of each year,
the Secretary shall review the standards established pursuant
to paragraph (1) and issue updates or modifications as the
Secretary considers necessary or appropriate.
(c) Ensuring Ability to Sell Commercially.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall, to the greatest
extent practicable, ensure that suppliers of microelectronics
products for the Federal Government who meet the standards
established under subsection (b) are able and incentivized to
sell products commercially that are produced on the same
production lines as the microelectronics products supplied to
the Federal Government.
(2) Effect of requirements and acquisitions.--The Secretary
shall, to the greatest extent practicable, ensure that the
requirements of the Department and the acquisition by the
Department of microelectronics enable the success of a dual-use
microelectronics industry.
(d) Maintaining Competition and Innovation.--The Secretary shall
take such actions as the Secretary considers necessary and appropriate,
within the Secretary's authorized activities to maintain the health of
the defense industrial base, to ensure that--
(1) providers of microelectronics products and services
that meet the standards established under subsection (b) are
exposed to competitive market pressures to achieve competitive
pricing and sustained innovation; and
(2) the industrial base of microelectronics products and
services that meet the standards established under subsection
(b) includes providers producing in or belonging to countries
that are allies or partners of the United States.
SEC. 234. TECHNICAL CORRECTION TO GLOBAL RESEARCH WATCH PROGRAM.
Section 2365 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsections (a) and (d)(2), by striking ``Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering'' both places
it appears and inserting ``Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering'';
(2) in subsections (d)(3) and (e), by striking ``Assistant
Secretary'' both places it appears and inserting ``Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering''; and
(3) in subsection (d), by striking ``Assistant Secretary''
both places it appears and inserting ``Under Secretary''.
SEC. 235. ADDITIONAL TECHNOLOGY AREAS FOR EXPEDITED ACCESS TO TECHNICAL
TALENT.
Section 217(e) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 10 U.S.C. 2358 note) is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (27) as paragraph (29); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (26) the following new
paragraph (27):
``(27) Rapid prototyping.
``(28) Infrastructure resilience.''.
SEC. 236. SENSE OF THE SENATE AND PERIODIC BRIEFINGS ON THE SECURITY
AND AVAILABILITY OF FIFTH-GENERATION (5G) WIRELESS
NETWORK TECHNOLOGY AND PRODUCTION.
(a) Sense of the Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) use of fifth-generation (5G) wireless networks and
associated technology will be a foundation for future
warfighting applications for the Department of Defense;
(2) the commercial implementation of fifth-generation
wireless networks will provide the high speed and capacity
necessary for the Internet of Things, advanced manufacturing,
autonomous machines, the application of artificial
intelligence, and smart cities, and it is critical that the
Department of Defense utilize these new capabilities;
(3) protecting the innovation and technology that enables
these revolutionary developments is essential for security of
the Department of Defense mission, and will require improved
security of the microelectronics supply chain and of the design
and operation of networks based on fifth-generation wireless
network technology;
(4) securing fifth-generation wireless networks and
associated technology is required due to the increased effects
of military processes that will be enabled on fifth-generation
wireless networks;
(5) the Department of Defense can no longer rely on
fabricationless business models in which microelectronics
manufacturing is located in countries with vulnerable supply
chains or adversarial nations known for predatory industrial
espionage and posing a military threat to the United States or
on small-scale manufacturing of trusted microelectronics in
dedicated facilities;
(6) the Department of Defense should leverage its large
procurement budget, sophisticated understanding of the threats
to microelectronics supply chains, as well as experience
establishing requirements for the secure production of
microelectronics and working with trusted foundries to create a
secure, competitive, and innovative manufacturing base in
cooperation with industry; and
(7) the Secretary of Defense should act expeditiously to
achieve the goals enumerated in this subsection using resources
and authorities available to the Department, while encouraging
interagency planning for a whole-of-government strategy.
(b) Periodic Briefings.--
(1) In general.--Not later than March 15, 2020, and not
less frequently than once every three months thereafter until
March 15, 2022, the Secretary of Defense shall brief the
congressional defense committees on how the Department of
Defense--
(A) is using secure fifth-generation wireless
network technology;
(B) is reshaping the Department's policy for
producing and procuring secure microelectronics; and
(C) working in the interagency and internationally
to develop common policies and approaches.
(2) Elements.--Each briefing under paragraph (1) shall
contain information on--
(A) efforts to ensure a secure supply chain for
fifth-generation wireless network equipment and
microelectronics;
(B) the continued availability of electromagnetic
spectrum for warfighting needs;
(C) planned implementation of fifth-generation
wireless network infrastructure in warfighting
networks, base infrastructure, defense-related
manufacturing, and logistics;
(D) steps taken to work with allied and partner
countries to protect critical networks and supply
chains; and
(E) such other topics as the Secretary considers
relevant.
SEC. 237. TRANSFER OF COMBATING TERRORISM TECHNICAL SUPPORT OFFICE.
(a) Transfer Required.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the Secretary
of Defense shall transfer responsibilities for the authority,
direction, and control of the Combating Terrorism Technical Support
Office from the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations
and Low Intensity Conflict to the Under Secretary of Defense for
Research and Engineering.
(b) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than the date that is 30 days
before the date of the transfer of responsibilities required by
subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on such transfer.
(2) Contents.--The report submitted under paragraph (1)
shall include the following:
(A) An assessment of the relevance of the roles,
responsibilities, and objectives of the Combating
Terrorism Technical Support Office to supporting
implementation of the National Defense Strategy and
recommendations, if any, for changes to the roles,
responsibilities, and objectives of the Combating
Terrorism Technical Support Office for the purpose of
supporting implementation of the National Defense
Strategy.
(B) An articulation of any anticipated efficiencies
resulting from the transfer of responsibilities as
described in subsection (a).
(C) Such other matters as the Secretary considers
relevant.
SEC. 238. BRIEFING ON COOPERATIVE DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY PROGRAMS AND RISKS
OF TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TO CHINA OR RUSSIA.
(a) Briefing Required.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the Secretary
of Defense, in consultation with the Director of National Intelligence,
shall provide the congressional defense committees a briefing, and
documents as appropriate, on current cooperative defense technology
programs of the Department of Defense with any country the Secretary
assesses to be engaged in significant defense or other advanced
technology cooperation with the People's Republic of China or the
Russian Federation.
(b) Matters to Be Addressed.--The briefing required by subsection
(a) shall address the following matters:
(1) Whether any current cooperative defense technology
programs of the Department of Defense increase the risk of
technology transfer to the People's Republic of China or the
Russian Federation.
(2) What actions the Department of Defense has taken to
mitigate the risk of technology transfer to the People's
Republic of China or the Russian Federation with respect to
current cooperative defense technology programs.
(3) Such recommendations as the Secretary may have for
legislative or administrative action to prevent technology
transfer to the People's Republic of China or the Russian
Federation with respect to cooperative defense technology
programs, especially as it relates to capabilities the
Secretary assesses to be critical to maintain or restore the
comparative military advantage of the United States.
(c) Notification Required.--The Secretary shall provide the
congressional committees a written notification not later than 15 days
after any decision to suspend or terminate a cooperative defense
technology program due to the risk or occurrence of technology transfer
to the People's Republic of China or the Russian Federation.
SEC. 239. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY FOR PRIZES FOR ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
ACHIEVEMENTS.
Section 2374a(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering'' and inserting ``Under Secretary of Defense for Research
and Engineering, the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and
Sustainment,''.
SEC. 240. USE OF FUNDS FOR STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH PROGRAM,
ENVIRONMENTAL SECURITY TECHNICAL CERTIFICATION PROGRAM,
AND OPERATIONAL ENERGY CAPABILITY IMPROVEMENT.
Of the funds authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020 for
the use of the Department of Defense for research, development, test,
and evaluation, as specified in the funding table in section 4201 for
the Strategic Environmental Research Program, Operational Energy
Capability Improvement, and the Environmental Security Technical
Certification Program, the Secretary of Defense shall expend amounts as
follows:
(1) Not less than $10,000,000 on the development and
demonstration of long duration on-site energy battery storage
for distributed energy assets.
(2) Not less than $10,000,000 on the development,
demonstration, and validation of non-fluorine based
firefighting foams.
(3) Not less than $10,000,000 on the development,
demonstration, and validation of secure microgrids for both
installations and forward operating bases.
(4) Not less than $5,000,000 on the development,
demonstration, and validation of technologies that can harvest
potable water from air.
SEC. 241. FUNDING FOR THE SEA-LAUNCHED CRUISE MISSILE-NUCLEAR ANALYSIS
OF ALTERNATIVES.
(a) Availability of Funding.--Of the amount authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2020 by section 201 for research,
development, test, and evaluation, at least $5,000,000 shall be
available for the analysis of alternatives for the Sea-Launched Cruise
Missile-Nuclear.
(b) Program of Record.--The Secretary of Defense shall make the
Sea-Launched Cruise Missile-Nuclear a program of record.
SEC. 242. REVIEW AND ASSESSMENT PERTAINING TO TRANSITION OF DEPARTMENT
OF DEFENSE-ORIGINATED DUAL-USE TECHNOLOGY.
(a) In General.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering shall--
(1) conduct a review of the Department of Defense science
and technology enterprise's intellectual property and strategy
for awarding exclusive commercial rights to industry partners;
and
(2) assess whether its practices are encouraging or
constraining technology diffusion where desirable.
(b) Elements.--The review and assessment required by subsection (a)
shall include consideration of the following:
(1) The retention or relinquishment by the Department of
intellectual property rights and the effect thereof.
(2) The granting by the Department of exclusive commercial
rights and the effect thereof.
(3) The potential of research prizes, vice payment and
exclusive commercial rights, on contract as remuneration for
science and technology activities.
(4) The potential of science and technology programs with
intellectual property strategies that do not include
commercialization monopolies.
(5) The potential of establishing price ceilings for
licenses and commercial sale mandates to discourage selective
commercial hoarding.
(6) The activities of the Department in effect on the day
before the date of the enactment of this Act to promulgate to
approved users in the commercial sector the intellectual
property that the Department retains and their potential
applications.
(7) Such other major factors as may inhibit the diffusion
of Department-funded technology in the commercial sector where
desirable.
(c) University Partnership.--In carrying out subsection (a), the
Under Secretary shall partner with a business school or law school of a
university with resident economics and intellectual property expertise.
(d) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than May 1, 2020, the Under
Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees
a report on the findings of the Under Secretary with respect to
the review and assessment required by subsection (a).
(2) Recommendations.--The report required by paragraph (1)
shall include such recommendations as the Under Secretary may
have for legislative or administrative action to improve the
diffusion of the intellectual property and technology of the
science and technology enterprise of the Department.
TITLE III--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
Subtitle A--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 301. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020
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. USE OF OPERATIONAL ENERGY COST SAVINGS OF DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE.
Section 2912 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``subsection (b)'' and
inserting ``subsection (b) or (c), as the case may be,'';
(2) in subsection (b), in the matter preceding paragraph
(1), by striking ``The Secretary of Defense'' and inserting
``Except as provided in subsection (c) with respect to
operational energy cost savings, the Secretary of Defense'';
(3) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
(4) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsection (c):
``(c) Use of Operational Energy Cost Savings.--The amount that
remains available for obligation under subsection (a) that relates to
operational energy cost savings realized by the Department shall be
used for the implementation of additional operational energy
resilience, efficiencies, mission assurance, energy conservation, or
energy security within the department, agency, or instrumentality that
realized that savings.''.
SEC. 312. USE OF PROCEEDS FROM SALES OF ELECTRICAL ENERGY GENERATED
FROM GEOTHERMAL RESOURCES.
Section 2916(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``Except as provided in
paragraph (3), proceeds'' and inserting ``Proceeds''; and
(2) by striking paragraph (3).
SEC. 313. ENERGY RESILIENCE PROGRAMS AND ACTIVITIES.
(a) Modification of Annual Energy Management and Resilience
Report.--Section 2925(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in the subsection heading, by inserting ``and
Readiness'' after ``Mission Assurance'';
(2) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by inserting
``The Secretary shall ensure that mission operators of critical
facilities provide to personnel of military installations any
information necessary for the completion of such report.''
after ``by the Secretary.'';
(3) in paragraph (4), in the matter preceding subparagraph
(A), by striking ``megawatts'' and inserting ``electric and
thermal loads''; and
(4) in paragraph (5), by striking ``megawatts'' and
inserting ``electric and thermal loads''.
(b) Funding for Energy Program Offices.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretaries of the military
departments shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report stating whether the program offices
specified in paragraph (2) are funded--
(A) at proper levels to ensure that the energy
resilience requirements of the Department of Defense
are met; and
(B) at levels that are not less than in any
previous fiscal year.
(2) Program offices specified.--The program offices
specified in this paragraph are the following:
(A) The Power Reliability Enhancement Program of
the Army.
(B) The Office of Energy Initiatives of the Army.
(C) The Office of Energy Assurance of the Air
Force.
(D) The Resilient Energy Program Office of the
Navy.
(3) Funding plan.--
(A) In general.--The Secretaries of the military
departments shall include in the report submitted under
paragraph (1) a funding plan for the next five fiscal
years beginning after the date of the enactment of this
Act to ensure that funding levels are, at a minimum,
maintained during that period.
(B) Elements.--The funding plan under subparagraph
(A) shall include, for each fiscal year covered by the
plan, an identification of the amounts to be used for
the accomplishment of energy resilience goals and
objectives.
(c) Establishment of Targets for Water Use.--The Secretary of
Defense shall, where life-cycle cost-effective, improve water use
efficiency and management by the Department of Defense, including storm
water management, by--
(1) installing water meters and collecting and using water
balance data of buildings and facilities to improve water
conservation and management;
(2) reducing industrial, landscaping, and agricultural
water consumption in gallons by two percent annually through
fiscal year 2030 relative to a baseline of such consumption by
the Department in fiscal year 2010; and
(3) installing appropriate sustainable infrastructure
features on installations of the Department to help with storm
water and wastewater management.
SEC. 314. NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN LANDS ENVIRONMENTAL MITIGATION
PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Chapter 160 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2712. Native American lands environmental mitigation program
``(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense may establish and
carry out a program to mitigate the environmental effects of actions by
the Department of Defense on Indian lands and culturally connected
locations.
``(b) Program Activities.--The activities that may be carried out
under the program established under subsection (a) are the following:
``(1) Identification, investigation, and documentation of
suspected environmental effects attributable to past actions by
the Department of Defense.
``(2) Development of mitigation options for such
environmental effects, including development of cost-to-
complete estimates and a system for prioritizing mitigation
actions.
``(3) Direct mitigation actions that the Secretary
determines are necessary and appropriate to mitigate the
adverse environmental effects of past actions by the
Department.
``(4) Demolition and removal of unsafe buildings and
structures used by, under the jurisdiction of, or formerly used
by or under the jurisdiction of the Department.
``(5) Training, technical assistance, and administrative
support to facilitate the meaningful participation of Indian
tribes in mitigation actions under the program.
``(6) Development and execution of a policy governing
consultation with Indian tribes that have been or may be
affected by action by the Department, including training
personnel of the Department to ensure compliance with the
policy.
``(c) Cooperative Agreements.--(1) In carrying out the program
established under subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense may enter
into a cooperative agreement with an Indian tribe or an instrumentality
of tribal government.
``(2) Notwithstanding chapter 63 of title 31, a cooperative
agreement under this section may be used to acquire property or
services for the direct benefit of the United States Government.
``(3) A cooperative agreement under this section for the
procurement of severable services may begin in one fiscal year and end
in another fiscal year only if the total period of performance does not
exceed two calendar years.
``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `Indian land' includes--
``(A) any land located within the boundaries and a
part of an Indian reservation, pueblo, or rancheria;
``(B) any land that has been allotted to an
individual Indian but has not been conveyed to such
Indian with full power of alienation;
``(C) Alaska Native village and regional
corporation lands; and
``(D) lands and waters upon which any Federally
recognized Indian tribe has rights reserved by treaty,
act of Congress, or action by the President.
``(2) The term `Indian tribe' has the meaning given such
term in section 2701(d)(4)(A) of this title.
``(3) The term `culturally connected location' means a
location or place that has demonstrable significance to Indians
or Alaska Natives based on its association with the traditional
beliefs, customs, and practices of a living community,
including locations or places where religious, ceremonial,
subsistence, medicinal, economic, or other lifeways practices
have historically taken place.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 160 of such title is amended by inserting after the item
relating to section 2711 the following new item:
``2712. Native American lands environmental mitigation program.''.
SEC. 315. REIMBURSEMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY FOR CERTAIN
COSTS IN CONNECTION WITH THE TWIN CITIES ARMY AMMUNITION
PLANT, MINNESOTA.
(a) Transfer Amount.--Notwithstanding section 2215 of title 10,
United States Code, the Secretary of Defense may transfer to the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency--
(1) in fiscal year 2020, not more than $890,790; and
(2) in each of fiscal years 2021 through 2026, not more
than $150,000.
(b) Purpose of Reimbursement.--The amount authorized to be
transferred under subsection (a) is to reimburse the Environmental
Protection Agency for costs the Agency has incurred and will incur
relating to the response actions performed at the Twin Cities Army
Ammunition Plant, Minnesota, through September 30, 2025.
(c) Interagency Agreement.--The reimbursement described in
subsection (b) is intended to satisfy certain terms of the interagency
agreement entered into by the Department of the Army and the
Environmental Protection Agency for the Twin Cities Army Ammunition
Plant that took effect in December 1987 and that provided for the
recovery of expenses by the Agency from the Department of the Army.
SEC. 316. PROHIBITION ON USE OF PERFLUOROALKYL SUBSTANCES AND
POLYFLUOROALKYL SUBSTANCES FOR LAND-BASED APPLICATIONS OF
FIREFIGHTING FOAM.
(a) Limitation.--After October 1, 2022, no funds of the Department
of Defense may be obligated or expended to procure firefighting foam
that contains in excess of one part per billion of perfluoroalkyl
substances and polyfluoroalkyl substances.
(b) Prohibition on Use and Disposal of Existing Stocks.--Not later
than October 1, 2023, the Secretary of Defense shall--
(1) cease the use of firefighting foam containing in excess
of one part per billion of perfluoroalkyl substances and
polyfluoroalkyl substances; and
(2) dispose of all existing stocks of such firefighting
foam in accordance with the Solid Waste Disposal Act (42 U.S.C.
6901 et seq.).
(c) Exemption for Shipboard Use.--Subsections (a) and (b) shall not
apply to firefighting foam for use solely onboard ocean-going vessels.
(d) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Perfluoroalkyl substances.--The term ``perfluoroalkyl
substances'' means aliphatic substances for which all of the H
atoms attached to C atoms in the nonfluorinated substance from
which they are notionally derived have been replaced by F
atoms, except those H atoms whose substitution would modify the
nature of any functional groups present.
(2) Polyfluoroalkyl substances.--The term ``polyfluoroalkyl
substances'' means aliphatic substances for which all H atoms
attached to at least one (but not all) C atoms have been
replaced by F atoms, in such a manner that they contain the
perfluoroalkyl moiety C<INF>n</INF>F<INF>2n+1</INF>_ (for
example,
C<INF>8</INF>F<INF>17</INF>CH<INF>2</INF>CH<INF>2</INF>OH).
SEC. 317. TRANSFER AUTHORITY FOR FUNDING OF STUDY AND ASSESSMENT ON
HEALTH IMPLICATIONS OF PER- AND POLYFLUOROALKYL
SUBSTANCES CONTAMINATION IN DRINKING WATER BY AGENCY FOR
TOXIC SUBSTANCES AND DISEASE REGISTRY.
Section 316(a)(2)(B)(ii) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1350), as amended by
section 315(a) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), is amended by striking
``2019 and 2020'' and inserting ``2019, 2020, and 2021''.
SEC. 318. COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS WITH STATES TO ADDRESS CONTAMINATION
BY PERFLUOROALKYL AND POLYFLUOROALKYL SUBSTANCES.
(a) Cooperative Agreements.--
(1) In general.--Upon request from the Governor or chief
executive of a State, the Secretary of Defense shall work
expeditiously, pursuant to section 2701(d) of title 10, United
States Code, to finalize a cooperative agreement, or amend an
existing cooperative agreement to address testing, monitoring,
removal, and remedial actions relating to the contamination or
suspected contamination of drinking, surface, or ground water
from PFAS originating from activities of the Department of
Defense by providing the mechanism and funding for the
expedited review and approval of documents of the Department
related to PFAS investigations and remedial actions from an
active or decommissioned military installation, including a
facility of the National Guard.
(2) Minimum standards.--A cooperative agreement finalized
or amended under paragraph (1) shall meet or exceed the most
stringent of the following standards for PFAS in any
environmental media:
(A) An enforceable State standard, in effect in
that State, for drinking, surface, or ground water, as
described in section 121(d)(2)(A)(ii) of the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. 9621(d)(2)(A)(ii)).
(B) An enforceable Federal standard for drinking,
surface, or ground water, as described in section
121(d)(2)(A)(i) of the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (42
U.S.C. 9621(d)(2)(A)(i)).
(b) Report.--Beginning on February 1, 2020, if a cooperative
agreement is not finalized or amended under subsection (a) within one
year after the request from the Governor or chief executive under that
subsection, and annually thereafter, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the appropriate committees and Members of Congress a report--
(1) explaining why the agreement has not been finalized or
amended, as the case may be; and
(2) setting forth a projected timeline for finalizing or
amending the agreement.
(c) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Appropriate committees and members of congress.--The
term ``appropriate committees and Members of Congress'' means--
(A) the congressional defense committees;
(B) the Senators who represent a State impacted by
PFAS contamination described in subsection (a)(1); and
(C) the Members of the House of Representatives who
represent a district impacted by such contamination.
(2) Fully fluorinated carbon atom.--The term ``fully
fluorinated carbon atom'' means a carbon atom on which all the
hydrogen substituents have been replaced by fluorine.
(3) PFAS.--The term ``PFAS'' means perfluoroalkyl and
polyfluoroalkyl substances that are man-made chemicals with at
least one fully fluorinated carbon atom.
(4) State.--The term ``State'' has the meaning given the
term in section 101 of the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C.
9601).
SEC. 319. MODIFICATION OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL
RESTORATION AUTHORITIES TO INCLUDE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
FACILITIES USED BY NATIONAL GUARD.
(a) Definition of Facility.--Section 2700(2) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking ``The terms'' and inserting ``(A) The
terms''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(B) The term `facility' includes real property that is
owned by, leased to, or otherwise possessed by the United
States at locations at which military activities are conducted
under this title or title 32 (including real property owned or
leased by the Federal Government that is licensed to and
operated by a State for training for the National Guard).''.
(b) Inclusion of Pollutants and Contaminants in Environmental
Response Actions.--Section 2701(c) of such title is amended by
inserting ``or pollutants or contaminants'' after ``hazardous
substances'' each place it appears.
(c) Establishment of Environmental Restoration Accounts.--Section
2703(a) of such title is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraphs:
``(6) An account to be known as the `Environmental
Restoration Account, Army National Guard' (for real property
owned or leased by the Federal Government that is licensed to
and operated by a State for training for the Army National
Guard).
``(7) An account to be known as the `Environmental
Restoration Account, Air National Guard' (for real property
owned or leased by the Federal Government that is licensed to
and operated by a State for training for the Air National
Guard).''.
SEC. 320. BUDGETING OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE RELATING TO EXTREME
WEATHER.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall include in the
annual budget submission of the President under section 1105(a) of
title 31, United States Code--
(1) a dedicated budget line item for adaptation to, and
mitigation of, effects of extreme weather on military networks,
systems, installations, facilities, and other assets and
capabilities of the Department of Defense; and
(2) an estimate of the anticipated adverse impacts to the
readiness of the Department and the financial costs to the
Department during the year covered by the budget of the loss
of, or damage to, military networks, systems, installations,
facilities, and other assets and capabilities of the
Department, including loss of or obstructed access to training
ranges, as a result extreme weather events.
(b) Disaggregation of Impacts and Costs.--The estimate under
subsection (a)(2) shall set forth the adverse readiness impacts and
financial costs under that subsection by military department, Defense
Agency, and other component or element of the Department.
(c) Extreme Weather Defined.--In this section, the term ``extreme
weather'' means recurrent flooding, drought, desertification,
wildfires, and thawing permafrost.
SEC. 321. PILOT PROGRAM FOR AVAILABILITY OF WORKING-CAPITAL FUNDS FOR
INCREASED COMBAT CAPABILITY THROUGH ENERGY OPTIMIZATION.
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding section 2208 of title 10, United
States Code, the Secretary of Defense and the military departments may
use a working capital fund established pursuant to that section for
expenses directly related to conducting a pilot program for energy
optimization initiatives described in subsection (b).
(b) Energy Optimization Initiatives.--Energy optimization
initiatives covered by the pilot program include the research,
development, procurement, installation, and sustainment of technologies
or weapons system platforms, and the manpower required to do so, that
would improve the efficiency and maintainability, extend the useful
life, lower maintenance costs, or provide performance enhancement of
the weapon system platform or major end item.
(c) Limitation on Certain Projects.--Funds may not be used pursuant
to subsection (a) for--
(1) any product improvement that significantly changes the
performance envelope of an end item; or
(2) any single component with an estimated total cost in
excess of $10,000,000.
(d) Limitation in Fiscal Year Pending Timely Report.--If during any
fiscal year the report required by paragraph (1) of subsection (e) is
not submitted by the date specified in paragraph (2) of that
subsection, funds may not be used pursuant to subsection (a) during the
period--
(1) beginning on the date specified in such paragraph (2);
and
(2) ending on the date of the submittal of the report.
(e) Annual Report.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall submit an
annual report to the congressional defense committees on the
use of the authority under subsection (a) during the preceding
fiscal year.
(2) Deadline for submittal.--The report required by
paragraph (1) in a fiscal year shall be submitted not later
than 60 days after the date of the submittal to Congress of the
budget of the President for the succeeding fiscal year pursuant
to section 1105 of title 31, United States Code.
(3) Recommendation.--In the case of the report required to
be submitted under paragraph (1) during fiscal year 2020, the
report shall include the recommendation of the Secretary of
Defense and the military departments regarding whether the
authority under subsection (a) should be made permanent.
(f) Sunset.--The authority under subsection (a) shall expire on
October 1, 2024.
SEC. 322. REPORT ON EFFORTS TO REDUCE HIGH ENERGY INTENSITY AT MILITARY
INSTALLATIONS.
(a) Report.--
(1) Report required.--Not later than September 1, 2020, the
Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, in
conjunction with the assistant secretaries responsible for
installations and environment for the military departments and
the Defense Logistics Agency, shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report detailing the efforts to achieve
cost savings at military installations with high energy
intensity.
(2) Elements.--The report required under paragraph (1)
shall include the following elements:
(A) A comprehensive, installation-specific
assessment of feasible and mission-appropriate energy
initiatives supporting energy production and
consumption at military installations with high energy
intensity.
(B) An assessment of current sources of energy in
areas with high energy intensity and potential future
sources that are technologically feasible, cost-
effective, and mission-appropriate for military
installations.
(C) A comprehensive implementation strategy to
include required investment for feasible energy
efficiency options determined to be the most beneficial
and cost-effective, where appropriate, and consistent
with priorities of the Department of Defense.
(D) An explanation on how the military departments
are working collaboratively in order to leverage
lessons learned on potential energy efficiency
solutions.
(E) An assessment of the extent to which activities
administered under the Federal Energy Management
Program of the Department of Energy could be used to
assist with the implementation strategy under
subparagraph (C).
(F) An assessment of State and local partnership
opportunities that could achieve efficiency and cost
savings, and any legislative authorities required to
carry out such partnerships or agreements.
(3) Coordination with state, local, and other entities.--In
preparing the report required under paragraph (1), the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment may work
in conjunction and coordinate with the States containing areas
of high energy intensity, local communities, and other Federal
agencies.
(b) Definition.--In this section, the term ``high energy
intensity'' means costs for the provision of energy by kilowatt of
electricity or British Thermal Unit of heat or steam for a military
installation in the United States that is in the highest 20 percent of
all military installations for a military department.
SEC. 323. TECHNICAL AND GRAMMATICAL CORRECTIONS AND REPEAL OF OBSOLETE
PROVISIONS RELATING TO ENERGY.
(a) Technical and Grammatical Corrections.--
(1) Technical corrections.--Title 10, United States Code,
is amended--
(A) in section 2913(c), by striking ``government''
and inserting ``government or''; and
(B) in section 2926(d)(1), in the second sentence,
by striking ``Defense Agencies'' and inserting ``the
Defense Agencies''.
(2) Grammatical corrections.--Such title is further
amended--
(A) in section 2922a(d), by striking ``resilience
are prioritized and included'' and inserting ``energy
resilience are included as critical factors''; and
(B) in section 2925(a)(3), by striking ``impacting
energy'' and all that follows through the period at the
end and inserting ``degrading energy resilience at
military installations (excluding planned outages for
maintenance reasons), whether caused by on- or off-
installation disruptions, including the total number of
outages and their locations, the duration of each
outage, the financial effect of each outage, whether or
not the mission was affected, the downtimes (in minutes
or hours) the mission can afford based on mission
requirements and risk tolerances, the responsible
authority managing the utility, and measures taken to
mitigate the outage by the responsible authority.''.
(b) Clarification of Applicability of Conflicting Amendments Made
by 2018 Defense Authorization Act.--Section 2911(e) of such title is
amended--
(1) by striking paragraphs (1) and (2) and inserting the
following new paragraphs:
``(1) Opportunities to reduce the current rate of
consumption of energy, the future demand for energy, and the
requirement for the use of energy.
``(2) Opportunities to 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
(2) by striking the second paragraph (13).
(c) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of section 2926 of such
title is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 2926. Operational energy''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 173 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 2926 and inserting the following
new item:
``2926. Operational energy.''.
Subtitle C--Logistics and Sustainment
SEC. 331. REQUIREMENT FOR MEMORANDA OF UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN THE AIR
FORCE AND THE NAVY REGARDING DEPOT MAINTENANCE.
Before the Secretary of the Navy transfers any maintenance action
on a platform to a depot under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of the
Air Force or the Secretary of the Air Force transfers any maintenance
action on a platform to a depot under the jurisdiction of the Secretary
of the Navy, the Air Logistics Complex Commander and the Commander of
Naval Air Systems Command shall enter into a joint memorandum of
understanding that lists out responsibilities for work and technical
oversight responsibilities for such maintenance.
SEC. 332. MODIFICATION TO LIMITATION ON LENGTH OF OVERSEAS FORWARD
DEPLOYMENT OF NAVAL VESSELS.
Section 323 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsection (c):
``(c) Extension of Limitation on Length of Overseas Forward
Deployment for U.S.S. Shiloh (CG-67).--Notwithstanding subsection (b),
the Secretary of the Navy shall ensure that the U.S.S. Shiloh (CG-67)
is assigned a homeport in the United States by not later than September
30, 2023.''.
Subtitle D--Reports
SEC. 341. REPORT ON MODERNIZATION OF JOINT PACIFIC ALASKA RANGE
COMPLEX.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than May 1, 2020, the Secretary of
the Air Force shall submit to the congressional defense committees a
report on the long-term modernization of the Joint Pacific Alaska Range
Complex (in this section referred to as the ``JPARC'').
(b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) An assessment of the requirement for the JPARC to
provide realistic training against modern adversaries,
including 5th generation adversary aircraft and ground threats,
and any current limitations compared to those requirements.
(2) An assessment of the requirement for JPARC to provide a
realistic anti-access area denial training environment and any
current limitations compared to those requirements.
(3) An assessment of the requirement to modernize the JPARC
to provide realistic threats in a large-scale, combined-arms
near-peer environment and any current limitations in meeting
that requirement. The assessment should include--
(A) target sets;
(B) early warning and surveillance systems;
(C) threat systems;
(D) real-time communications capacity and security;
(E) instrumentation and enabling mission data
fusion capabilities; and
(F) such other range deficiencies as the Secretary
of the Air Force considers appropriate to identify.
(4) A plan for balancing coalition training against
training only for members of the Armed Forces of the United
States at the JPARC.
Subtitle E--Other Matters
SEC. 351. STRATEGY TO IMPROVE INFRASTRUCTURE OF CERTAIN DEPOTS OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Strategy Required.--Not later than October 1, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a comprehensive strategy for improving the depot
infrastructure of the military departments with the objective of
ensuring that all covered depots have the capacity and capability to
support the readiness and material availability goals of current and
future weapon systems of the Department of Defense.
(b) Elements.--The strategy under subsection (a) shall include the
following:
(1) A comprehensive review of the conditions and
performance at each covered depot, including the following:
(A) An assessment of the current status of the
following elements:
(i) Cost and schedule performance of the
depot.
(ii) Material availability of weapon
systems supported at the depot and the impact
of the performance of the depot on that
availability.
(iii) Work in progress and non-operational
items awaiting depot maintenance.
(iv) The condition of the depot.
(v) The backlog of restoration and
modernization projects at the depot.
(vi) The condition of equipment at the
depot.
(B) An identification of analytically based goals
relating to the elements identified in subparagraph
(A).
(2) A business-case analysis that assesses investment
alternatives comparing cost, performance, risk, and readiness
outcomes and recommends an optimal investment approach across
the Department of Defense to ensure covered depots efficiently
and effectively meet the readiness goals of the Department,
including an assessment of the following alternatives:
(A) The minimum investment necessary to meet
investment requirements under section 2476 of title 10,
United States Code.
(B) The investment necessary to ensure the current
inventory of facilities at covered depots can meet the
mission-capable, readiness, and contingency goals of
the Secretary of Defense.
(C) The investment necessary to execute the depot
infrastructure optimization plans of each military
department.
(D) Any other strategies for investment in covered
depots, as identified by the Secretary.
(3) A plan to improve conditions and performance of covered
depots that identifies the following:
(A) The approach of the Secretary of Defense for
achieving the goals outlined in paragraph (1)(B).
(B) The resources and investments required to
implement the plan.
(C) The activities and milestones required to
implement the plan.
(D) A results-oriented approach to assess--
(i) the progress of each military
department in achieving such goals; and
(ii) the progress of the Department in
implementing the plan.
(E) Organizational roles and responsibilities for
implementing the plan.
(F) A process for conducting regular management
review and coordination of the progress of each
military department in implementing the plan and
achieving such goals.
(G) The extent to which the Secretary has addressed
recommendations made by the Comptroller General of the
United States relating to depot operations during the
five-year period preceding the date of submittal of the
strategy under this section.
(H) Risks to implementing the plan and mitigation
strategies to address those risks.
(c) Annual Report on Progress.--As part of the annual budget
submission of the President under section 1105(a) of title 31, United
States Code, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report describing the progress made in--
(1) implementing the strategy under subsection (a); and
(2) achieving the goals outlined in subsection (b)(1)(B).
(d) Comptroller General Reports.--
(1) Assessment of strategy.--Not later than January 1,
2021, the Comptroller General of the United States shall submit
to the congressional defense committees a report assessing the
extent to which the strategy under subsection (a) meets the
requirements of this section.
(2) Assessment of implementation.--Not later than April 1,
2022, the Comptroller General shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report setting forth an assessment of the
extent to which the strategy under subsection (a) has been
effectively implemented by each military department and the
Secretary of Defense.
(e) Covered Depot Defined.--In this section, the term ``covered
depot'' has the meaning given that term in section 2476(e) of title 10,
United States Code.
SEC. 352. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS REGARDING THE BASING OF KC-46A
AIRCRAFT OUTSIDE THE CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES.
(a) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of the Air Force shall
submit to Congress a report on the projected plan and timeline
for strategic basing of the KC-46A aircraft outside the
continental United States.
(2) Elements.--In considering basing options in the report
required by paragraph (1), the Secretary of the Air Force shall
consider locations that--
(A) support day-to-day air refueling operations,
operations plans of the combatant commands, and
flexibility for contingency operations, and have--
(i) a strategic location that is essential
to the defense of the United States and its
interests;
(ii) receivers for boom or probe-and-drogue
combat training opportunities with joint and
international partners; and
(iii) sufficient airfield and airspace
availability and capacity to meet requirements;
and
(B) possess facilities that--
(i) take full advantage of existing
infrastructure to provide--
(I) runways, hangars, and aircrew
and maintenance operations; and
(II) sufficient fuel receipt,
storage, and distribution for a five-
day peacetime operating stock; and
(ii) minimize overall construction and
operational costs.
(b) Limitation on Use of Funds.--Not more than 85 percent of the
funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise made
available for fiscal year 2020 for the Air Force for operation and
maintenance for the Management Headquarters Program (Program Element
92398F) may be obligated or expended until the Secretary of the Air
Force submits the report required by subsection (a) unless the
Secretary of the Air Force certifies to Congress that the use of
additional funds is mission essential.
SEC. 353. PREVENTION OF ENCROACHMENT ON MILITARY TRAINING ROUTES AND
MILITARY OPERATIONS AREAS.
Section 183a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (c)(6)--
(A) by striking ``radar or airport surveillance
radar operated'' and inserting ``radar, airport
surveillance radar, or wide area surveillance over-the-
horizon radar operated''; and
(B) by inserting ``Any setback for a project
pursuant to the previous sentence shall not be more
than what is determined to be necessary by a technical
analysis conducted by the Lincoln Laboratory at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology or any successor
entity.'' after ``mitigation options.'';
(2) in subsection (d)--
(A) in paragraph (2)(E), by striking ``to a Deputy
Secretary of Defense, an Under Secretary of Defense, or
a Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense'' and
inserting ``to the Deputy Secretary of Defense, an
Under Secretary of Defense, or a Deputy Under Secretary
of Defense'';
(B) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph
(4); and
(C) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following
new paragraph (3):
``(3) The governor of a State may recommend to the
Secretary of Defense additional geographical areas of concern
within that State. Any such recommendation shall be submitted
for notice and comment pursuant to paragraph (2)(C).'';
(3) in subsection (e)(3), by striking ``an under secretary
of defense, or a deputy under secretary of defense'' and
inserting ``an Under Secretary of Defense, or a Deputy Under
Secretary of Defense'';
(4) in subsection (f), by striking ``from an applicant for
a project filed with the Secretary of Transportation pursuant
to section 44718 of title 49'' and inserting ``from an entity
requesting a review by the Clearinghouse under this section'';
and
(5) in subsection (h)--
(A) by redesignating paragraphs (3), (4), (5), (6),
and (7) as paragraphs (4), (5), (6), (7), and (9),
respectively;
(B) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following
new paragraph (3):
``(3) The term `governor', with respect to a State, means
the chief executive officer of the State.'';
(C) in paragraph (7), as redesignated by
subparagraph (A), by striking ``by the Federal Aviation
Administration'' and inserting ``by the Administrator
of the Federal Aviation Administration''; and
(D) by inserting after paragraph (7), as
redesignated by subparagraph (A), the following new
paragraph:
``(8) The term `State' means the several States, the
District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, the United
States Virgin Islands, and American Samoa.''.
SEC. 354. EXPANSION AND ENHANCEMENT OF AUTHORITIES ON TRANSFER AND
ADOPTION OF MILITARY ANIMALS.
(a) Transfer and Adoption Generally.--Section 2583 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) in the subsection heading, by inserting
``Transfer or'' before ``Adoption''; and
(B) by striking ``adoption'' each place it appears
and inserting ``transfer or adoption'';
(2) in subsection (b)--
(A) in the subsection heading, by inserting
``Transfer or'' before ``Adoption''; and
(B) in the first sentence, by striking ``adoption''
and inserting ``transfer or adoption''; and
(C) in the second sentence, striking
``adoptability'' and inserting ``transferability or
adoptability'';
(3) in subsection (c)(1)--
(A) in the matter preceding subparagraph (A)--
(i) by inserting ``transfer or'' before
``adoption''; and
(ii) by inserting ``, by'' after
``recommended priority'';
(B) in subparagraphs (A) and (B), by inserting
``adoption'' before ``by'';
(C) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``or
organizations'' after ``persons''; and
(D) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``by'' and
inserting ``transfer to''; and
(4) in subsection (e)--
(A) in the subsection heading, by inserting ``or
Adopted''after ``Transferred'';
(B) in paragraphs (1) and (2), by striking
``transferred'' each place it appears and inserting
``transferred or adopted''; and
(C) in paragraph (2), by striking ``transfer'' each
place it appears and inserting ``transfer or
adoption''.
(b) Veterinary Screening and Care for Military Working Dogs to Be
Retired.--Such section is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (f), (g), and (h) as
subsections (g), (h), and (i), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new
subsection (f):
``(f) Veterinary Screening and Care for Military Working Dogs To Be
Retired.--(1)(A) If the Secretary of the military department concerned
determines that a military working dog should be retired, such
Secretary shall transport the dog to the Veterinary Treatment Facility
at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas.
``(B) In the case of a contract working dog to be retired,
transportation required by subparagraph (A) is satisfied by the
transfer of the dog to the 341st Training Squadron at the end of the
dog's service life as required by section 2410r of this title and
assignment of the dog to the Veterinary Treatment Facility referred to
in that subparagraph.
``(2)(A) The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that each dog
transported as described in paragraph (1) to the Veterinary Treatment
Facility referred to in that paragraph is provided with a full
veterinary screening, and necessary veterinary care (including surgery
for any mental, dental, or stress-related illness), before
transportation of the dog in accordance with subsection (g).
``(B) For purposes of this paragraph, stress-related illness
includes illness in connection with post-traumatic stress, anxiety that
manifests in a physical ailment, obsessive compulsive behavior, and any
other stress-related ailment.
``(3) Transportation is not required under paragraph (1), and
screening and care is not required under paragraph (2), for a military
working dog located outside the United States if the Secretary of the
military department concerned determines that transportation of the dog
to the United States would not be in the best interests of the dog for
medical reasons.''.
(c) Coordination of Screening and Care Requirements With
Transportation Requirements.--Subsection (g) of such section, as
redesignated by subsection (b)(1) of this section, is amended to read
as follows:
``(g) Transportation of Retiring Military Working Dogs.--Upon
completion of veterinary screening and care for a military working dog
to be retired pursuant to subsection (f), the Secretary of the military
department concerned shall--
``(1) if the dog was at a location outside the United
States immediately prior to transportation for such screening
and care and a United States citizen or member of the armed
forces living abroad agrees to adopt the dog, transport the dog
to such location for adoption; or
``(2) for any other dog, transport the dog--
``(A) to the 341st Training Squadron;
``(B) to another location within the United States
for transfer or adoption under this section.''.
(d) Preservation of Policy on Transfer of Military Working Dogs to
Law Enforcement Agencies.--Subsection (h) of such section, as so
redesignated, is amended in paragraph (3) by striking ``adoption of
military working dogs'' and all that follows through the period at the
end and inserting ``transfer of military working dogs to law
enforcement agencies before the end of the dogs' useful working
lives.''.
(e) Clarification of Horses Treatable as Military Animals.--
Subsection (i) of such section, as so redesignated, is amended by
striking paragraph (2) and inserting the following new paragraph (2):
``(2) An equid (horse, mule, or donkey) owned by the
Department of Defense.''.
(f) Contract Term for Contract Working Dogs.--Section 2410r(a) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``, and shall contain a contract term,''
after ``shall require'';
(2) by inserting ``and assigned for veterinary screening
and care in accordance with section 2583 of this title'' after
``341st Training Squadron''; and
(3) by striking ``section 2583 of this title'' and
inserting ``such section''.
SEC. 355. LIMITATION ON CONTRACTING RELATING TO DEFENSE PERSONAL
PROPERTY PROGRAM.
(a) Contracting Prohibition.--The Secretary of Defense may not
enter into or award any single or multiple-award contract to a single-
source or multiple-vendor commercial provider for the management of the
Defense Personal Property Program during the period beginning on the
date of the enactment of this Act and ending on the date that is 60
days after the date on which the Comptroller General of the United
States submits to the congressional defense committees a report on the
administration of the Defense Personal Property Program, which was
requested by the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate to be
submitted to the congressional defense committees not later than
February 15, 2020.
(b) Review of Proposals.--Nothing in this section shall be
construed as preventing the Secretary of Defense from reviewing or
evaluating any solicited or unsolicited proposals to improve the
Defense Personal Property Program.
SEC. 356. PROHIBITION ON SUBJECTIVE UPGRADES BY COMMANDERS OF UNIT
RATINGS IN MONTHLY READINESS REPORTING ON MILITARY UNITS.
(a) In General.--The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff shall
modify Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Instruction (CJCSI)
3401.02B, on Force Readiness Reporting, to prohibit the commander of a
military unit who is responsible for monthly reporting of the readiness
of the unit under the instruction from making any upgrade of the
overall rating of the unit (commonly referred to as the ``C-rating'')
for such reporting purposes based in whole or in part on subjective
factors.
(b) Waiver.--
(1) In general.--The modification required by subsection
(a) shall authorize an officer in a general or flag officer
grade in the chain of command of a commander described in that
subsection to waive the prohibition described in that
subsection in connection with readiness reporting on the unit
concerned if the officer considers the waiver appropriate in
the circumstances.
(2) Reporting on waivers.--Each report on personnel and
unit readiness submitted to Congress for a calendar year
quarter pursuant to section 482 of title 10, United States
Code, shall include information on each waiver, if any, issued
pursuant to paragraph (1) during such calendar year quarter.
SEC. 357. EXTENSION OF TEMPORARY INSTALLATION REUTILIZATION AUTHORITY
FOR ARSENALS, DEPOTS, AND PLANTS.
Section 345(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 10 U.S.C. 2667 note) is amended by
striking ``September 30, 2020'' and inserting ``September 30, 2025''.
SEC. 358. CLARIFICATION OF FOOD INGREDIENT REQUIREMENTS FOR FOOD OR
BEVERAGES PROVIDED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) In General.--Before making any final rule, statement, or
determination regarding the limitation or prohibition of any food or
beverage ingredient in military food service, military medical foods,
commissary food, or commissary food service, the Secretary of Defense
shall publish in the Federal Register a notice of a preliminary rule,
statement, or determination (in this section referred to as a
``proposed action'') and provide opportunity for public comment.
(b) Matters To Be Included.--The Secretary shall include in any
notice published under subsection (a) the following:
(1) The date and contact information for the appropriate
office at the Department of Defense.
(2) A summary of the notice.
(3) A date for comments to be submitted and specific
methods for submitting comments.
(4) A description of the substance of the proposed action.
(5) Findings and a statement of reason supporting the
proposed action.
SEC. 359. TECHNICAL CORRECTION TO DEADLINE FOR TRANSITION TO DEFENSE
READINESS REPORTING SYSTEM STRATEGIC.
Section 358(c) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended by striking
``October 1, 2019'' and inserting ``October 1, 2020''.
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, 2020, as follows:
(1) The Army, 480,000.
(2) The Navy, 340,500.
(3) The Marine Corps, 186,200.
(4) The Air Force, 332,800.
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, 2020, as follows:
(1) The Army National Guard of the United States, 336,000.
(2) The Army Reserve, 189,500.
(3) The Navy Reserve, 59,000.
(4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 38,500.
(5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 107,700.
(6) The Air Force Reserve, 70,100.
(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 of any reserve component are released from
active duty during any fiscal year, the end strength prescribed for
such fiscal year for the Selected Reserve of such reserve component
shall be increased proportionately by the total authorized strengths of
such units and by the total number of such individual members.
SEC. 412. END STRENGTHS FOR RESERVES ON ACTIVE DUTY IN SUPPORT OF THE
RESERVES.
Within the end strengths prescribed in section 411(a), the reserve
components of the Armed Forces are authorized, as of September 30,
2020, 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, 30,595.
(2) The Army Reserve, 16,511.
(3) The Navy Reserve, 10,155.
(4) The Marine Corps Reserve, 2,386.
(5) The Air National Guard of the United States, 22,637.
(6) The Air Force Reserve, 4,431.
SEC. 413. END STRENGTHS FOR MILITARY TECHNICIANS (DUAL STATUS).
(a) In General.--The authorized number of military technicians
(dual status) as of the last day of fiscal year 2020 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,
22,294.
(2) For the Army Reserve, 6,492.
(3) For the Air National Guard of the United States,
13,569.
(4) For the Air Force Reserve, 8,938.
(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.
(c) Limitation.--Under no circumstances may a military technician
(dual status) employed under the authority of this section be coerced
by a State into accepting an offer of realignment or conversion to any
other military status, including as a member of the Active, Guard, and
Reserve program of a reserve component. If a military technician (dual
status) declines to participate in such realignment or conversion, no
further action will be taken against the individual or the individual's
position.
(d) Adjustment of Authorized Strength.--
(1) In general.--If, at the end of fiscal year 2019, the
Air National Guard of the United States does not meet its full-
time support realignment goals for such fiscal year (as
presented in the justification materials of the Department of
Defense in support of the budget of the President for such
fiscal year under section 1105 of title 31, United States
Code), the authorized number of military technicians (dual
status) of the Air National Guard of the United States under
subsection (a)(3) shall be increased by the number equal to
difference between--
(A) 3,190, which is the number of military
technicians (dual status) positions in the Air National
Guard of the United States sought to be converted to
the Active, Guard, and Reserve program of the Air
National Guard during fiscal year 2019; and
(B) the number of realigned positions achieved in
the Air National Guard by the end of fiscal year 2019.
(2) Limitation.--The increase under paragraph (1) in the
authorized number of military technician (dual status)
positions described in that paragraph may not exceed 2,292.
(3) Decrease in authorized number of angus reserves on
active duty in support of the reserves.--In the event of an
adjustment to the authorized number military technicians (dual
status) of the Air National Guard of the United States under
this subsection, the number of members of the Air National
Guard of the United States authorized by section 412(5) to be
on active duty as of September 30, 2020, shall be decreased by
the number equal to the number of such adjustment.
(e) Certification.--Not later than January 1, 2020, the Chief of
the National Guard Bureau shall certify to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and House of Representatives the number of
positions realigned from a military technician (dual status) position
to a position in the Active, Guard, and Reserve program of a reserve
component in fiscal year 2019.
(f) Definitions.--In subsections (c), (d), and (e):
(1) The term ``realigned position'' means any military
technician (dual status) position which has been converted or
realigned to a position in an Active, Guard, and Reserve
program of a reserve component under the full time support
rebalancing plan of the Armed Force concerned, regardless of
whether such position is encumbered.
(2) The term ``Active, Guard, and Reserve program'', in the
case of a reserve component, means the program of the reserve
component under which Reserves serve 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 such reserve component.
SEC. 414. MAXIMUM NUMBER OF RESERVE PERSONNEL AUTHORIZED TO BE ON
ACTIVE DUTY FOR OPERATIONAL SUPPORT.
During fiscal year 2020, 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.
SEC. 415. AUTHORIZED STRENGTHS FOR MARINE CORPS RESERVES ON ACTIVE
DUTY.
(a) Officers.--Section 12011(a)(1) of title 10, United States Code,
is amended by striking that part of the table pertaining to the Marine
Corps Reserve and inserting the following:
``Marine Corps Reserve:
2,400......................... 143 105 34
2,500......................... 149 109 35
2,600......................... 155 113 36
2,700......................... 161 118 37
2,800......................... 167 122 39
2,900......................... 173 126 41
3,000......................... 179 130 42''.
(b) Senior Enlisted Members.--Section 12012(a) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by striking that part of the table pertaining
to the Marine Corps Reserve and inserting the following:
``Marine Corps Reserve:
2,400....................................... 106 24
2,500....................................... 112 25
2,600....................................... 116 26
2,700....................................... 121 27
2,800....................................... 125 28
2,900....................................... 130 29
3,000....................................... 134 30''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take
effect on October 1, 2019, and shall apply with respect to fiscal years
beginning on or after that date.
Subtitle C--Authorization of Appropriations
SEC. 421. MILITARY PERSONNEL.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized
to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020 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 2020.
TITLE V--MILITARY PERSONNEL POLICY
Subtitle A--Officer Personnel Policy
SEC. 501. REPEAL OF CODIFIED SPECIFICATION OF AUTHORIZED STRENGTHS OF
CERTAIN COMMISSIONED OFFICERS ON ACTIVE DUTY.
Effective as of October 1, 2020, the text of section 523 of title
10, United States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``The total number of commissioned officers serving on active duty
in the Army, Air Force, or Marine Corps in each of the grades of major,
lieutenant colonel, or colonel, or in the Navy in each of the grades of
lieutenant commander, commander, or captain, at the end of any fiscal
year shall be as specifically authorized by Act of Congress for such
fiscal year.''.
SEC. 502. MAKER OF ORIGINAL APPOINTMENTS IN A REGULAR OR RESERVE
COMPONENT OF COMMISSIONED OFFICERS PREVIOUSLY SUBJECT TO
ORIGINAL APPOINTMENT IN OTHER TYPE OF COMPONENT.
(a) Maker of Regular Appointments in Transfer From Reserve Active-
status List to Active-duty List.--Section 531(c) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by striking ``the Secretary concerned'' and
inserting ``the Secretary of Defense''.
(b) Maker of Reserve Appointments in Transfer From Active-duty List
to Reserve Active-status List.--Subsection (b) of section 12203 of such
title is amended by striking ``the Secretary concerned'' and inserting
``the Secretary of Defense''.
(c) Treatment of Regular Appointment as Constructive Reserve
Appointment To Facilitate Transfer From Active Duty List to Reserve
Active-status List.--Such section 12203 is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (d); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsection (c):
``(c) For purposes of appointments under this section, an officer
who receives an original appointment as a regular commissioned officer
in a grade under section 531 of this title that is made on or after the
date of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2020 shall be deemed also to have received an original
appointment as a reserve commissioned officer in such grade.''.
SEC. 503. FURNISHING OF ADVERSE INFORMATION ON OFFICERS TO PROMOTION
SELECTION BOARDS.
(a) Expansion of Grades of Officers for Which Information Is
Furnished.--Section 615(a)(3) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by inserting ``(A)'' after ``(3)'';
(2) in subparagraph (A), as designated by paragraph (1), by
striking ``a grade above colonel or, in the case of the Navy,
captain,'' and inserting ``a grade specified in subparagraph
(B)''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(B) A grade specified in this subparagraph is as follows:
``(i) In the case of a regular officer, a grade above
captain or, in the case of the Navy, lieutenant.
``(ii) In the case of a reserve officer, a grade above
lieutenant colonel or, in the case of the Navy, commander.''.
(b) Furnishing at Every Phase of Consideration.--Such section is
further amended by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(C) The standards and procedures referred to in subparagraph (A)
shall require the furnishing to the selection board, and to each
individual member of the board, the information described in that
paragraph with regard to an officer in a grade specified in
subparagraph (B) at each stage or phase of the selection board,
concurrent with the screening, rating, assessment, evaluation,
discussion, or other consideration by the board or member of the
official military personnel file of the officer, or of the officer.''.
(c) 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 the proceedings of promotion selection boards convened under
section 611(a) of title 10, United States Code, after that date.
SEC. 504. LIMITATION ON NUMBER OF OFFICERS RECOMMENDABLE FOR PROMOTION
BY PROMOTION SELECTION BOARDS.
(a) In General.--Section 616 of title 10, United States Code is
amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (d), (e), (f), and (g) as
subsections (e), (f), (g), and (h), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new
subsection (d):
``(d) The number of officers recommended for promotion by a
selection board convened under section 611(a) of this title may not
exceed the number equal to 95 percent of the number of officers
included in the promotion zone established under section 623 of this
title for consideration by the board.''.
(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 consideration by promotion selection boards convened under
section 611(a) of title 10, United States Code, of promotion zones that
are established under section 623 of that title on or after that date.
SEC. 505. EXPANSION OF AUTHORITY FOR CONTINUATION ON ACTIVE DUTY OF
OFFICERS IN CERTAIN MILITARY SPECIALTIES AND CAREER
TRACKS.
Section 637a(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
inserting ``separation or'' after ``provided for the''.
SEC. 506. HIGHER GRADE IN RETIREMENT FOR OFFICERS FOLLOWING REOPENING
OF DETERMINATION OR CERTIFICATION OF RETIRED GRADE.
(a) Advice and Consent of Senate Required for Higher Grade.--
Section 1370(f) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (5) as paragraph (6); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (4) the following new
paragraph (5):
``(5) If the retired grade of an officer is proposed to be
increased through the reopening of the determination or certification
of officer's retired grade, the increase in the retired grade shall be
made by the Secretary of Defense, by and with the advice and consent of
the Senate.''.
(b) Recalculation of Retired Pay.--Paragraph (6) of such section,
as redesignated by subsection (a)(1), is amended--
(1) by inserting ``or increased'' after ``reduced'';
(2) by inserting ``as a result of the reduction or
increase'' after ``any modification of the retired pay of the
officer'';
(3) by inserting ``or increase'' after ``the reduction'';
and
(4) by adding at the end the following new sentence: ``An
officer whose retired grade is increased as described in the
preceding sentence shall not be entitled to an increase in
retired pay for any period before the effective date of the
increase.''.
(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 an
increase in the retired grade of an officer that occurs through a
reopening of the determination or certification of the officer's
retired grade of officer on or after that date, regardless of when the
officer retired.
SEC. 507. AVAILABILITY ON THE INTERNET OF CERTAIN INFORMATION ABOUT
OFFICERS SERVING IN GENERAL OR FLAG OFFICER GRADES.
(a) Availability Required.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of each military department
shall make available on an Internet website of such department
available to the public information specified in paragraph (2)
on each officer in a general or flag officer grade under the
jurisdiction of such Secretary, including any such officer on
the reserve active-status list.
(2) Information.--The information on an officer specified
by this paragraph to be made available pursuant to paragraph
(1) is the information as follows:
(A) The officer's name.
(B) The officer's current grade, duty position,
command or organization, and location of assignment.
(C) A summary list of the officer's past duty
assignments while serving in a general or flag officer
grade.
(b) Additional Public Notice on Certain Officers.--Whenever an
officer in a grade of O-7 or above is assigned to a new billet or
reassigned from a current billet, the Secretary of the military
department having jurisdiction of such officer shall make available on
an Internet website of such department available to the public a notice
of such assignment or reassignment.
(c) Limitation on Withholding of Certain Information or Notice.--
(1) Limitation.--The Secretary of a military department may
not withhold the information or notice specified in subsections
(a) and (b) from public availability pursuant to subsection
(a), unless and until the Secretary notifies the Committees on
Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives
in writing of the information or notice that will be so
withheld, together with justification for withholding the
information or notice from public availability.
(2) Limited duration of withholding.--The Secretary
concerned may withhold from the public under paragraph (1)
information or notice on an officer only on the bases of
individual risk to the officer or in the interest of national
security, and may continue to withhold such information or
notice only for so long as the basis for withholding remains in
force.
Subtitle B--Reserve Component Management
SEC. 511. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT FOR REVIEW OF CERTAIN ARMY RESERVE
OFFICER UNIT VACANCY PROMOTIONS BY COMMANDERS OF
ASSOCIATED ACTIVE DUTY UNITS.
Section 1113 of the Army National Guard Combat Readiness Reform Act
of 1992 (10 U.S.C. 10105 note) is repealed.
Subtitle C--General Service Authorities
SEC. 515. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITIES ON MANAGEMENT OF DEPLOYMENTS OF
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES AND RELATED UNIT OPERATING
AND PERSONNEL TEMPO MATTERS.
(a) Limitation on Scope of Delegations of Approval of Exceptions to
Deployment Thresholds.--Paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of section 991
of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``be delegated
to--'' and all that follows and inserting ``be delegated to a civilian
officer of the Department of Defense appointed by the President, by and
with the advice and consent of the Senate.''.
(b) Separate Policies on Dwell Time for Regular and Reserve
Members.--Paragraph (4) of such subsection is amended--
(1) by striking ``addresses the amount'' and inserting
``addresses each of the following:
``(1) The amount'';
(2) in paragraph (1), as designated by paragraph (1) of
this subsection, by inserting ``regular'' before ``member'';
and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) The amount of dwell time a reserve member of the
armed forces remains at the member's permanent duty station
after completing a deployment of 30 days or more in length.''.
(c) Repeal of Authority to Prescribe Alternative Definition of
``Deployment''.--Subsection (b) of such section is amended by striking
paragraph (4).
SEC. 516. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT THAT PARENTAL LEAVE BE TAKEN IN ONE
INCREMENT.
(a) In General.--Subsection (i) of section 701 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (5); and
(2) by redesignating paragraphs (6) through (10) as
paragraphs (5) through (9), respectively.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--Subsection (j)(4) of such section is
amended--
(1) by striking ``paragraphs (6) through (10)'' and
inserting ``paragraphs (5) through (9)''; and
(2) by striking ``paragraph (9)(B)'' and inserting
``paragraph (8)(B)''.
SEC. 517. DIGITAL ENGINEERING AS A CORE COMPETENCY OF THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Policy.--
(1) In general.--It shall be a policy of the Department of
Defense to promote and maintain digital engineering as a core
competency of the civilian and military workforces of the
Department, which policy shall be achieved by--
(A) the recruitment, development, and retention of
civilian employees and members of the Armed Forces with
aptitude, experience, proficient expertise, or a
combination thereof in digital engineering in and to
the Department;
(B) at the discretion of the Secretaries of the
military departments, the development and maintenance
of civilian and military career tracks on digital
engineering, and related digital competencies
(including data science, machine learning, software
engineering, software product management, and
artificial intelligence product management) for
civilian employees of the Department and members of the
Armed Forces, including the development and maintenance
of training, education, talent management, incentives,
and promotion policies in support of members at all
levels of such career tracks; and
(C) the development and application of appropriate
readiness standards and metrics to measure and report
on the overall capability, capacity, use, and readiness
of digital engineering civilian and military workforces
to develop and deliver operational capabilities,
leverage modern digital engineering technologies,
develop advanced capabilities to support military
missions, and employ modern business practices.
(2) Digital engineering.--For purposes of this section,
digital engineering is the discipline and set of skills
involved in the creation, processing, transmission,
integration, and storage of digital data.
(b) Responsibility.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall appoint a
civilian official of the Department of Defense, at a level no lower
than Assistant Secretary of Defense, for the development and discharge
of the policy set forth in subsection (a). The official so designated
shall be known as the ``Chief Digital Engineering Recruitment and
Management Officer of the Department of Defense'' (in this section
referred to as the ``Officer'').
(c) Duties.--In developing and providing for the discharge of the
policy set forth in subsection (a), the Officer shall, in consultation
with the Secretaries of the miliary departments, do the following:
(1) Develop recruitment programs with various core
initiatives, programs, activities, and mechanisms to identify
and recruit civilians employees of the Department of Defense
and members of the Armed Forces with demonstrated aptitude,
interest, proficient expertise, or a combination thereof, in
digital engineering particularly, and in science, technology,
engineering, and mathematics (STEM) generally, including
initiatives, programs, activities, and mechanisms to target
populations of individuals not typically aware of opportunities
in the Armed Forces for a digital engineering career.
(2) Develop and maintain education, training, doctrine, and
professional development activities to support digital
engineering skills of civilian employees of the Department and
members of the Armed Forces.
(3) Coordinate and synchronize digital force management
activities throughout the Department, advise the Secretary of
Defense on all matters pertaining to the health and readiness
of digital forces, convene a Department-wide executive steering
group, and submit to Congress an annual report on the readiness
of digital forces and progress toward achieving the policy.
(4) Create a Department-wide mechanism to track digital
expertise in the workforce, develop and maintain organizational
policies, strategies, and plans sufficient to build, maintain,
and refresh internal capacity at scale, and report to the
Secretary quarterly on the health and readiness of digital
forces.
(5) Assist the military departments in designing,
developing, and executing programs and incentives to retain,
track, and oversee digital expertise among civilian employees
of the Department and members of the Armed Forces on active
duty.
(6) At the request of the Chief of Staff of an Armed Force,
or the head of another component or element of the Department,
undertake an executive search for key leadership positions in
digital engineering in such Armed Force, component, or element,
and develop and deploy agile hiring and competitive
compensation processes to fill such positions.
(7) Identify necessary changes in authorities, policies,
resources, or a combination thereof to further the policy.
(8) Develop a definition for digital engineering consistent
with and aligned to Department needs and processes.
(d) Plan.--Not later than June 1, 2020, the Secretary of Defense
shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the
House of Representatives a plan to meet the requirements of this
section. The plan shall set forth the following:
(1) An identification of the Officer.
(2) A timeline for full implementation of the requirements
of this section.
(3) A description of the career tracks authorized by this
section for both the civilian and military workforces of the
Department of Defense.
(4) Recommendations for such legislative or administrative
action as the Secretary considers appropriate in connection
with implementation of such requirements.
SEC. 518. MODIFICATION OF NOTIFICATION ON MANNING OF AFLOAT NAVAL
FORCES.
(a) Timing of Notification.--Subsection (a) of section 525 of the
John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019
(Public Law 115-232) is amended--
(1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by striking
``not later than 15 days after any of the following conditions
are met:'' and inserting ``not later than 30 days after the end
of each fiscal year quarter, of each covered ship (if any)
that, as of the last day of such fiscal year quarter, met
either condition as follows:''; and
(2) in paragraphs (1) and (2), by striking ``is less'' and
inserting ``was less''.
(b) Definitions of Manning Fit and Manning Fill.--Subsection (d) of
such section is amended in paragraphs (1) and (2) by striking ``the
billets authorized'' and inserting ``the ship manpower document
requirement.''.
SEC. 519. REPORT ON EXPANSION OF THE CLOSE AIRMAN SUPPORT TEAM APPROACH
OF THE AIR FORCE TO THE OTHER ARMED FORCES.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretaries of the military departments
shall jointly submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate
and the House of Representatives a report setting forth an assessment
of the Secretaries of the feasibility and advisability of expanding the
Close Airman Support (CAS) team approach of the Air Force to the other
Armed Forces under the jurisdiction of such Secretaries.
(b) Close Airman Support Team Approach.--The Close Airman Support
team approach of the Air Force referred to in subsection (a) is an
approach by which personnel associated with an Air Force squadron, and
led by a senior enlisted member of the squadron, take actions to
improve relationships and communication among members of the squadron
in order to promote positive social behaviors among such members as a
squadron, including an embrace of proactive pursuit of needed
assistance.
(c) Scope of Report.--If the Secretaries determine that expansion
of the Close Airman Support team approach to the other Armed Forces is
feasible and advisable, the report under subsection (a) shall include a
description of the manner in which the approach will be carried out in
the other Armed Forces, including the manner, if any, in which the
approach will be modified in the other Armed Forces to take into
account the unique circumstances of such Armed Forces.
Subtitle D--Military Justice and Related Matters
PART I--MATTERS RELATING TO INVESTIGATION, PROSECUTION, AND DEFENSE OF
SEXUAL ASSAULT GENERALLY
SEC. 521. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE-WIDE POLICY AND MILITARY DEPARTMENT-
SPECIFIC PROGRAMS ON REINVIGORATION OF THE PREVENTION OF
SEXUAL ASSAULT INVOLVING MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Policy Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall develop and issue
a comprehensive policy for the Department to reinvigorate the
prevention of sexual assault involving members of the Armed Forces.
(b) Policy Elements.--
(1) In general.--The policy required by subsection (a)
shall include the following:
(A) Education and training for members of the Armed
Forces on the prevention of sexual assault.
(B) Elements for programs designed to encourage and
promote healthy relationships among members of the
Armed Forces.
(C) Elements for programs designed to empower and
enhance the role of non-commissioned officers in the
prevention of sexual assault.
(D) Elements for programs to foster social courage
among members of the Armed Forces to encourage and
promote intervention in situations in order to prevent
sexual assault.
(E) Processes and mechanisms designed to address
behaviors among members of the Armed Forces that are
included in the continuum of harm that frequently
results in sexual assault.
(F) Elements for programs designed to address
alcohol abuse, including binge drinking, among members
of the Armed Forces.
(G) Such other elements, processes, mechanisms, and
other matters as the Secretary of Defense considers
appropriate.
(2) Continuum of harm resulting in sexual assault.--For
purposes of paragraph (1)(E), the continuum of harm that
frequently results in sexual assault includes hazing, sexual
harassment, and related behaviors (including language choices,
off-hand statements, jokes, and unconscious attitudes or
biases) that create a permissive climate for sexual assault.
(c) Programs Required.--Not later than 180 days after the issuance
of the policy required by subsection (a), each Secretary of a military
department shall develop and implement for each Armed Force under the
jurisdiction of such Secretary a program to reinvigorate the prevention
of sexual assaults involving members of the Armed Forces. Each program
shall include the elements, processes, mechanisms, and other matters
developed by the Secretary of Defense pursuant to subsection (a)
tailored to the requirements and circumstances of the Armed Force or
Armed Forces concerned.
SEC. 522. ENACTMENT AND EXPANSION OF POLICY ON WITHHOLDING OF INITIAL
DISPOSITION AUTHORITY FOR CERTAIN OFFENSES UNDER THE
UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE.
(a) Initial Disposition Authority.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
proper authority for a determination of disposition of reported
offenses with respect to any offense specified in subsection
(b) shall be an officer in a grade not below the grade of O-6
in the chain of command of the subject who is authorized by
chapter 47 of such title (the Uniform Code of Military Justice)
to convene special courts-martial.
(2) Authority when subject and victim are in different
chains of command.--If the victim of an offense specified in
subsection (b) is in a different chain of command than the
subject, the proper authority under paragraph (1), for any
reported offenses in connection with misconduct of the victim
arising out of the incident in which the offense is alleged to
have occurred, shall be an officer described in that paragraph
in the chain of command of the victim.
(3) Construction.--Nothing in this subsection shall be
construed--
(A) to prohibit the preferral of charges by an
authorized person under section 830(a)(1) of title 10,
United States Code (article 30(a)(1) of the Uniform
code of Military Justice), with respect to the offenses
specified in subsection (b), and the forwarding of such
charges as so preferred to the proper authority under
paragraph (1) with a recommendation as disposition; or
(B) to prohibit an officer in a grade below the
grade of O-6 from advising an officer described in
paragraph (1) who is making a determination described
in that paragraph with respect to the disposition of
the offenses involved.
(b) Covered Offenses.--An offense specified in this subsection is
any offense as follows:
(1) An offense under section 893 of title 10, United States
Code (article 93 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice),
relating to cruelty and maltreatment, if the offense
constitutes sexual harassment.
(2) An offense under section 893a of title 10, United
States Code (article 93a of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to prohibited activity with a military
recruit or trainee by a person in a position of special trust.
(3) An offense under section 918 of title 10, United States
Code (article 118 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice),
relating to murder, if the offense is committed in connection
with family abuse or other domestic violence.
(4) An offense under section 919 of title 10, United States
Code (article 119 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice),
relating to manslaughter, if the offense is committed in
connection with family abuse or other domestic violence.
(5) An offense under section 919a of title 10, United
States Code (article 119a of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to death or injury of an unborn child, if
the offense is committed in connection with family abuse or
other domestic violence.
(6) An offense under section 919b of title 10, United
States Code (article 119b of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to child endangerment, if the offense is
committed in connection with family abuse or other domestic
violence.
(7) An offense under section 920 of title 10, United States
Code (article 120 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice),
relating to rape and sexual assault generally.
(8) An offense under section 920b of title 10, United
States Code (article 120b of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to rape and sexual assault of a child.
(9) An offense under section 920c of title 10, United
States Code (article 120c of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to other sexual misconduct.
(10) An offense under section 925 of title 10, United
States Code (article 125 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to kidnapping, if the offense is committed
in connection with family abuse or other domestic violence.
(11) An offense under section 928 of title 10, United
States Code (article 128 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to aggravated assault, if the offense is
committed in connection with family abuse or other domestic
violence.
(12) An offense under section 928a of title 10, United
States Code (article 128a of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to maiming, if the offense is committed in
connection with family abuse or other domestic violence.
(13) An offense under section 928b of title 10, United
States Code (article 128b of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to domestic violence.
(14) An offense under section 930 of title 10, United
States Code (article 130 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to stalking, if the offense is committed in
connection with family abuse or other domestic violence.
(15) An offense under section 932 of title 10, United
States Code (article 132 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), relating to retaliation.
(16) An offense under section 934 of title 10, United
States Code (article 134 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), if the offense relates to child pornography.
(17) An offense under section 934 of title 10, United
States Code (article 134 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), if the offense--
(A) relates to animal abuse; and
(B) is committed in connection with family abuse or
other domestic violence,
(18) An offense under section 934 of title 10, United
States Code (article 134 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), if the offense--
(A) relates to negligent homicide; and
(B) is committed in connection with family abuse or
other domestic violence.
(19) An attempt to commit an offense specified in a
paragraph (1) through (18) as punishable under section 880 of
title 10, United States Code (article 80 of the Uniform Code of
Military Justice).
(c) Scope of Disposition Authority With Respect to Particular
Offenses.--The authority in subsection (a) of an officer to make a
disposition determination described in that subsection with respect to
any offense specified in subsection (b) extends to a determination of
disposition with respect to any other offenses against the subject
arising out of the incident in which the offense is alleged to have
occurred.
(d) Scope of Disposition Determinations.--Except for an offense
specified in section 818(c) of title 10, United States Code (article
18(c) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), of which only general
courts-martial have jurisdiction, the disposition determinations
permissible in the exercise of the authority under this section with
respect to charges and specifications are as follows:
(1) No action.
(2) Administrative action.
(3) Imposition of non-judicial punishment.
(4) Preferral of charges.
(5) If such charges and specifications were preferred from
a subordinate, dismissal of charges or referral to court-
martial for trial.
(6) Forwarding to a superior or subordinate authority for
further disposition.
(e) Review of Certain Disposition Determinations.--
(1) Initial review and recommendation.--If a disposition
determination under this section with respect to an offense is
for a disposition specified in paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of
subsection (d) and the legal advisor to the officer making the
disposition determination has recommended a disposition
specified in paragraph (4), (5), or (6) of that subsection, a
Special Victim Prosecutor (SVP), Senior Trial Counsel (STC), or
Regional Trial Counsel (RTC) not in the chain of command of the
officer making the disposition determination shall--
(A) review the disposition determination; and
(B) recommend to the staff judge advocate in the
chain of command whether to endorse or supersede the
disposition determination.
(2) SJA review and advice.--Upon completion of a review of
a recommendation under paragraph (1)(B), the staff judge
advocate concerned shall advise the next superior commander in
the chain of command of the officer making the original
disposition determination whether such disposition
determination should be endorsed or superseded.
(3) Final disposition determination.--After considering
advice under paragraph (2) with respect to an original
disposition determination, the superior commander concerned
shall--
(A) make a new disposition determination with
respect to the offenses concerned; or
(B) endorse the original disposition determination
for appropriate further action.
(f) Training.--
(1) In general.--The training provided to commissioned
officers of the Armed Forces in grades O-6 and above on the
exercise of authority pursuant to this section for
determinations of the disposition of an offense specified in
subsection (b) shall include specific training on such matters
in connection with sexual harassment, sexual assault, and
family abuse and domestic violence as the Secretary of Defense
considers appropriate to make informed disposition
determinations under such authority.
(2) Construction.--Nothing in this subsection shall be
construed to deprive a court-martial of jurisdiction based on
the level or amount of training received by the disposition
authority pursuant to this section.
(g) Manual for Courts-Martial.--The President shall implement the
requirement of this section into the Manual for Courts-Martial in
accordance with section 836 of title 10, United States Code (article 36
of the Uniform Code of Military Justice).
SEC. 523. TRAINING FOR SEXUAL ASSAULT INITIAL DISPOSITION AUTHORITIES
ON EXERCISE OF DISPOSITION AUTHORITY FOR SEXUAL ASSAULT
AND COLLATERAL OFFENSES.
(a) In General.--The training for Sexual Assault Initial
Disposition Authorities (SAIDAs) on the exercise of disposition
authority under chapter 47, United States Code (the Uniform Code of
Military Justice), with respect to cases for which disposition
authority is withheld to such Authorities by the April 20, 2012,
memorandum of the Secretary of Defense, or any successor memorandum,
shall include comprehensive training on the exercise by such
Authorities of such authority with respect to such cases in order to
enhance the capabilities of such Authorities in the exercise of such
authority and thereby promote confidence and trust in the military
justice process with respect to such cases.
(b) Memorandum of Secretary of Defense.--The April 20, 2012,
memorandum of the Secretary of Defense referred to in subsection (a) is
the memorandum of the Secretary of Defense entitled ``Withholding
Initial Disposition Authority Under the Uniform Code of Military
Justice in Certain Sexual Assault Cases'' and dated April 20, 2012.
SEC. 524. EXPANSION OF RESPONSIBILITIES OF COMMANDERS FOR VICTIMS OF
SEXUAL ASSAULT COMMITTED BY ANOTHER MEMBER OF THE ARMED
FORCES.
(a) Notification of Victims of Events in Military Justice
Process.--
(1) Notification required.--Except as provided in paragraph
(2), the commander of a member of the Armed Forces who is the
victim of an alleged sexual assault committed by another member
of the Armed Forces (whether or not such other member is in the
command of such commander) shall provide notification to such
victim of every key or other significant event in the military
justice process in connection with the investigation,
prosecution, and confinement of such other member for alleged
sexual assault.
(2) Election of victim not to receive.--A commander is not
required by paragraph (1) to provide notifications to a victim
as described in that paragraph if the victim elects not to be
provided such notifications.
(3) Documentation.--Each commander described in paragraph
(1) shall create and maintain appropriate documentation on the
following:
(A) Any notification provided as described in
paragraph (1).
(B) Any election made pursuant to paragraph (2).
(b) Documentation of Victim's Preference on Jurisdiction in
Prosecution.--In the case of a member of the Armed Forces who is the
victim of an alleged sexual assault committed by another member of the
Armed Forces who is subject to prosecution for such alleged offense
both by court-martial under chapter 47 of title 10, United States Code
(the Uniform Code of Military Justice), and by a civilian court under
Federal or State law, the commander of such victim shall create and
maintain appropriate documentation of the expressed preference, if any,
of such victim for prosecution of such alleged offense by court-martial
or by a civilian court as provided for by Rule 306(e) of the Rules for
Court-Martial.
(c) Regulations.--The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe in
regulations the requirements applicable to each of the following:
(1) Notifications under subsection (a)(1).
(2) Elections under subsection (a)(2).
(3) Documentation under subsection (a)(3).
(4) Documentation under subsection (b).
SEC. 525. TRAINING FOR COMMANDERS IN THE ARMED FORCES ON THEIR ROLE IN
ALL STAGES OF MILITARY JUSTICE IN CONNECTION WITH SEXUAL
ASSAULT.
(a) In General.--The training provided commanders in the Armed
Forces shall include comprehensive training on the role of commanders
in all stages of military justice in connection with sexual assaults by
members of the Armed Forces.
(b) Elements To Be Covered.--The training provided pursuant to
subsection (a) shall include training on the following:
(1) The role of commanders in each stage of the military
justice process in connection with sexual assault committed by
a member of the Armed Forces, including investigation and
prosecution.
(2) The role of commanders in assuring that victims in
sexual assault described in paragraph (1) are informed of, and
have the opportunity to obtain, assistance available for
victims of sexual assault by law.
(3) The role of commanders in assuring that victims in
sexual assault described in paragraph (1) are afforded the due
process rights and protections available to victims by law.
(4) The role of commanders in preventing retaliation
against victims, their family members, witnesses, first
responders, and bystanders for their their complaints,
statements, testimony, and status in connection with sexual
assault described in paragraph (1), including the role of
commanders in ensuring that subordinates in the command are
aware of their responsibilities in preventing such retaliation.
(5) The role of commanders in establishing and maintaining
a healthy command climate in connection with reporting on
sexual assault described in paragraph (1) and in the response
of the commander, subordinates in the command, and other
personnel in the command to such sexual assault, such
reporting, and the military justice process in connection with
such sexual assault.
(6) Any other matters on the role of commanders in
connection with sexual assault described in paragraph (1) that
the Secretary of Defense considers appropriate for purposes of
this section.
(c) Incorporation of Best Practices.--
(1) In general.--The training provided pursuant to
subsection (a) shall incorporate best practices on all matters
covered by the training.
(2) Identification of best practices.--The Secretaries of
the military departments shall, acting through the training and
doctrine commands of the Armed Forces, undertake from time to
time surveys and other reviews of the matters covered by the
training provided pursuant to subsection (a) in order to
identify and incorporate into such training the most current
practicable best practices on such matters.
(d) Uniformity.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the
training provided pursuant to subsection (a) is, to the extent
practicable, uniform across the Armed Forces.
SEC. 526. NOTICE TO VICTIMS OF ALLEGED SEXUAL ASSAULT OF PENDENCY OF
FURTHER ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION FOLLOWING A DETERMINATION
NOT TO REFER TO TRIAL BY COURT-MARTIAL.
Under regulations prescribed by the Secretary of Defense, upon a
determination not to refer a case of alleged sexual assault for trial
by court-martial under chapter 47 of title 10, United States Code (the
Uniform Code of Military Justice), the commander making such
determination shall periodically notify the victim of the status of a
final determination on further action on such case, whether non-
judicial punishment under section 815 of such title (article 15 of the
Uniform Code of Military Justice), other administrative action, or no
further action. Such notifications shall continue not less frequently
than monthly until such final determination.
SEC. 527. SAFE TO REPORT POLICY APPLICABLE ACROSS THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall, in consultation
with the Secretaries of the military departments and the Secretary of
Homeland Security, prescribe in regulations a safe to report policy
described in subsection (b) that applies with respect to all members of
the Armed Forces (including members of the reserve components of the
Armed Forces) and cadets and midshipmen at the military service
academies.
(b) Safe to Report Policy.--The safe to report policy described in
this subsection is a policy under which a member of the Armed Forces
who is the victim of an alleged sexual assault, but who may have
committed minor collateral misconduct at or about the time of such
alleged sexual assault, or whose minor collateral misconduct is
discovered only as a result of the investigation into such alleged
sexual assault, may report such alleged sexual assault to proper
authorities without fear or receipt of discipline in connection with
such minor collateral misconduct absent aggravating circumstances that
increase the gravity of the minor collateral misconduct or its impact
on good order and discipline.
(c) Minor Collateral Misconduct.--For purposes of the safe to
report policy, minor collateral misconduct shall include any of the
following:
(1) Improper use or possession of alcohol.
(2) Consensual intimate behavior (including adultery) or
fraternization.
(3) Presence in an off-limits area.
(4) Such other misconduct as the Secretary of Defense shall
specify in the regulations under subsection (a).
(d) Aggravating Circumstances.--The regulations under subsection
(a) shall specify aggravating circumstances that increase the gravity
of minor collateral misconduct or its impact on good order and
discipline for purposes of the safe to report policy.
SEC. 528. REPORT ON EXPANSION OF AIR FORCE SAFE TO REPORT POLICY ACROSS
THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Report.--Not late than 180 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in consultation with the
Secretaries of the military departments and the Secretary of Homeland
Security, submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
the House of Representatives a report setting forth an assessment of
the feasibility and advisability of expanding the applicability of the
safe to report policy described in subsection (b) so that the policy
applies across the Armed Forces.
(b) Safe to Report Policy.--The safe to report policy described in
this subsection is the policy, currently applicable in the Air Force
alone, under which a member of the Armed Forces who is the victim of an
alleged sexual assault committed by another member of the Armed Forces,
but who may have committed minor collateral misconduct at or about the
time of such alleged sexual assault, or whose minor collateral
misconduct at or about such time is discovered only as a result of the
investigation into such alleged sexual assault, may report such alleged
sexual assault to proper authorities without fear or receipt of
discipline in connection with such minor collateral misconduct.
SEC. 529. PROPOSAL FOR SEPARATE PUNITIVE ARTICLE IN THE UNIFORM CODE OF
MILITARY JUSTICE ON SEXUAL HARASSMENT.
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Joint Service Committee on Military Justice shall submit to
the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report setting forth recommendations for legislative
and administrative action required to establish a separate punitive
article in chapter 47 of title 10, United States Code (the Uniform Code
of Military Justice), on sexual harassment.
SEC. 530. TREATMENT OF INFORMATION IN CATCH A SERIAL OFFENDER PROGRAM
FOR CERTAIN PURPOSES.
(a) Exclusion From FOIA.--Section 552 of title 5, United States
Code (commonly referred to as the ``Freedom of Information Act''),
shall not apply to any report for purposes of the Catch a Serial
Offender (CATCH) Program.
(b) Preservation of Restricted Report.--The transmittal or receipt
in connection with the Catch a Serial Offender Program of a report on a
sexual assault that is treated as a restricted report shall not operate
to terminate its treatment or status as a restricted report.
SEC. 531. REPORT ON PRESERVATION OF RECOURSE TO RESTRICTED REPORT ON
SEXUAL ASSAULT FOR VICTIMS OF SEXUAL ASSAULT FOLLOWING
CERTAIN VICTIM OR THIRD-PARTY COMMUNICATIONS.
(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 making findings and recommendations on the
feasibility and advisability of a policy for the Department of Defense
that would permit a victim of a sexual assault, that is or may be
investigated as a result of a communication described in subsection
(b), which victim is a member of the Armed Forces or an adult dependent
of a member of the Armed Forces, to have the reporting on the sexual
assault be treated as a restricted report without regard to the party
initiating or receiving such communication.
(b) Communications.--A communication described in this subsection
is a communication reporting a sexual assault as follows:
(1) By the victim to a member of the Armed Forces, whether
a commissioned officer or a noncommissioned officer, in the
chain of command of the victim or the victim's military
sponsor.
(2) By the victim to military law enforcement personnel or
personnel of a military criminal investigative organization
(MCIO).
(3) By any individual other than victim.
(c) Scope of Findings and Recommendations.--The report required by
subsection (a) may include recommendations for new provisions of
statute or regulations, or modification of current statute or
regulations, that may be required to put into effect the findings and
recommendations described in subsection (a).
(d) Consultation.--In preparing the report required by subsection
(a), the Secretary shall consult with the Defense Advisory Committee on
Investigation, Prosecution, and Defense of Sexual Assault in the Armed
Forces (DAC-IPAD) under section 546 of the Carl Levin and Howard P.
``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015
(10 U.S.C. 1561 note).
SEC. 532. AUTHORITY FOR RETURN OF PERSONAL PROPERTY TO VICTIMS OF
SEXUAL ASSAULT WHO FILE A RESTRICTED REPORT BEFORE
CONCLUSION OF RELATED PROCEEDINGS.
Section 586 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2012 (10 U.S.C. 1561 note) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (e);
(2) in subsection (e), as so redesignated, in the
subsection heading, by inserting ``in Unrestricted Reporting
Cases'' after ``Proceedings''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(f) Return of Personal Property in Restricted Reporting Cases.--
(1) The Secretary of Defense shall prescribe procedures under which a
victim who files a restricted report on an incident of sexual assault
may request, at any time, the return of any personal property of the
victim obtained as part of the sexual assault forensic examination.
``(2) The procedures shall ensure that--
``(A) a request of a victim under paragraph (1) may be made
on a confidential basis and without affecting the restricted
nature of the restricted report; and
``(B) at the time of the filing of the restricted report, a
Sexual Assault Response Coordinator or Sexual Assault
Prevention and Response Victim Advocate--
``(i) informs the victim that the victim may
request the return of personal property as described in
paragraph (1); and
``(ii) advises the victim that such a request for
the return of personal property may negatively impact a
subsequent case adjudication, if the victim later
decides to convert the restricted report to an
unrestricted report.
``(3) Except with respect to personal property returned to a victim
under this subsection, nothing in this subsection shall affect the
requirement to retain a sexual assault forensic examination (SAFE) kit
for the period specified in subsection (c)(4)(A).''.
SEC. 533. EXTENSION OF DEFENSE ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON INVESTIGATION,
PROSECUTION, AND DEFENSE OF SEXUAL ASSAULT IN THE ARMED
FORCES.
Section 546(f)(1) of the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (10 U.S.C. 1561
note) is amended by striking ``five'' and inserting ``ten''.
SEC. 534. DEFENSE ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR THE PREVENTION OF SEXUAL
MISCONDUCT.
(a) Establishment Required.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish
and maintain within the Department of Defense an advisory
committee to be known as the ``Defense Advisory Committee for
the Prevention of Sexual Misconduct'' (in this section referred
to as the ``Advisory Committee'').
(2) Deadline for establishment.--The Secretary shall
establish the Advisory Committee not later than 180 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act.
(b) Membership.--
(1) In general.--The Advisory Committee shall consist of
not more than 20 members, appointed by the Secretary from among
individuals who have an expertise appropriate for the work of
the Advisory Committee, including at least one individual with
each expertise as follows:
(A) Expertise in the prevention of sexual assault
and behaviors on the sexual assault continuum of harm.
(B) Expertise in the prevention of suicide.
(C) Expertise in the change of culture of large
organizations.
(D) Expertise in implementation science.
(2) Background of individuals.--Individuals appointed to
the Advisory Committee may include individuals with expertise
in sexual assault prevention efforts of institutions of higher
education, public health officials, and such other individuals
as the Secretary considers appropriate.
(3) Prohibition on membership of members of armed forces on
active duty.--A member of the Armed Forces serving on active
duty may not serve as a member of the Advisory Committee.
(c) Duties.--
(1) In general.--The Advisory Committee shall advise the
Secretary on the following:
(A) The prevention of sexual assault (including
rape, forcible sodomy, other sexual assault, and other
sexual misconduct (including behaviors on the sexual
assault continuum of harm)) involving members of the
Armed Forces.
(B) The policies, programs, and practices of each
military department, each Armed Force, and each
military service academy for the prevention of sexual
assault as described in subparagraph (A).
(2) Basis for provision of advice.--For purposes of
providing advice to the Secretary pursuant to this subsection,
the Advisory Committee shall review, on an ongoing basis, the
following:
(A) Cases involving allegations of sexual assault
described in paragraph (1).
(B) Efforts of institutions of higher education to
prevent sexual assault among students.
(C) Any other information or matters that the
Advisory Committee or the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(3) Coordination of efforts.--In addition to the reviews
required by paragraph (2), for purposes of providing advice to
the Secretary the Advisory Committee shall also consult and
coordinate with the Defense Advisory Committee on
Investigation, Prosecution, and Defense of Sexual Assault in
the Armed Forces (DAC-IPAD) on matters of joint interest to the
two Advisory Committees.
(d) Annual Report.--Not later than March 30 each year, the Advisory
Committee shall submit to the Secretary and the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the
activities of the Advisory Committee pursuant to this section during
the preceding year.
(e) Sexual Assault Continuum of Harm.--In this section, the term
``sexual assault continuum of harm'' includes--
(1) inappropriate actions (such as sexist jokes), sexual
harassment, gender discrimination, hazing, cyber bullying, or
other behavior that contributes to a culture that is tolerant
of, or increases risk for, sexual assault; and
(2) maltreatment or ostracism of a victim for a report of
sexual misconduct.
SEC. 535. INDEPENDENT REVIEWS AND ASSESSMENTS ON RACE AND ETHNICITY IN
THE INVESTIGATION, PROSECUTION, AND DEFENSE OF SEXUAL
ASSAULT IN THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) Reviews and Assessments by DAC-IPAD.--The independent committee
established by the Secretary of Defense under section 546 of the Carl
Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3374), commonly
known as the ``DAC-IPAD'', shall conduct each of the following:
(1) A review and assessment, by fiscal year, of the race
and ethnicity of members of the Armed Forces accused of a
penetrative sexual assault offense or contact sexual assault
offense in an unrestricted report made pursuant to Department
of Defense Instruction 6495.02, including an unrestricted
report involving a spouse or intimate partner, in all cases
completed in each fiscal year assessed.
(2) A review and assessment, by fiscal year, of the race
and ethnicity of members of the Armed Forces against whom
charges were preferred pursuant to Rule for Courts-Martial 307
for a penetrative sexual assault offense or contact sexual
assault offense in all cases completed in each fiscal year
assessed.
(3) A review and assessment, by fiscal year, of the race
and ethnicity of members of the Armed Forces who were convicted
of a penetrative sexual assault offense or contact sexual
assault offense in all cases completed in each fiscal year
assessed.
(b) Information From Federal Agencies.--
(1) In general.--Upon request by the chair of the
committee, a department or agency of the Federal Government
shall provide information that the committees considers
necessary to conduct reviews and assessments required by
subsection (a), including military criminal investigation
files, charge sheets, records of trial, and personnel records.
(2) Handling, storage, and return.--The committee shall
handle and store all records received and reviewed under this
section in accordance with applicable privacy laws and
Department of Defense policy, and shall return all records so
received in a timely manner.
(c) Report.--Not later than one year after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the committee shall submit to the Secretary of
Defense, and to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the
House of Representatives, a report setting forth the results of the
reviews and assessments required by subsection (a). The report shall
include such recommendations for legislative or administrative action
as the committee considers appropriate in light of such results.
(d) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) The term ``case'' means an unrestricted report of any
penetrative sexual assault offense or contact sexual assault
offense made against a member of the Armed Forces pursuant to
Department of Defense Instruction 6495.02, including any
unrestricted report involving a spouses or intimate partner for
which an investigation has been opened by a criminal
investigative organization.
(2) The term ``completed'', with respect to a case, means
that the case was tried to verdict, dismissed without further
action, or dismissed and then resolved by non-judicial or
administrative proceedings.
(3) The term ``contact sexual assault offense'' means
aggravated sexual contact, abusive sexual contact, wrongful
sexual contact, and attempts to commit such offenses under the
Uniform Code of Military Justice.
(4) The term ``penetrative sexual assault offense'' means
rape, aggravated sexual assault, sexual assault, forcible
sodomy, and attempts to commit such offenses under the Uniform
Code of Military Justice.
SEC. 536. REPORT ON MECHANISMS TO ENHANCE THE INTEGRATION AND
SYNCHRONIZATION OF ACTIVITIES OF SPECIAL VICTIM
INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION PERSONNEL WITH ACTIVITIES
OF MILITARY CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE ORGANIZATIONS.
Not later than one year after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in consultation with the
Secretaries of the military departments, submit to the Committees on
Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report
setting forth proposals for various mechanisms to enhance the
integration and synchronization of activities of Special Victim
Investigation and Prosecution (SVIP) personnel with activities of
military criminal investigative organizations (MCIOs) in investigations
in which both such personnel are or may be involved. If the proposed
mechanisms require legislative or administration action for
implementation, the report shall set forth such recommendations for
such action as the Secretary of Defense considers appropriate.
SEC. 537. COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES REPORT ON
IMPLEMENTATION BY THE ARMED FORCES OF RECENT STATUTORY
REQUIREMENTS ON SEXUAL ASSAULT PREVENTION AND RESPONSE IN
THE MILITARY.
(a) Report Required.--The Comptroller General of the United States
shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the
House of Representatives a report, in writing, on a study, conducted by
the Comptroller General for purposes of the report, on the
implementation by the Armed Forces of statutory requirements on sexual
assault prevention and response in the military in the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2004 (Public Law 108-136) and each
succeeding national defense authorization Act through the John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public
Law 115-232).
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
the following:
(1) A list and citation of each statutory requirement
(whether codified or uncodified) on sexual assault prevention
and response in the military in each national defense
authorization Act specified in paragraph (1), including--
(A) whether such statutory requirement is still in
force; and
(B) if such statutory requirement is no longer in
force, the date of the repeal or expiration of such
requirement.
(2) For each statutory requirement listed pursuant to
paragraph (1), the following:
(A) An assessment of the extent to which such
requirement was implemented, or is currently being
implemented, as applicable, by each Armed Force to
which such requirement applied or applies.
(B) A description and assessment of the actions
taken by each of the Department of Defense, the
military department concerned, and the Armed Force
concerned to assess and determine the effectiveness of
actions taken pursuant to such requirement in meeting
its intended objective.
(3) Any other matters in connection with the statutory
requirements specified in subsection (a), and the
implementation of such requirements by the Armed Forces, that
the Comptroller General considers appropriate.
(c) Briefings.--Not later than May 1, 2020, the Comptroller General
shall provide to the committees referred to in subsection (a) one or
more briefings on the status of the study required by subsection (a),
including any preliminary findings and recommendations of the
Comptroller General as a result of the study as of the date of such
briefing.
PART II--SPECIAL VICTIMS' COUNSEL MATTERS
SEC. 541. LEGAL ASSISTANCE BY SPECIAL VICTIMS' COUNSEL FOR VICTIMS OF
ALLEGED DOMESTIC VIOLENCE OFFENSES.
(a) Conditional Expansion of Eligibility to Victims of Alleged
Domestic Violence Offenses.--Subsection (a) of section 1044e of title
10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
``(3) Legal counsel designated as described in paragraph (1) may
also provide legal assistance to any individual described in paragraph
(2)(B) or (2)(C) who is the victim of an alleged domestic violence
offense, and to any civilian individual not otherwise covered by
paragraph (2)(C) who is the victim of an alleged sex-related offense or
alleged domestic violence offense, if the Secretary of the military
department concerned determines (on a case-by-case basis) that
resources are available for the provision of such assistance to such
individual without impairing the capacity to provide assistance under
paragraph (1) to victims of alleged sex-related offenses described in
paragraph (2).''.
(b) Definitions.--Subsection (g) of such section is amended to read
as follows:
``(g) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `alleged covered offense' means any of the
following:
``(A) An alleged sex-related offense.
``(B) An alleged domestic violence offense.
``(2) The term `alleged sex-related offense' means any
allegation of--
``(A) a violation of section 920, 920b, 920c, or
930 of this title (article 120, 120b, 120c, or 130 of
the Uniform Code of Military Justice); or
``(B) an attempt to commit an offense specified in
a subparagraph (A) as punishable under section 880 of
this title (article 80 of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice).
``(3) The term `alleged domestic violence offense' means
any allegation of--
``(A) a violation of section 928, 928b(1), 928b(5),
or 930 of this title (article 128, 128b(1), 128b(5), or
130 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), when
committed against a spouse, intimate partner, or
immediate family member;
``(B) a violation of any other provision of
subchapter X of chapter 47 of this title (the Uniform
Code of Military Justice), when committed against a
spouse, intimate partner, or immediate family member,
as specified by the Secretary concerned for purposes of
eligibility for legal consultation and assistance by
Special Victims' Counsel under the jurisdiction of such
Secretary under this section; or
``(C) an attempt to commit an offense specified in
a subparagraph (A) or (B) as punishable under section
880 of this title (article 80 of the Uniform Code of
Military Justice).''.
(c) Conforming Amendments.--Such section is further amended--
(1) in subsections (b) and (f), by striking ``alleged sex-
related offense'' each place it appears (other than subsection
(f)(1)) and inserting ``alleged covered offense concerned'';
and
(2) in subsection (f)--
(A) by striking ``subsection (a)(2)'' each place it
appears and inserting ``paragraph (2) or (3) of
subsection (a)''; and
(B) in paragraph (1), by striking ``an alleged sex-
related offense'' and inserting ``an alleged covered
offense''.
(d) Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 1044e. Special Victims' Counsel: victims of sex-related
offenses; victims of domestic violence offenses''.
(2) Table of sections.--the table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 53 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 1044e and inserting the following
new item:
``1044e. Special Victims' Counsel: victims of sex-related offenses;
victims of domestic violence offenses.''.
SEC. 542. OTHER SPECIAL VICTIMS' COUNSEL MATTERS.
(a) Enhancement of Legal Consultation and Assistance in Connection
With Potential Victim Benefits.--Paragraph (8)(D) of subsection (b) of
section 1044e of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking
``and other'' and inserting ``, section 1408(h) of this title, and
other''.
(b) Expansion of Legal Assistance Authorized to Include
Consultation and Assistance for Retaliation.--Subsection (b) of such
section is amended further--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (10) as paragraph (11); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (9) the following new
paragraph (10):
``(10) Legal consultation and assistance in connection with
an incident of retaliation, whether such incident occurs
before, during, or after the conclusion of any criminal
proceedings, including--
``(A) in understanding the rights and protections
afforded to victims of retaliation;
``(B) in the filing of complaints; and
``(C) in any resulting military justice
proceedings.''.
(c) Codification of Duty to Determine Victim's Preference for
Prosecution of Alleged Sex-related Offense by Court-martial or Civilian
Court.--
(1) In general.--Such section is further amended--
(A) by redesignating subsections (d) through (h) as
subsections (e) through (i), respectively; and
(B) by inserting after subsection (c) the following
new subsection (d):
``(d) Duty to Determine Victim's Preference for Prosecution of an
Alleged Sex-related Offense by Court-martial or Civilian Court.--(1) In
providing legal consultation and representation to a victim under this
section in connection with an alleged sex-related offense that occurs
in the United States, a Special Victims' Counsel shall have the duty--
``(A) to solicit the victim's preference regarding whether
the offense should be prosecuted by court-martial or in a
civilian court with jurisdiction over the offense; and
``(B) to make the victim's preference, if offered, known to
appropriate military prosecutors.
``(2) Any consultation by a Special Victims' Counsel pursuant to
paragraph (1) shall occur in accordance with the process for such
consultation established pursuant to section 534(b) of the Carl Levin
and Howard P. `Buck' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2015 (10 U.S.C. 1044e note) or such other process as the
Secretary of Defense shall establish for that purpose.''.
(2) Conforming amendment.--Paragraph (11) of subsection (b)
of such section, as redesignated by subsection (b)(1) of this
section, is amended by striking ``subsection (h)'' and
inserting ``subsection (i)''.
(d) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take
effect on the date that is 180 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act.
(e) Report on Expansion of Eligibility for SVC Services for Victims
of Alleged Domestic Violence Offenses and Related Matters.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 120 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 setting forth a
description and assessment of the manner in which the
Department of Defense would implement amendments to section
1044e of title 10, United States Code, that would provide for
the following:
(A) An expansion of eligibility for Special
Victims' Counsel services for victims of alleged
domestic violence offenses.
(B) An expansion of eligibility for Special
Victim's Counsel services to any civilians who are the
victim of an alleged sex-related offense or an alleged
domestic violence offense, in cases in which the
Secretary concerned waives the condition in section
1044(a)(7) of title 10, United States Code, for
purposes of such eligibility.
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include a comprehensive description of the additional personnel
(including the specific number of additional billets),
resources, and training required to implement the amendments
described in that paragraph such that such amendments are fully
implemented by not later than September 30, 2025.
(3) Definitions.--In this subsection:
(A) The term ``alleged sex-related offense'' has
the meaning given that term in section 1044e(g) of
title 10, United States Code.
(B) The term ``alleged domestic violence offense''
means any allegation of--
(i) a violation of section 928(b), 928b(1),
928b(5), or 930 of title 10, United States Code
(article 128(b), 128b(1), 128b(5), or 130 of
the Uniform Code of Military Justice), when
committed against a spouse, intimate partner,
or immediate family member;
(ii) a violation of any other provision of
subchapter X of chapter 47 of such title (the
Uniform Code of Military Justice), when
committed against a spouse, intimate partner,
or immediate family member, if specified by any
Secretary concerned for purposes of eligibility
for legal consultation and assistance by
Special Victims' Counsel under the amendments
described in paragraph (1); and
(iii) an attempt to commit an offense
specified in clause (i) or (ii) as punishable
under section 880 of such title (article 80 of
the Uniform Code of Military Justice).
(C) The term ``Secretary concerned'' has the
meaning given that term in section 101(a)(9) of title
10, United States Code.
SEC. 543. AVAILABILITY OF SPECIAL VICTIMS' COUNSEL AT MILITARY
INSTALLATIONS.
(a) Deadline for Availability.--If a Special Victims' Counsel is
not available at a military installation for access by a member of the
Armed Forces who requests access to such a Counsel, such a Counsel
shall be made available at such installation for access by such member
by not later than 72 hours after such request.
(b) Report on Civilian Support of SVCs.--Not later than 180 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act, each Secretary of a
military department shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of
the Senate and the House of Representatives a report setting forth the
assessment of such Secretary of the feasibility and advisability of
establishing and maintaining for each Special Victims' Counsel under
the jurisdiction of such Secretary one or more civilian positions for
the purpose of--
(1) providing support to such Special Victims' Counsel; and
(2) ensuring continuity and the preservation of
institutional knowledge in transitions between the service of
individuals as such Special Victims' Counsel.
SEC. 544. TRAINING FOR SPECIAL VICTIMS' COUNSEL ON CIVILIAN CRIMINAL
JUSTICE MATTERS IN THE STATES OF THE MILITARY
INSTALLATIONS TO WHICH ASSIGNED.
(a) Training.--Upon the assignment of a Special Victims' Counsel
(including a Victim Legal Counsel of the Navy) to a military
installation in the United States, such Counsel shall be provided
appropriate training on the law and policies of the State or States in
which such military installation is located with respect to the
criminal justice matters specified in subsection (b).
(b) Criminal Justice Matters.--The criminal justice matters
specified in this subsection, with respect to a State, are the
following:
(1) Victim rights.
(2) Protective orders.
(3) Prosecution of criminal offenses.
(4) Sentencing for conviction of criminal offenses.
PART III--BOARDS FOR CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS AND DISCHARGE
REVIEW BOARD MATTERS
SEC. 546. REPEAL OF 15-YEAR STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS ON MOTIONS OR
REQUESTS FOR REVIEW OF DISCHARGE OR DISMISSAL FROM THE
ARMED FORCES.
(a) Repeal.--Section 1553(a) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by striking the second sentence.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section shall take
effect on October 1, 2020.
SEC. 547. REDUCTION IN REQUIRED NUMBER OF MEMBERS OF DISCHARGE REVIEW
BOARDS.
Section 1553(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``five'' and inserting ``not fewer than three''.
SEC. 548. ENHANCEMENT OF PERSONNEL ON BOARDS FOR THE CORRECTION OF
MILITARY RECORDS AND DISCHARGE REVIEW BOARDS.
(a) Boards for the Correction of Military Records.--Section 1552 of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (g), by inserting ``, or a social worker
with training on mental health issues connected with post-
traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury or other
trauma,'' after ``psychiatrist''; and
(2) in subsection (h)(2)(A), by inserting ``(including a
social worker with training on mental health issues connected
with post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury
or other trauma)'' after ``a civilian health care provider''.
(b) Discharge Review Boards.--Section 1553 of such title is
amended--
(1) in subsection (d)(1), by inserting ``, or a social
worker with training on mental health issues connected with
post-traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury or
other trauma,'' after ``psychiatrist'' both places it appears;
and
(2) in subsection (e), by inserting ``a social worker with
training on mental health issues connected with post-traumatic
stress disorder or traumatic brain injury or other trauma,''
after ``or psychiatrist,''.
SEC. 549. INCLUSION OF INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE AND SPOUSAL ABUSE
AMONG SUPPORTING RATIONALES FOR CERTAIN CLAIMS FOR
CORRECTIONS OF MILITARY RECORDS AND DISCHARGE REVIEW.
(a) Correction of Military Records.--Section 1552(h)(1) of title
10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``or military sexual
trauma'' and inserting ``, sexual trauma, intimate partner violence, or
spousal abuse''.
(b) Discharge Review.--Section 1553(d)(3)(B) of such title is
amended by striking ``or military sexual trauma'' and inserting ``,
sexual trauma, intimate partner violence, or spousal abuse''.
SEC. 550. ADVICE AND COUNSEL OF TRAUMA EXPERTS IN REVIEW BY BOARDS FOR
CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS AND DISCHARGE REVIEW
BOARDS OF CERTAIN CLAIMS.
(a) Boards for Correction of Military Records.--Section 1552(g) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``(1)'' after ``(g)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) If a board established under subsection (a)(1) is reviewing a
claim described in subsection (h), the board shall seek advice and
counsel in the review from a psychiatrist, psychologist, or social
worker with training on mental health issues associated with post-
traumatic stress disorder or traumatic brain injury or other trauma as
specified in the current edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders published by the American Psychiatric
Association.
``(3) If a board established under subsection (a)(1) is reviewing a
claim in which sexual trauma, intimate partner violence, or spousal
abuse is claimed, the board shall seek advice and counsel in the review
from an expert in trauma specific to sexual assault, intimate partner
violence, or spousal abuse, as applicable.''.
(b) Discharge Review Boards.--Section 1553(d)(1) of such title is
amended--
(1) by inserting ``(A)'' after ``(1)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph;
``(B) In the case of a former member described in paragraph (3)(B)
who claims that the former member's post-traumatic stress disorder or
traumatic brain injury as described in that paragraph in based in whole
or in part on sexual trauma, intimate partner violence, or spousal
abuse, a board established under this section to review the former
member's discharge or dismissal shall seek advice and counsel in the
review from a psychiatrist, psychologist, or social worker with
training on mental health issues associated with post-traumatic stress
disorder or traumatic brain injury or other trauma as specified in the
current edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders published by the American Psychiatric Association.''.
SEC. 551. TRAINING OF MEMBERS OF BOARDS FOR CORRECTION OF MILITARY
RECORDS AND DISCHARGE REVIEW BOARDS ON SEXUAL TRAUMA,
INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE, SPOUSAL ABUSE, AND RELATED
MATTERS.
(a) Boards for Correction of Military Records.--The curriculum of
training for members of boards for the correction of military records
under section 534(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2017 (10 U.S.C. 1552 note) shall include training on each
of the following:
(1) Sexual trauma.
(2) Intimate partner violence.
(3) Spousal abuse.
(4) The various responses of individuals to trauma.
(b) Discharge Review Boards.--
(1) In general.--Each Secretary concerned shall develop and
provide training for members of discharge review boards under
section 1553 of title 10, United States Code, that are under
the jurisdiction of such Secretary on each of the following:
(A) Sexual trauma.
(B) Intimate partner violence.
(C) Spousal abuse.
(D) The various responses of individuals to trauma.
(2) Uniformity of training.--The Secretary of Defense and
the Secretary of Homeland Security shall jointly ensure that
the training developed and provided pursuant to this subsection
is, to the extent practicable, uniform.
(3) Secretary concerned defined.--In this subsection, the
term ``Secretary concerned'' has the meaning given that term in
section 101(a)(9) of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 552. LIMITATIONS AND REQUIREMENTS IN CONNECTION WITH SEPARATIONS
FOR MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES WHO SUFFER FROM MENTAL
HEALTH CONDITIONS IN CONNECTION WITH A SEX-RELATED,
INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE-RELATED, OR SPOUSAL-ABUSE
OFFENSE.
(a) Confirmation of Diagnosis of Condition Required Before
Separation.--Before a member of the Armed Forces who was the victim of
a sex-related offense, an intimate partner violence-related offense, or
a spousal-abuse offense during service in the Armed Forces (whether or
not such offense was committed by another member of the Armed Forces),
and who has a mental health condition not amounting to a physical
disability, is separated, discharged, or released from the Armed Forces
based solely on such condition, the diagnosis of such condition must
be--
(1) corroborated by a competent mental health care
professional at the peer level or a higher level of the health
care professional making the diagnosis; and
(2) endorsed by the Surgeon General of the military
department concerned.
(b) Narrative Reason for Separation if Mental Health Condition
Present.--If the narrative reason for discharge, separation, or release
from the Armed Forces of a member of the Armed Forces is a mental
health condition that is not a disability, the appropriate narrative
reason for the discharge, separation, or release shall be condition,
not a disability, or Secretarial authority.
(c) Definition.--In this section:
(1) The term ``intimate partner violence-related offense''
means the following:
(A) An offense under section 928 or 930 of title
10, United States Code (article 128 or 130 of the
Uniform Code of Military Justice).
(B) An offense under State law for conduct
identical or substantially similar to an offense
described in subparagraph (A).
(2) The term ``sex-related offense'' means the following:
(A) An offense under section 920 or 920b of title
10, United States Code (article 120 or 120b of the
Uniform Code of Military Justice).
(B) An offense under State law for conduct
identical or substantially similar to an offense
described in subparagraph (A).
(3) The term ``spousal-abuse offense'' means the following:
(A) An offense under section 928 of title 10,
United States Code (article 128 of the Uniform Code of
Military Justice).
(B) An offense under State law for conduct
identical or substantially similar to an offense
described in subparagraph (A).
(d) Effective Date.--This section shall take effect 180 days after
the date of the enactment of this Act, and shall apply with respect to
separations, discharges, and releases from the Armed Forces that occur
on or after that effective date.
SEC. 553. LIBERAL CONSIDERATION OF EVIDENCE IN CERTAIN CLAIMS BY BOARDS
FOR THE CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS AND DISCHARGE
REVIEW BOARDS.
(a) Boards for the Correction of Military Records.--
(1) In general.--Section 1552(h) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(A) by striking paragraph (1);
(B) by striking ``(2) In the case of a claimant
described in paragraph (1), a board'' and inserting ``A
board'';
(C) by redesignating subparagraphs (A) and (B) as
paragraphs (1) and (2), respectively;
(D) in paragraph (1), as redesignated by
subparagraph (C), by inserting ``all evidence presented
by the claimant, including lay evidence and information
and'' after ``review''; and
(E) by striking paragraph (2), as so redesignated,
and inserting the following new paragraph (2):
``(2) if a claim alleges error or injustice in the
claimant's discharge or dismissal, or the characterization of
such discharge or dismissal, review such claim with liberal
consideration of all evidence and information submitted by, or
pertaining to, the claimant.''.
(2) Effective date.--The amendments made by paragraph (1)
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and
shall apply with respect to claims submitted to boards for the
correction of military records under section 1552 of title 10,
United States Code, on or after that date.
(b) Discharge Review Boards.--
(1) In general.--Section 1553 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(A) in subsection (c)--
(i) by inserting ``(1)'' after ``(c)''; and
(ii) by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(2) A board established under this section shall--
``(A) review all evidence and information provided by the
former member, including lay evidence and information and
medical evidence of the Secretary of Veterans Affairs or a
civilian health care provider that is provided by the former
member; and
``(B) review the claim with liberal consideration of all
evidence and information submitted by, or pertaining to, the
former member.''; and
(B) in subsection (d), by striking paragraph (3).
(2) Effective date.--The amendments made by paragraph (1)
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and
shall apply with respect to motions or requests for review
submitted to discharge review boards under section 1553 of
title 10, United States Code, on or after that date.
PART IV--OTHER MILITARY JUSTICE MATTERS
SEC. 555. EXPANSION OF PRE-REFERRAL MATTERS REVIEWABLE BY MILITARY
JUDGES AND MILITARY MAGISTRATES IN THE INTEREST OF
EFFICIENCY IN MILITARY JUSTICE.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 830a of title 10, United
States Code (article 30a of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is
amended by striking paragraphs (1) and (2) and inserting the following
new paragraphs:
``(1) The President shall prescribe regulations for matters
relating to proceedings conducted before referral of charges and
specifications to court-martial for trial, including the following:
``(A) Pre-referral investigative subpoenas.
``(B) Pre-referral warrants or orders for electronic
communications.
``(C) Pre-referral matters referred by an appellate court.
``(D) Pre-referral matters under subsection (c) or (e) of
section 806b of this title (article 6b).
``(E) Pre-referral matters relating to the following:
``(i) Pre-trial confinement of an accused.
``(ii) The mental capacity or responsibility of an
accused.
``(iii) A request for an individual military
counsel.
``(2) In addition to the matters specified in paragraph (1), the
regulations prescribed under that paragraph shall--
``(A) set forth the matters that a military judge may rule
upon in such proceedings;
``(B) include procedures for the review of such rulings;
``(C) include appropriate limitations to ensure that
proceedings under this section extend only to matters that
would be subject to consideration by a military judge in a
general or special court-martial;
``(D) provide such limitations on the relief that may be
ordered under this section as the President considers
appropriate; and
``(E) provide for treatment of such other pre-referral
matters as the President may prescribe.''.
(b) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 830a. Art 30a. Proceedings conducted before referral''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of subchapter VI of chapter 47 of title 10, United
States Code (the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended
by striking the item relating to section 830a (article 30a) and
inserting the following new item:
``830a. 30a. Proceedings conducted before referral.''.
SEC. 556. POLICIES AND PROCEDURES ON REGISTRATION AT MILITARY
INSTALLATIONS OF CIVILIAN PROTECTIVE ORDERS APPLICABLE TO
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES ASSIGNED TO SUCH
INSTALLATIONS AND CERTAIN OTHER INDIVIDUALS.
(a) Policies and Procedures Required.--Not later than one year
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense
shall, in consultation with the Secretaries of the military
departments, establish policies and procedures for the registration at
military installations of any civilian protective orders described in
subsection (b), including the duties and responsibilities of commanders
of installations in the registration process.
(b) Civilian Protective Orders.--A civilian protective order
described in this subsection is any civilian protective order as
follows:
(1) A civilian protective order against a member of the
Armed Forces assigned to the installation concerned.
(2) A civilian protective order against a civilian employee
employed at the installation concerned.
(3) A civilian protective order against the civilian spouse
or intimate partner of a member of the Armed Forces on active
duty and assigned to the installation concerned, or of a
civilian employee described in paragraph (2), which order
provides for the protection of such member or employee.
(c) Particular Elements.--The policies and procedures required by
subsection (a) shall include the following:
(1) A requirement for notice between and among the
commander, military law enforcement elements, and military
criminal investigative elements of an installation when a
member of the Armed Forces assigned to such installation, a
civilian employee employed at such installation, a civilian
spouse or intimate partner of a member assigned to such
installation, or a civilian spouse or intimate partner of a
civilian employee employed at such installation becomes subject
to a civilian protective order.
(2) A statement of policy that failure to register a
civilian protective order may not be a justification for the
lack of enforcement of such order by military law enforcement
and other applicable personnel who have knowledge of such
order.
(d) Letter.--As soon as practicable after establishing the policies
and procedures required by subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit
to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a letter that includes the following:
(1) A detailed description of the policies and procedures.
(2) A certification by the Secretary that the policies and
procedures have been implemented on each military installation.
SEC. 557. INCREASE IN NUMBER OF DIGITAL FORENSIC EXAMINERS FOR THE
MILITARY CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE ORGANIZATIONS.
(a) In General.--Each Secretary of a military department shall take
appropriate actions to increase the number of digital forensic
examiners in each military criminal investigative organization (MCIO)
under the jurisdiction of such Secretary by not fewer than 10 from the
authorized number of such examiners for such organization as of
September 30, 2019.
(b) Military Criminal Investigative Organizations.--For purposes of
this section, the military criminal investigative organizations are the
following:
(1) The Army Criminal Investigation Command.
(2) The Naval Criminal Investigative Service.
(3) The Air Force Office of Special Investigations.
(4) The Marine Corps Criminal Investigation Division.
(c) Funding.--Funds for additional digital forensic examiners as
required by subsection (a) for fiscal year 2020, including for
compensation, initial training, and equipment, shall be derived from
amounts authorized to be appropriated for that fiscal year for the
Armed Force concerned for operation and maintenance.
SEC. 558. SURVEY OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES ON THEIR EXPERIENCES
WITH MILITARY INVESTIGATIONS AND MILITARY JUSTICE.
(a) In General.--Chapter 23 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by inserting after section 481a the following new section:
``Sec. 481b. Military investigation and justice experiences: survey of
members of the armed forces
``(a) Surveys Required.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall conduct
from time to time a survey on the experiences of members of the armed
forces with military investigations and military justice in accordance
with this section and guidance issued by the Secretary for purposes of
this section.
``(2) The survey under this section shall be known as the `Military
Investigation and Justice Experience Survey'.
``(b) Matters Covered by Survey.--The guidance issued by the
Secretary under this section on the survey shall include specification
of the following:
``(1) The individuals to be surveyed, including any member
of the armed forces serving on active duty who is a victim of
an alleged sex-related offense and who made an unrestricted
report of that offense.
``(2) The matters to be covered in the survey, including--
``(A) the experience of the individuals surveyed
with the military criminal investigative organization
that investigated the alleged offense, and with the
Special Victims' Counsel in the case of a member who
was the victim of an alleged sex-related offense; and
``(B) if the individual's report resulted in a
charge or charges that were referred to a court-
martial, the experience of the individual with the
prosecutor and the court-martial in general.
``(3) The timing of the administration of the survey,
including when the investigation or case is closed or otherwise
complete.
``(c) Frequency of Survey.--The survey required by this section
shall be conducted at least once every four years, but not more
frequently than once every two years.
``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Alleged sex-related offense.--The term `alleged sex-
related offense' has the meaning provided in section 1044e(g)
of this title.
``(2) Unrestricted report.--The term `unrestricted report'
means a report that is not a restricted report.
``(3) Restricted report.--The term `restricted report'
means a report concerning a sexual assault that is treated as a
restricted report under section 1565b(b) of this title.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 23 of such title is amended by inserting after the item
relating to section 481a the following new item:
``481b. Military investigation and justice experiences: survey of
members of the armed forces.''.
SEC. 559. PUBLIC ACCESS TO DOCKETS, FILINGS, AND COURT RECORDS OF
COURTS-MARTIAL OR OTHER RECORDS OF TRIAL OF THE MILITARY
JUSTICE SYSTEM.
(a) In General.--Section 940a of title 10, United States Code
(article 140a of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), is amended--
(1) by striking ``The Secretary of Defense'' and inserting
``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense, in consultation
with the Secretary of Homeland Security,'';
(2) in subsection (a), as designated by paragraph (1)--
(A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by
inserting ``(including with respect to the Coast
Guard)'' after ``military justice system''; and
(B) in paragraph (4), by inserting ``public''
before ``access to docket information''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subsections:
``(b) Inapplicability of Privacy Act.--Section 552a of title 5
shall not apply to records of trial produced or distributed within the
military justice system or docket information, filings, and records
made publicly accessible in accordance with the uniform standards and
criteria for conduct established by the Secretary under subsection (a).
``(c) Protection of Certain Personally Identifiable Information.--
Records of trial, docket information, filings, and other records made
publicly accessible in accordance with the uniform standards and
criteria for conduct established by the Secretary under subsection (a)
shall restrict access to personally identifiable information of minors
and victims of crime (including victims of sexual assault and domestic
violence), as practicable to the extent such information is restricted
in electronic filing systems of Federal and State courts.
``(d) Inapplicability to Certain Dockets and Records.--Nothing in
this section shall be construed to provide public access to docket
information, filings, or records that are classified, subject to a
judicial protective order, or ordered sealed.''.
(b) Existing Standards and Criteria.--The Secretary of Homeland
Security shall apply to the Coast Guard the standards and criteria for
conduct established by the Secretary of Defense under section 940a of
title 10, United States Code (article 140a of the Uniform Code of
Military Justice), as in effect on the day before the date of the
enactment of this Act, until such time as the Secretary of Defense, in
consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, prescribes
revised standards and criteria for conduct under such section that
implement the amendments made by subsection (a) of this section.
SEC. 560. PILOT PROGRAMS ON DEFENSE INVESTIGATORS IN THE MILITARY
JUSTICE SYSTEM.
(a) In General.--Each Secretary of a military department shall
carry out a pilot program on defense investigators within the military
justice system under the jurisdiction of such Secretary in order to do
the following:
(1) Determine whether the presence of defense investigators
within such military justice system will--
(A) make such military justice system more
effective in determining the truth; and
(B) make such military justice system more fair and
efficient.
(2) Otherwise assess the feasibility and advisability of
defense investigators as an element of such military justice
system.
(b) Elements.--
(1) Model of similar civilian criminal justice systems.--
Defense investigators under each pilot program under subsection
(a) shall consist of personnel, and participate in the military
justice system concerned, in a manner similar to that of
defense investigators in civilian criminal justice systems that
are similar to the military justice systems of the military
departments.
(2) Interview of victim.--A defense investigator may
question a victim under a pilot program only upon a request
made through the Special Victims' Counsel or other counsel of
the victim, or trial counsel if the victim does not have such
counsel.
(3) Uniformity across military justice systems.--The
Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the personnel and
activities of defense investigators under the pilot programs
are, to the extent practicable, uniform across the military
justice systems of the military departments.
(c) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than three years after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall,
in consultation with the Secretaries of the military
departments, submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the
Senate and the House of Representatives a report on the pilot
programs under subsection (a).
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) A description of each pilot program, including
the personnel and activities of defense investigators
under such pilot program.
(B) An assessment of the feasibility and
advisability of establishing and maintaining defense
investigators as an element of the military justice
systems of the military departments.
(C) If the assessment under subparagraph (B) is
that the establishment and maintenance of defense
investigators as an element of the military justice
systems of the military departments is feasible and
advisable, such recommendations for legislative and
administrative action as the Secretary of Defense
considers appropriate to establish and maintain defense
investigators as an element of the military justice
systems.
(D) Any other matters the Secretary of Defense
considers appropriate.
SEC. 561. REPORT ON MILITARY JUSTICE SYSTEM INVOLVING ALTERNATIVE
AUTHORITY FOR DETERMINING WHETHER TO PREFER OR REFER
CHANGES FOR FELONY OFFENSES UNDER THE UNIFORM CODE OF
MILITARY JUSTICE.
(a) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 300 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 setting forth the results
of a study, conducted for purposes of the report, on the
feasibility and advisability of an alternative military justice
system in which determinations as to whether to prefer or refer
charges for trial by court-martial for any offense specified in
paragraph (2) is made by a judge advocate in grade O-6 or
higher who has significant experience in criminal litigation
and is outside of the chain of command of the member subject to
the charges rather than by a commanding officer of the member
who is in the chain of command of the member.
(2) Specified offense.--An offense specified in this
paragraph is any offense under chapter 47 of title 10, United
States Code (the Uniform Code of Military Justice), for which
the maximum punishment authorized includes confinement for more
than one year.
(b) Elements.--The study required for purposes of the report under
subsection (a) shall address the following:
(1) Relevant procedural, legal, and policy implications and
considerations of the alternative military justice system
described in subsection (a).
(2) An analysis of the following in connection with the
implementation and maintenance of the alternative military
justice system:
(A) Legal personnel requirements.
(B) Changes in force structure.
(C) Amendments to law.
(D) Impacts on the timeliness and efficiency of
legal processes and court-martial adjudications.
(E) Potential legal challenges to the system.
(F) Potential changes in prosecution and conviction
rates.
(G) Potential impacts on the preservation of good
order and discipline, including the ability of a
commander to carry out nonjudicial punishment and other
administrative actions.
(H) Such other considerations as the Secretary
considers appropriate.
(3) A comparative analysis of the military justice systems
of relevant foreign allies with the current military justice
system of the United States and the alternative military
justice system, including whether or not approaches of the
military justice systems of such allies to determinations
described in subsection (a) are appropriate for the military
justice system of the United States.
(4) An assessment of the feasibility and advisability of
conducting a pilot program to assess the feasibility and
advisability of the alternative military justice system, and,
if the pilot program is determined to be feasible and
advisable--
(A) an analysis of potential legal issues in
connection with the pilot program, including potential
issues for appeals; and
(B) recommendations on the following:
(i) The populations to be subject to the
pilot program.
(ii) The duration of the pilot program.
(iii) Metrics to measure the effectiveness
of the pilot program.
(iv) The resources to be used to conduct
the pilot program.
SEC. 562. REPORT ON STANDARDIZATION AMONG THE MILITARY DEPARTMENTS IN
COLLECTION AND PRESENTATION OF INFORMATION ON MATTERS
WITHIN THE MILITARY JUSTICE SYSTEM.
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in consultation with the
Secretaries of the military departments, submit to the Committees on
Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report
setting forth the following:
(1) A plan for actions to provide for standardization, to
the extent practicable, among the military departments in the
collection and presentation of information on matters within
their military justice systems, including information collected
and maintained for purposes of section 940a of title 10, United
States Code (article 140a of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice), and such other information as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(2) An assessment of the feasibility and advisability of
establishing and maintaining a single, Department of Defense-
wide data management system for the standardized collection and
presentation of information described in paragraph (1).
SEC. 563. REPORT ON ESTABLISHMENT OF GUARDIAN AD LITEM PROGRAM FOR
CERTAIN MILITARY DEPENDENTS WHO ARE A VICTIM OR WITNESS
OF OFFENSES UNDER THE UNIFORM CODE OF MILITARY JUSTICE
INVOLVING ABUSE OR EXPLOITATION.
(a) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--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 setting forth an
assessment of the feasibility and advisability of establishing
a guardian ad litem program for military dependents described
in paragraph (2) who are a victim or witness of an offense
under chapter 47 of title 10, United States Code (the Uniform
Code of Military Justice), that involves an element of abuse or
exploitation in order to protect the best interests of such
dependents in a court-martial of such offense.
(2) Covered dependents.--The military dependents described
in this paragraph are as follows:
(A) Military dependents under 12 years of age.
(B) Military dependents who lack mental or other
capacity.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
the following:
(1) An assessment of the feasibility and advisability of
establishing a guardian ad litem program as described in
subsection (a).
(2) If establishment of the guardian ad litem program is
considered feasible and advisable, the following:
(A) A description of administrative requirements in
connection with the program, including the following:
(i) Any memoranda of understanding between
the Department of Defense and State and local
authorities required for purposes of the
program.
(ii) The personnel, funding, and other
resources required for purposes of the program.
(B) Best practices for the program (as determined
in consultation with appropriate civilian experts on
child advocacy).
(C) Such recommendations for legislative and
administration action to implement the program as the
Secretary considers appropriate.
Subtitle E--Member Education, Training, Transition, and Resilience
SEC. 566. CONSECUTIVE SERVICE OF SERVICE OBLIGATION IN CONNECTION WITH
PAYMENT OF TUITION FOR OFF-DUTY TRAINING OR EDUCATION FOR
COMMISSIONED OFFICERS OF THE ARMED FORCES WITH ANY OTHER
SERVICE OBLIGATIONS.
(a) In General.--Section 2007(b) of title 10, United States Code,
is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) Any active duty service obligation of a commissioned officer
under this subsection shall be served consecutively with any other
service obligation of the officer (whether active duty or otherwise)
under any other provision of law.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by this section shall take
effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and shall apply with
respect to agreements for the payment of tuition for off-duty training
or education that are entered into on or after that date.
SEC. 567. AUTHORITY FOR DETAIL OF CERTAIN ENLISTED MEMBERS OF THE ARMED
FORCES AS STUDENTS AT LAW SCHOOLS.
(a) In General.--Section 2004 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) by inserting ``and enlisted members'' after
``commissioned officers'';
(B) by striking ``bachelor of laws or''; and
(C) by inserting ``and enlisted members'' after
``twenty-five officers'';
(2) in subsection (b)--
(A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by
inserting ``or enlisted member'' after ``officer'';
(B) by striking paragraph (1) and inserting the
following new paragraph (1):
``(1) either--
``(A) have served on active duty for a period of
not less than two years nor more than six years and be
an officer in the pay grade O-3 or below as of the time
the training is to begin; or
``(B) have served on active duty for a period of
not less than four years nor more than eight years and
be an enlisted member in the pay grade E-5, E-6, or E-7
as of the time the training is to begin;'';
(C) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph
(3);
(D) by inserting after paragraph (1), as amended by
subparagraph (B), the following new paragraph (2):
``(2) in the case of an enlisted member, meet all
requirements for acceptance of a commission as a commissioned
officer in the armed forces; and''; and
(E) in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (3), as
redesignated by subparagraph (C) of this paragraph, by
striking ``or law specialist'';
(3) in subsection (c)--
(A) in the first sentence, by inserting ``and
enlisted members'' after ``Officers''; and
(B) in the second sentence, by inserting ``or
enlisted member'' after ``officer'' each place it
appears;
(4) in subsection (d), by inserting ``and enlistment
members'' after ``officers'';
(5) in subsection (e), by inserting ``or enlistment
member'' after ``officer''; and
(6) in subsection (f), by inserting ``or enlisted member''
after ``officer''.
(b) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 2004. Detail as students at law schools; commissioned officers;
certain enlisted members''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 101 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 2004 and inserting the following
new item:
``2004. Detail as students at law schools; commissioned officers;
certain enlisted members.''.
SEC. 568. CONNECTIONS OF MEMBERS RETIRING OR SEPARATING FROM THE ARMED
FORCES WITH COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS AND RELATED
ENTITIES.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of
Veterans Affairs shall jointly seek to enter into memoranda of
understanding (MOUs) or other agreements with State veterans agencies
under which information from Department of Defense Form DD-2648 on
individuals undergoing retirement, discharge, or release from the Armed
Forces is transmitted to one or more State veterans agencies, as
elected by such individuals, to provide or connect veterans to benefits
or services as follows:
(1) Assistance in preparation of resumes.
(2) Training for employment interviews.
(3) Employment recruitment training.
(4) Other services leading directly to a successful
transition from military life to civilian life.
(5) Healthcare, including care for mental health.
(6) Transportation or transportation-related services.
(7) Housing.
(8) Such other benefits or services as the Secretaries
jointly consider appropriate for purposes of this section.
(b) Information Transmitted.--The information transmitted on
individuals as described in subsection (a) shall be such information on
Form DD-2648 as the Secretaries jointly consider appropriate to
facilitate community-based organizations and related entities in
providing or connecting such individuals to benefits and services as
described in subsection (a).
(c) Modification of Form DD-2648.--The Secretary of Defense shall
make such modifications to Form DD-2648 as the Secretary considers
appropriate to allow an individual filling out the form to indicate an
email address at which the individual may be contacted to receive or be
connected to benefits or services described in subsection (a).
(d) Voluntary Participation.--Information on an individual may be
transmitted to and through a State veterans agency as described in
subsection (a) only with the consent of the individual. In giving such
consent, an individual shall specify the following:
(1) The State veterans agency or agencies elected by the
individual to transmit such information as described in
subsection (a).
(2) The benefits and services for which contact information
shall be so transmitted.
(3) Such other information on the individual as the
individual considers appropriate in connection with the
transmittal.
Subtitle F--Defense Dependents' Education and Military Family Readiness
Matters
PART I--DEFENSE DEPENDENTS' EDUCATION MATTERS
SEC. 571. 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 2020 by section 301 and available for operation and
maintenance for Defense-wide activities as specified in the funding
table in section 4301, $40,000,000 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. 572. IMPACT AID FOR CHILDREN WITH SEVERE DISABILITIES.
(a) In General.--Of the amount authorized to be appropriated for
fiscal year 2020 pursuant to section 301 and available for operation
and maintenance for Defense-wide activities as specified in the funding
table in section 4301, $10,000,000 shall be available for payments
under section 363 of the Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2001 (as enacted into law by Public Law 106-398;
114 Stat. 1654A-77; 20 U.S.C. 7703a).
(b) Use of Certain Amount.--Of the amount available under
subsection (a) for payments as described in that subsection, $5,000,000
shall be available for such payments to local educational agencies
determined by the Secretary of Defense, in the discretion of the
Secretary, to have higher concentrations of military children with
severe disabilities.
SEC. 573. RI'KATAK GUEST STUDENT PROGRAM AT UNITED STATES ARMY
GARRISON-KWAJALEIN ATOLL.
(a) Program Authorized.--The Secretary of the Army may conduct an
assistance program to educate up to five local national students per
grade, per academic year, on a space-available basis at the contractor-
operated schools on United States Army GarrisonUKwajalein Atoll. The
program shall be known as the ``Ri'katak Guest Student Program''.
(b) Student Assistance.--Assistance that may be provided to
students participating in the program carried out pursuant to
subsection (a) includes the following:
(1) Classroom instruction.
(2) Extracurricular activities.
(3) Student meals.
(4) Transportation.
PART II--MILITARY FAMILY READINESS MATTERS
SEC. 576. TWO-YEAR EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR REIMBURSEMENT FOR STATE
LICENSURE AND CERTIFICATION COSTS OF SPOUSES OF MEMBERS
OF THE ARMED FORCES ARISING FROM RELOCATION TO ANOTHER
STATE.
Section 476(p)(4) of title 37, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``December 31, 2022'' and inserting ``December 31, 2024''.
SEC. 577. IMPROVEMENT OF OCCUPATIONAL LICENSE PORTABILITY FOR MILITARY
SPOUSES THROUGH INTERSTATE COMPACTS.
Section 1784 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding
at the end the following new subsection:
``(h) Improvement of Occupational License Portability Through
Interstate Compacts.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall seek to
enter into a cooperative agreement with the Council of State
Governments to assist with funding of the development of
interstate compacts on licensed occupations in order to
alleviate the burden associated with relicensing in such an
occupation by spouse of a member of the armed forces in
connection with a permanent change of duty station of members
to another State.
``(2) Limitation on assistance per compact.--The amount
provided under paragraph (1) as assistance for the development
of any particular interstate compact may not exceed $1,000,000.
``(3) Limitation on total amount of assistance.--The total
amount of assistance provided under paragraph (1) in any fiscal
year may not exceed $4,000,000.
``(4) Annual report.--Not later than February 28 each year,
the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services
of the Senate and the House of Representatives a report on
interstate compacts described in paragraph (1) developed
through assistance provided under that paragraph. Each report
shall set forth the following:
``(A) Any interstate compact developed during the
preceding calendar year, including the occupational
licenses covered by such compact and the States
agreeing to enter into such compact.
``(B) Any interstate compact developed during a
prior calendar year into which one or more additional
States agreed to enter during the preceding calendar
year.
``(5) Expiration.--The authority to enter into a
cooperative agreement under paragraph (1), and to provide
assistance described in that paragraph pursuant to such
cooperative agreement, shall expire on September 30, 2024.''.
SEC. 578. MODIFICATION OF RESPONSIBILITY OF THE OFFICE OF SPECIAL NEEDS
FOR INDIVIDUALIZED SERVICE PLANS FOR MEMBERS OF MILITARY
FAMILIES WITH SPECIAL NEEDS.
Subparagraph (F) of section 1781c(d)(4) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(F) Requirements regarding the development of an
individualized services plan for each military family member
with special needs when requested in connection with the
completion of a family needs assessment for the military family
concerned.''.
SEC. 579. CLARIFYING TECHNICAL AMENDMENT ON DIRECT HIRE AUTHORITY FOR
THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FOR CHILDCARE SERVICES
PROVIDERS FOR DEPARTMENT CHILD DEVELOPMENT CENTERS.
Section 559(e) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1406; 10 U.S.C. 1792 note) is
amended by inserting ``(including family childcare coordinator services
and school age childcare coordinator services)'' after ``childcare
services''.
SEC. 580. PILOT PROGRAM ON INFORMATION SHARING BETWEEN DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE AND DESIGNATED RELATIVES AND FRIENDS OF MEMBERS
OF THE ARMED FORCES REGARDING THE EXPERIENCES AND
CHALLENGES OF MILITARY SERVICE.
(a) Pilot Program Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall seek
to enter into an agreement with the American Red Cross to carry
out a pilot program under which the American Red Cross--
(A) encourages a member of the Armed Forces, upon
the enlistment or appointment of such member, to
designate up to 10 persons to whom information
regarding the military service of such member shall be
disseminated using contact information obtained under
paragraph (6); and
(B) provides such persons, within 30 days after the
date on which such persons are designated under
subparagraph (A), the option to elect to receive such
information regarding military service.
(2) Dissemination.--The Secretary shall disseminate
information described in paragraph (1)(A) under the pilot
program on a regular basis.
(3) Types of information.--The types of information to be
disseminated under the pilot program to persons who elect to
receive such information shall include information regarding--
(A) aspects of daily life and routine experienced
by members of the Armed Forces;
(B) the challenges and stresses of military
service, particularly during and after deployment as
part of a contingency operation;
(C) the services available to members of the Armed
Forces and the dependents of such members to cope with
the experiences and challenges of military service;
(D) benefits administered by the Department of
Defense for members of the Armed Forces and the
dependents of such members;
(E) a toll-free telephone number through which such
persons who elect to receive information under the
pilot program may request information regarding the
program; and
(F) such other information as the Secretary
determines to be appropriate.
(4) Privacy of information.--In carrying out the pilot
program, the Secretary may not disseminate information under
paragraph (3) in violation of laws and regulations pertaining
to the privacy of members of the Armed Forces, including
requirements pursuant to--
(A) section 552a of title 5, United States Code;
and
(B) the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191).
(5) Notice and modifications.--In carrying out the pilot
program, the Secretary shall, with respect to a member of the
Armed Forces--
(A) ensure that such member is notified of the
ability to modify designations made by such member
under paragraph (1)(B); and
(B) upon the request of a member, authorize such
member to modify such designations at any time.
(6) Contact information.--In making a designation under the
pilot program, a member of the Armed Forces shall provide
necessary contact information, specifically including an email
address, to facilitate the dissemination of information
regarding the military service of the member.
(7) Opt-in and opt-out of program.--
(A) Opt-in by members.--A member may participate in
the pilot program only if the member voluntarily elects
to participate in the program. A member seeking to make
such an election shall make such election in a manner,
and by including such information, as the Secretary and
the Red Cross shall jointly specify for purposes of the
pilot program.
(B) Opt-in by designated recipients.--A person
designated pursuant to paragraph (1)(A) may receive
information under the pilot program only if the person
makes the election described in paragraph(1)(B).
(C) Opt-out.--In carrying out the pilot program,
the Secretary shall, with respect to a person who has
elected to receive information under such pilot
program, cease disseminating such information to that
person upon request of such person.
(b) Survey and Report on Pilot Program.--
(1) Survey.--Not later than two years after the date on
which the pilot program commences, the Secretary, in
consultation with the American Red Cross, shall administer a
survey to persons who elected to receive information under the
pilot program for the purpose of receiving feedback regarding
the quality of information disseminated under this section,
including whether such information appropriately reflects the
military career progression of members of the Armed Forces.
(2) Report.--Not later than three years after the date on
which the pilot program commences, the Secretary shall submit
to the congressional defense committees a final report on the
pilot program which includes--
(A) the results of the survey administered under
paragraph (1);
(B) a determination as to whether the pilot program
should be made permanent; and
(C) recommendations as to modifications necessary
to improve the program if made permanent.
(c) Termination of Pilot Program.--The pilot program shall
terminate upon submission of the report required by subsection (b)(2).
SEC. 581. BRIEFING ON USE OF FAMILY ADVOCACY PROGRAMS TO ADDRESS
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE.
Not later than 180 days 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 briefing on
various mechanisms by which the Family Advocacy Programs (FAPs) of the
military departments may be used and enhanced in order to end domestic
violence among members of the Armed Forces and support survivors of
such violence and their dependents.
Subtitle G--Decorations and Awards
SEC. 585. AUTHORIZATION FOR AWARD OF THE MEDAL OF HONOR TO JOHN J.
DUFFY FOR ACTS OF VALOR IN VIETNAM.
(a) Waiver of Time Limitations.--Notwithstanding the time
limitations specified in section 3744 of title 10, United States Code,
or any other time limitation with respect to the awarding of certain
medals to persons who served in the Armed Forces, the President may
award the Medal of Honor under section 3741 of such title to John J.
Duffy for the acts of valor in Vietnam described in subsection (b).
(b) Acts of Valor Described.--The acts of valor referred to in
subsection (a) are the actions of John J. Duffy on April 14 and 15,
1972, in Vietnam for which he was previously awarded the Distinguished-
Service Cross.
SEC. 586. STANDARDIZATION OF HONORABLE SERVICE REQUIREMENT FOR AWARD OF
MILITARY DECORATIONS.
(a) Honorable Service Requirement.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 57 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new section
``Sec. 1136. Honorable service requirement for award of military
decorations
``No military decoration, including a medal, cross, or bar, or an
associated emblem or insignia, may be awarded or presented to any
person, or to a representative of the person, if the service of the
person after the person distinguished himself or herself has not been
honorable.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 57 of such title is amended by adding at
the end the following:
``1136. Honorable service requirement for award of military
decorations.''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--Title 10, United States Code, is
further amended as follows:
(1) In section 7274--
(A) in subsection (b) in the matter preceding
paragraph (1), by striking ``subsection (d)'' and
inserting ``subsection (c)'';
(B) by striking subsection (c); and
(C) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection
(c).
(2)(A) Section 8299 is repealed.
(B) The table of sections at the beginning of chapter 837
is amended by striking the item relating to section 8299.
(3) In section 9274--
(A) in subsection (b) in the matter preceding
paragraph (1), by striking ``subsection (d)'' and
inserting ``subsection (c)'';
(B) by striking subsection (c); and
(C) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection
(c).
(4) In section 9279, by striking subsection (c).
SEC. 587. AUTHORITY TO AWARD OR PRESENT A DECORATION NOT PREVIOUSLY
RECOMMENDED IN A TIMELY FASHION FOLLOWING A REVIEW
REQUESTED BY CONGRESS.
(a) Authority To Award or Present.--Section 1130 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (e); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new
subsection (d):
``(d)(1) A decoration may be awarded or presented following the
submittal of a recommendation under subsection (b) approving the award
or presentation.
``(2) The authority to make an award or presentation under this
subsection shall apply notwithstanding any limitation described in
subsection (a).''.
(b) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 1130. Consideration of proposals for decorations not previously
submitted in timely fashion: procedures for review and
award or presentation''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 57 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 1130 and inserting the following
new item:
``1130. Consideration of proposals for decorations not previously
submitted in timely fashion: procedures for
review and award or presentation.''.
SEC. 588. AUTHORITY TO MAKE POSTHUMOUS AND HONORARY PROMOTIONS AND
APPOINTMENTS FOLLOWING A REVIEW REQUESTED BY CONGRESS.
(a) Authority To Make.--Section 1563 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (c) as subsection (e); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (b) the following new
subsections:
``(c) Authority To Make.--(1) Under regulations prescribed by the
Secretary of Defense, a posthumous or honorary promotion or appointment
may be made following the submittal of a determination under subsection
(b) if the determination is to approve the making of such promotion of
appointment.
``(2) The authority to make a promotion or appointment under this
subsection shall apply notwithstanding that such promotion or
appointment is not otherwise authorized by law.
``(d) Additional Benefits Not To Accrue.--The promotion or
appointment of individual pursuant to subsection (c) shall not affect
the retired pay or other benefits from the United States to which the
individual would have been entitled based upon the individual's
military service, if any, or affect any benefits to which any other
person may become entitled based on the individual's military service,
if any.''.
(b) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 1563. Consideration of proposals for posthumous and honorary
promotions and appointments: procedures for review and
promotion or appointment''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 80 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 1563 and inserting the following
new item:
``1563. Consideration of proposals for posthumous and honorary
promotions and appointments: procedures for
review and promotion or appointment.''.
Subtitle H--Other Matters
SEC. 591. MILITARY FUNERAL HONORS MATTERS.
(a) Full Military Honors Ceremony for Certain Veterans.--Section
1491(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the
end the following:
``(3) The Secretary concerned shall provide full military honors
(as determined by the Secretary concerned) for the funeral of a veteran
who--
``(A) is first interred or first inurned in Arlington
National Cemetery on or after the date of the enactment of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020;
``(B) was awarded the medal of honor or the prisoner-of-war
medal; and
``(C) is not entitled to full military honors by the grade
of that veteran.''.
(b) Full Military Funeral Honors for Veterans at Military
Installations.--
(1) Installation plans for honors required.--The commander
of each military installation at or through which a funeral
honors detail for a veteran is provided pursuant to section
1491 of title 10, United States Code (as amended by subsection
(a)), shall maintain and carry out a plan for the provision,
upon request, of full military funeral honors at funerals of
veterans for whom a funeral honors detail is authorized in that
section.
(2) Elements.--Each plan of an installation under paragraph
(1) shall include the following:
(A) Mechanisms to ensure compliance with the
requirements applicable to the composition of funeral
honors details in section 1491(b) of title 10, United
States Code (as so amended).
(B) Mechanisms to ensure compliance with the
requirements for ceremonies for funerals in section
1491(c) of such title.
(C) In addition to the ceremonies required pursuant
to subparagraph (B), the provision of a gun salute for
each funeral by appropriate personnel, including
personnel of the installation, members of the reserve
components of the Armed Forces residing in the vicinity
of the installation who are ordered to funeral honors
duty, and members of veterans organizations or other
organizations referred to in section 1491(b)(2) of such
title.
(D) Mechanisms for the provision of support
authorized by section 1491(d) of such title.
(E) Such other mechanisms and activities as the
Secretary concerned considers appropriate in order to
assure that full military funeral honors are provided
upon request at funerals of veterans.
(3) Definitions.--In this subsection:
(A) The term ``Secretary concerned'' has the
meaning given that term in section 101(a)(9) of title
10, United States Code.
(B) The term ``veteran'' has the meaning given that
term in section 1491(h) of title 10, United States
Code.
SEC. 592. INCLUSION OF HOMESCHOOLED STUDENTS IN JUNIOR RESERVE
OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS UNITS.
Section 2031 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding
at the end the following new subsection:
``(g)(1) Each public secondary educational institution that
maintains a unit under this section shall permit membership in the unit
to homeschooled students residing in the area served by the institution
who are qualified for membership in the unit (but for lack of
enrollment in the institution).
``(2) A student who is a member of a unit pursuant to this
subsection shall count toward the satisfaction by the institution
concerned of the requirement in subsection (b)(1) relating to the
minimum number of student members in the unit necessary for the
continuing maintenance of the unit.''.
SEC. 593. SENSE OF SENATE ON THE JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING
CORPS.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps (JROTC) is
a valuable program that instill the values of citizenship,
service to the community, personal responsibility and a sense
of accomplishment in high school students;
(2) the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps is
supported by all the Armed Forces, and there are Junior Reserve
Officers' Training Corps units in all 50 States, 4 United
States territories, and the District of Columbia;
(3) the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps
consistently improves student outcomes across a wide variety of
academic and nonacademic data points, including grade point
average, high school graduation and college acceptance rates,
standardized test scores, drop-out rates, discipline problems,
and leadership skills;
(4) the Department of Defense should view the Junior
Reserve Officers' Training Corps as a unique program to help
close the divide between the military and the greater civilian
community in the United States;
(5) given the increased funding and more flexible policy
authorized in the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), the Department
should take every possible action to increase the number of
Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps units at schools around
the United States; and
(6) the desired number of Junior Reserve Officers' Training
Corps units should be at least 3,700 in order to relieve a
significant backlog in requests to establish such units.
TITLE VI--COMPENSATION AND OTHER PERSONNEL BENEFITS
Subtitle A--Pay and Allowances
SEC. 601. EXPANSION OF ELIGIBILITY FOR EXCEPTIONAL TRANSITIONAL
COMPENSATION FOR DEPENDENTS TO DEPENDENTS OF CURRENT
MEMBERS.
Section 1059(m) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in the subsection heading, by inserting ``Members or''
after ``Dependents of'';
(2) by inserting ``member or'' before ``former member''
each place it appears;
(3) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (4); and
(4) by inserting after paragraph (2) the following new
paragraph (3):
``(3) For purposes of the provision of benefits under this section
pursuant to this subsection, a member shall be considered separated
from active duty upon the earliest of--
``(A) the date an administrative separation is initiated by
a commander of the member;
``(B) the date the court-martial sentence is adjudged if
the sentence, as adjudged, includes a dismissal, dishonorable
discharge, bad conduct discharge, or forfeiture of all pay and
allowances; or
``(C) the date the member's term of service expires.''.
Subtitle B--Bonuses and Special and Incentive Pays
SEC. 611. ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF CERTAIN EXPIRING BONUS AND SPECIAL PAY
AUTHORITIES.
(a) Authorities Relating To Reserve Forces.--Section 910(g) of
title 37, United States Code, relating to income replacement payments
for reserve component members experiencing extended and frequent
mobilization for active duty service, is amended by striking ``December
31, 2019'' and inserting ``December 31, 2020''.
(b) Title 10 Authorities Relating to Health Care Professionals.--
The following sections of title 10, United States Code, are amended by
striking ``December 31, 2019'' and inserting ``December 31, 2020'':
(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.
(c) Authorities Relating to Nuclear Officers.--Section 333(i) of
title 37, United States Code, is amended by striking ``December 31,
2019'' and inserting ``December 31, 2020''.
(d) 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, 2019''
and inserting ``December 31, 2020'':
(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 334(i), relating to special aviation incentive
pay and bonus authorities for officers.
(4) Section 335(k), relating to special bonus and incentive
pay authorities for officers in health professions.
(5) Section 336(g), relating to contracting bonus for
cadets and midshipmen enrolled in the Senior Reserve Officers'
Training Corps.
(6) Section 351(h), relating to hazardous duty pay.
(7) Section 352(g), relating to assignment pay or special
duty pay.
(8) Section 353(i), relating to skill incentive pay or
proficiency bonus.
(9) Section 355(h), relating to retention incentives for
members qualified in critical military skills or assigned to
high priority units.
(e) Authority to Provide Temporary Increase in Rates of Basic
Allowance for Housing.--Section 403(b)(7)(E) of title 37, United States
Code, is amended by striking ``December 31, 2019'' and inserting
``December 31, 2020''.
Subtitle C--Travel and Transportation Allowances
SEC. 621. EXTENSION OF PILOT PROGRAM ON A GOVERNMENT LODGING PROGRAM.
Section 914(b) of the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (5 U.S.C. 5911
note) is amended by striking ``December 31, 2019'' and inserting
``December 31, 2020''.
SEC. 622. REINVESTMENT OF TRAVEL REFUNDS BY THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Refunds for Official Travel.--Subchapter I of chapter 8 of
title 37, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new section:
``Sec. 456. Managed travel program refunds
``(a) Credit of Refunds.--The Secretary of Defense may credit
refunds attributable to Department of Defense managed travel programs
as a direct result of official travel to such operation and maintenance
or research, development, test, and evaluation accounts of the
Department as designated by the Secretary that are available for
obligation for the fiscal year in which the refund or amount is
collected.
``(b) Use of Refunds.--Refunds credited under subsection (a) may
only be used for official travel or operations and efficiency
improvements for improved financial management of official travel.
``(c) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Managed travel program.--The term `managed travel
program' includes air, rental car, train, bus, dining, lodging,
and travel management, but does not include rebates or refunds
attributable to the use of the Government travel card, the
Government Purchase Card, or Government travel arranged by
Government Contracted Travel Management Centers.
``(2) Refund.--The term `refund' includes miscellaneous
receipts credited to the Department identified as a refund,
rebate, repayment, or other similar amounts collected.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 8 of such title is amended by inserting after the item relating
to section 455 the following new item:
``456. Managed travel program refunds.''.
(c) Clarification on Retention of Travel Promotional Items.--
Section 1116(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2002 (Public Law 107-107; 5 U.S.C. 5702 note) is amended--
(1) by striking ``Definition.--In this section, the term''
and inserting the following: ``Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) The term `general public' includes the Federal
Government or an agency.''.
Subtitle D--Disability Pay, Retired Pay, and Survivor Benefits
SEC. 631. CONTRIBUTIONS TO DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE MILITARY RETIREMENT
FUND BASED ON PAY COSTS PER ARMED FORCE RATHER THAN ON
ARMED FORCES-WIDE BASIS.
(a) Determination of Contributions Generally.--Section 1465(c) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``single level
percentage of basic pay for active duty (other than the
Coast Guard) and for full-time National Guard duty''
and inserting ``percentage of basic pay for each armed
force (other than the Coast Guard) and for any full-
time National Guard duty'';
(B) in subparagraph (B)--
(i) by striking ``single level''; and
(ii) by striking ``members of the Selected
Reserve of the armed forces (other than the
Coast Guard)'' and inserting ``each armed force
(other than the Coast Guard) for members of the
Selected Reserve''; and
(C) in the flush matter following subparagraph (B),
by striking ``single level''; and
(2) in paragraph (4)--
(A) by striking ``a single level percentage
determined'' both places it appears and inserting
``percentages''; and
(B) in the flush matter following subparagraph (B),
by striking ``single level''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Determination of contributions.--Section 1465(b) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(A) in paragraph (1)--
(i) in subparagraph (A)--
(I) in the matter preceding clause
(i), by striking ``product'' and
inserting ``aggregate of the
products'';
(II) in clause (i), by striking
``single level percentage of basic
pay'' and inserting ``percentage of
basic pay for each armed force (other
than the Coast Guard)''; and
(III) in clause (ii), by striking
``for active duty (other than the Coast
Guard) and for full-time National Guard
duty'' and inserting ``for such armed
force for active duty and for any full-
time National Guard duty''; and
(ii) in subparagraph (B)--
(I) in the matter preceding clause
(i), by striking ``product'' and
inserting ``aggregate of the
products'';
(II) in clause (i), by striking
``single level percentage of basic pay
and of compensation (paid pursuant to
section 206 of title 37)'' and
inserting ``percentage of basic pay and
of compensation (paid pursuant to
section 206 of title 37) for each armed
force (other than the Coast Guard)'';
and
(III) in clause (ii), by striking
``the armed forces (other than the
Coast Guard)'' and inserting ``such
armed force''; and
(B) in paragraph (3), by striking ``single level''.
(2) Payments of contributions.--Section 1466(a) of such
title is amended--
(A) in paragraph (1)--
(i) in the matter preceding subparagraph
(A), by striking ``product'' and inserting
``aggregate of the products'';
(ii) in subparagraph (A), by striking
``level percentage of basic pay'' and inserting
``percentage of basic pay for each armed force
(other than the Coast Guard)''; and
(iii) in subparagraph (B), by striking
``for active duty (other than for the Coast
Guard) and for full-time National Guard duty''
and inserting ``for such armed force for active
duty and for any full-time National Guard
duty''; and
(B) in paragraph (2)--
(i) in the matter preceding subparagraph
(A), by striking ``product'' and inserting
``aggregate of the products'';
(ii) in subparagraph (A), by striking
``level percentage of basic pay and of
compensation (paid pursuant to section 206 of
title 37)'' and inserting ``percentage of basic
pay and of compensation (paid pursuant to
section 206 of title 37) for each armed force
(other than the Coast Guard)''; and
(iii) in subparagraph (B), by striking
``the armed forces (other than the Coast
Guard)'' and inserting ``such armed force''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take
effect on October 1, 2019, and shall apply with respect to
determinations of contributions to the Department of Defense Military
Retirement Fund, and payments into the Fund, beginning with fiscal year
2021.
SEC. 632. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITIES ON ELIGIBILITY FOR AND
REPLACEMENT OF GOLD STAR LAPEL BUTTONS.
(a) Expansion of Authority To Determine Next of Kin for Issuance.--
Section 1126 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``widows, parents, and''
in the matter preceding paragraph (1);
(2) in subsection (b), by striking ``the widow and to each
parent and'' and inserting ``each''; and
(3) in subsection (d)--
(A) by striking paragraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4)
and inserting the following new paragraph (1):
``(1) The term `next of kin' means individuals standing in
such relationship to members of the armed forces described in
subsection (a) as the Secretaries concerned shall jointly
specify in regulations for purposes of this section.''; and
(B) by redesignating paragraphs (5), (6), (7), and
(8) as paragraphs (2), (3), (4), and (5), respectively.
(b) Replacement.--Subsection (c) of such section is amended by
striking ``and payment'' and all that follows and inserting ``and
without cost.''.
Subtitle E--Commissary and Non-Appropriated Fund Instrumentality
Benefits and Operations
SEC. 641. DEFENSE RESALE SYSTEM MATTERS.
(a) In General.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and
Readiness shall, in coordination with the Chief Management Officer of
the Department of Defense, maintain oversight of business
transformation efforts of the defense commissary system and the
exchange store system in order to ensure the following:
(1) Development of an intercomponent business strategy that
maximizes efficiencies and results in a viable defense resale
system in the future.
(2) Preservation of patron savings and satisfaction from
and in the defense commissary system and exchange stores
system.
(3) Sustainment of financial support of the defense
commissary and exchange systems for morale, welfare, and
recreation (MWR) services of the Armed Forces.
(b) Executive Resale Board Advice on Operations of Systems.--The
Executive Resale Board of the Department of Defense shall advise the
Under Secretary on the implementation of sustainable, complementary
operations of the defense commissary system and the exchange stores
system.
(c) Practices and Services.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall, acting
through the Under Secretary and with advice from the Executive
Resale Board, require the Defense Commissary Agency and the
Military Exchange Service to identify and implement practices
and services described in paragraph (2) across the defense
resale system.
(2) Practices and services.--Practices and services
described in this paragraph shall include the following:
(A) Best commercial business practices.
(B) Shared-services systems that increase
efficiencies across the defense resale system,
including in transportation of goods, application-based
marketing initiatives and other mobile electronic-
commerce programs, facilities construction, back-office
information technology systems, human resource
management, legal services, financial services, and
advertising.
(C) Integration of services provided by the
exchange stores system within commissary system
facilities, as appropriate, including services such as
dry cleaning, health and wellness activities,
pharmacies, urgent care centers, food, and other retail
services.
(d) Information Technology Modernization.--The Secretary shall,
acting through the Under Secretary and with advice from the Executive
Resale Board, require the Defense Commissary Agency and the Military
Exchange Service to do as follows:
(1) Field new technologies and best business practices for
information technology for the defense resale system.
(2) Implement cutting-edge marketing opportunities across
the defense resale system.
(e) Inclusion of Advertising in Operating Expenses of Commissary
Stores.--Section 2483(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following paragraph:
``(7) Advertising of commissary sales on materials
available within commissary stores and at other on-base
locations.''.
SEC. 642. TREATMENT OF FEES ON SERVICES PROVIDED AS SUPPLEMENTAL FUNDS
FOR COMMISSARY OPERATIONS.
Section 2483(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
inserting ``fees on services provided,'' after ``handling fees for
tobacco products,''.
SEC. 643. PROCUREMENT BY COMMISSARY STORES OF CERTAIN LOCALLY SOURCED
PRODUCTS.
The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the dairy products and
fruits and vegetables procured for commissary stores under the defense
commissary system are, to the extent practicable, locally sourced in
order to ensure the availability of the freshest possible dairy
products and fruits and vegetables for patrons of the stores.
TITLE VII--HEALTH CARE PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--TRICARE and Other Health Care Benefits
SEC. 701. CONTRACEPTION COVERAGE PARITY UNDER THE TRICARE PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Section 1074d(b)(3) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by inserting before the period at the end the
following: ``(including all methods of contraception approved by the
Food and Drug Administration, contraceptive care (including with
respect to insertion, removal, and follow up), sterilization
procedures, and patient education and counseling in connection
therewith)''.
(b) Prohibition on Cost-sharing for Certain Services.--
(1) TRICARE select.--Section 1075(c) of such title is
amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) For all beneficiaries under this section, there is no
cost-sharing for any method of contraception provided by a
network provider.''.
(2) TRICARE prime.--Section 1075a(b) of such title is
amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(5) For all beneficiaries under this section, there is no cost-
sharing for any method of contraception provided under TRICARE
Prime.''.
(3) Pharmacy benefits program.--Section 1074g(a)(6) of such
title is amended by adding at the end the following new
subparagraph:
``(D) Notwithstanding subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C), there is no
cost-sharing for any prescription contraceptive on the uniform
formulary provided by a retail pharmacy described in subsection
(a)(2)(E)(ii) or the national mail-order pharmacy program.''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take
effect on January 1, 2020.
SEC. 702. TRICARE PAYMENT OPTIONS FOR RETIREES AND THEIR DEPENDENTS.
(a) In General.--Section 1099 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (e); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new
subsection (d):
``(d) Payment Options.--(1) A member or former member of the
uniformed services, or a dependent thereof, eligible for medical care
and dental care under section 1074(b) or 1076 of this title shall pay a
premium for coverage under this chapter.
``(2) To the maximum extent practicable, a premium owed by a
member, former member, or dependent under paragraph (1) shall be
withheld from the retired, retainer, or equivalent pay of the member,
former member, or dependent. In all other cases, a premium shall be
paid in a frequency and method determined by the Secretary.''.
(b) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Conforming amendments.--Section 1097a of title 10,
United States Code, is amended--
(A) by striking subsection (c); and
(B) by redesignating subsections (d), (e), and (f)
as subsections (c), (d), and (e), respectively.
(2) Heading amendments.--
(A) Automatic enrollments.--The heading for section
1097a of such title is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 1097a. TRICARE Prime: automatic enrollments''.
(B) Enrollment system and payment options.--The
heading for section 1099 of such title is amended to
read as follows:
``Sec. 1099. Health care enrollment system and payment options''.
(3) Clerical amendments.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 55 of such title is amended--
(A) by striking the item relating to section 1097a
and inserting the following new item:
``1097a. TRICARE Prime: automatic enrollments.''; and
(B) by striking the item relating to section 1099
and inserting the following new item:
``1099. Health care enrollment system and payment options.''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall
apply to health care coverage beginning on or after January 1, 2021.
SEC. 703. LEAD LEVEL SCREENING AND TESTING FOR CHILDREN.
(a) Comprehensive Screening, Testing, and Reporting Guidelines.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish
clinical practice guidelines for health care providers employed
by the Department of Defense on screening, testing and
reporting of blood lead levels in children.
(2) Use of cdc recommendations.--Guidelines established
under paragraph (1) shall reflect recommendations made by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention with respect to the
screening, testing, and reporting of blood lead levels in
children.
(3) Dissemination of guidelines.--Not later than one year
after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary
shall disseminate the clinical practice guidelines established
under paragraph (1) to health care providers of the Department
of Defense.
(b) Care Provided in Accordance With CDC Guidance.--The Secretary
shall ensure that any care provided by the Department of Defense to a
child for lead poisoning shall be carried out in accordance with
applicable guidance issued by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
(c) Sharing of Results of Testing.--
(1) In general.--With respect to a child who receives from
the Department of Defense a test for lead poisoning--
(A) the Secretary shall provide the results of the
test to the parent or guardian of the child; and
(B) notwithstanding any requirements for the
confidentiality of health information under the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(Public Law 104-191), the Secretary shall provide the
results of the test and the address at which the child
resides to--
(i) the relevant health department of the
State in which the child resides if the child
resides in the United States; or
(ii) if the child resides outside the
United States--
(I) the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention; and
(II) the appropriate authority of
the country in which the child resides.
(2) State defined.--In this subsection, the term ``State''
means each of the several States, the District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and any territory or possession of
the United States.
(d) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than January 1, 2021, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report detailing, with respect to the period
beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act and ending
on the date of the report, the following:
(A) The number of children who were tested by the
Department of Defense for the level of lead in the
blood of the child, and of such number, the number who
were found to have elevated blood lead levels.
(B) The number of children who were screened by the
Department of Defense for an elevated risk of lead
exposure.
(C) The treatment provided to children pursuant to
chapter 55 of title 10, United States Code, for lead
poisoning.
(2) Elevated blood lead level defined.--In this paragraph,
the term ``elevated blood lead level'' has the meaning given
that term by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
SEC. 704. PROVISION OF BLOOD TESTING FOR FIREFIGHTERS OF DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE TO DETERMINE EXPOSURE TO PERFLUOROALKYL AND
POLYFLUOROALKYL SUBSTANCES.
(a) In General.--Beginning on October 1, 2020, the Secretary of
Defense shall provide blood testing to determine and document potential
exposure to perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (commonly
known as ``PFAS'') for each firefighter of the Department of Defense
during the annual physical exam conducted by the Department for each
such firefighter.
(b) Firefighter Defined.--In this section, the term ``firefighter''
means someone whose primary job or military occupational specialty is
being a firefighter.
Subtitle B--Health Care Administration
SEC. 711. MODIFICATION OF ORGANIZATION OF MILITARY HEALTH SYSTEM.
(a) Administration of Military Medical Treatment Facilities.--
Subsection (a) of section 1073c of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) by redesignating subparagraphs (A), (B), (C),
(D), (E), and (F) as subparagraphs (C), (D), (E), (G),
(H), and (I), respectively;
(B) by inserting before subparagraph (C), as
redesignated by subparagraph (A) of this paragraph, the
following new subparagraphs:
``(A) provision and delivery of health care within
each such facility;
``(B) management of privileging, scope of practice,
and quality of health care provided within each such
facility;''; and
(C) inserting the following new subparagraph:
``(F) supply and equipment;'';
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by redesignating subparagraphs (D) through (G)
as subparagraphs (E) through (H), respectively;
(B) by inserting after subparagraph (C) the
following new subparagraph (D):
``(D) to identify the capacity of each military
medical treatment facility to support clinical
readiness standards of health care providers
established by the Secretary of a military department
or the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health
Affairs;'' and
(C) by amending subparagraph (F), as redesignated
by subparagraph (A) of this paragraph, to read as
follows:
``(F) to determine, in coordination with each
Secretary of a military department, manning, including
joint manning, assigned to military medical treatment
facilities and intermediary organizations;'' and
(3) in paragraph (3)--
(A) in subparagraph (A)--
(i) by inserting ``on behalf of the
military departments,'' before ``ensuring'';
and
(ii) by striking ``and civilian
employees''; and
(B) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``on behalf
of the Defense Health Agency,'' before ``furnishing''.
(b) DHA Assistant Director.--Subsection (b)(2) of such section is
amended by striking ``equivalent education and experience'' and all
that follows and inserting ``the education and experience to perform
the responsibilities of the position.''.
(c) DHA Deputy Assistant Directors.--Subsection (c) of such section
is amended--
(1) in paragraph (2)(B), by striking ``across the military
health system'' and inserting ``at military medical treatment
facilities''; and
(2) in paragraph (4)(B), by inserting ``at military medical
treatment facilities'' before the period at the end.
(d) Military Medical Treatment Facility.--Subsection (f) of such
section is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) The term `military medical treatment facility'
means--
``(A) any fixed facility of the Department of
Defense that is outside of a deployed environment and
used primarily for health care; and
``(B) any other location used for purposes of
providing health care services as designated by the
Secretary of Defense.''.
(e) Technical Amendments.--Subsection (a) of such section is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``paragraph (4)'' and
inserting ``paragraph (5)'';
(2) by redesignating paragraph (5) as paragraph (6);
(3) by redesignating the first paragraph (4) as paragraph
(5); and
(4) by moving the second paragraph (4) so as to appear
before paragraph (5), as redesignated by paragraph (3) of this
subsection.
SEC. 712. SUPPORT BY MILITARY HEALTH SYSTEM OF MEDICAL REQUIREMENTS OF
COMBATANT COMMANDS.
(a) In General.--Section 712 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is
amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by amending paragraph (1) to read as
follows:
``(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall, acting
through the Secretaries of the military departments, the
Defense Health Agency, and the Joint Staff, implement an
organizational framework of the military health system that
effectively implements chapter 55 of title 10, United States
Code, to maximize the readiness of the medical force, promote
interoperability, and integrate medical capabilities of the
Armed Forces in order to enhance joint military medical
operations in support of requirements of the combatant
commands.'';
(2) in subsection (e), by redesignating paragraphs (2) and
(3) as paragraphs (3) and (4), respectively, and by moving such
paragraphs so as to appear at the end of subsection (d);
(3) by striking subsection (e), as amended by paragraph (2)
of this subsection;
(4) by redesignating subsections (b) through (d) as
subsections (c) through (e), respectively;
(5) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new
subsection (b):
``(b) Additional Duties of Surgeons General of the Armed Forces.--
The Surgeons General of the Armed Forces shall have the following
duties:
``(1) To ensure the readiness for operational deployment of
medical and dental personnel and deployable medical or dental
teams or units of the Armed Force or Armed Forces concerned.
``(2) To meet medical readiness standards, subject to
standards and metrics established by the Assistant Secretary of
Defense for Health Affairs.
``(3) With respect to uniformed medical and dental
personnel of the military department concerned--
``(A) to assign such personnel to military medical
treatment facilities, under the operational control of
the commander or director of the facility, or to
partnerships with civilian or other medical facilities
for training activities specific to such military
department; and
``(B) to maintain readiness of such personnel for
operational deployment.
``(4) To provide logistical support for operational
deployment of medical and dental personnel and deployable
medical or dental teams or units of the Armed Force or Armed
Forces concerned.
``(5) To oversee mobilization and demobilization in
connection with the operational deployment of medical and
dental personnel of the Armed Force or Armed Forces concerned.
``(6) To develop operational medical capabilities required
to support the warfighter, and to develop policy relating to
such capabilities.
``(7) To provide health professionals to serve in
leadership positions across the military healthcare system.
``(8) To deliver operational clinical services under the
operational control of the combatant commands--
``(A) on ships and planes; and
``(B) on installations outside of military medical
treatment facilities.
``(9) To manage privileging, scope of practice, and quality
of health care in the settings described in paragraph (8).'';
(6) in subsection (c), as redesignated by paragraph (4) of
this subsection--
(A) in the subsection heading, by inserting
``Agency'' before ``Regions''; and
(B) in paragraph (1)--
(i) in the paragraph heading, by inserting
``Agency'' before ``regions''; and
(ii) by striking ``defense health'' and
inserting ``Defense Health Agency'';
(7) in subsection (d), as redesignated by paragraph (4) of
this subsection--
(A) in the subsection heading, by inserting
``Agency'' before ``Regions'';
(B) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by
striking ``defense health'' and inserting ``Defense
Health Agency''; and
(C) in paragraph (3), by striking ``subsection
(b)'' and inserting ``subsection (c)''; and
(8) in subsection (e), as redesignated by paragraph (4) of
this subsection--
(A) in paragraph (2)--
(i) by amending subparagraph (A) to read as
follows:
``(A) In general.--The Secretaries of the military
departments shall coordinate with the Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Defense Health Agency to
direct resources allocated to the military departments
to support requirements related to readiness and
operational medicine support that are established by
the combatant commands and validated by the Joint
Staff.''; and
(ii) in subparagraph (B), in the matter
preceding clause (i), by striking ``Based on''
and all that follows through ``shall--'' and
inserting ``The Director of the Defense Health
Agency, in coordination with the Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs,
shall--'';
(B) in paragraph (3), as moved and redesignated by
paragraph (2) of this subsection, in the second
sentence--
(i) by inserting ``primarily'' before
``through''; and
(ii) by inserting``, in coordination with
the Secretaries of the military departments,''
after ``the Defense Health Agency''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following:
``(5) Manpower.--
``(A) Administrative control of military
personnel.--Each Secretary of a military department
shall exercise administrative control of members of the
Armed Forces assigned to military medical treatment
facilities, including personnel assignment and issuance
of military orders.
``(B) Oversight of certain personnel by the
director of the defense health agency.--In situations
in which members of the Armed Forces provide health
care services at a military medical treatment facility,
the Director of the Defense Health Agency shall
maintain oversight for the provision of care delivered
by those individuals through policies, procedures, and
privileging responsibilities of the military medical
treatment facility.''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading for section 712 of the
John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended to read as follows:
``SEC. 712. SUPPORT BY MILITARY HEALTHCARE SYSTEM OF MEDICAL
REQUIREMENTS OF COMBATANT COMMANDS.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for such Act
is amended by striking the item relating to section 712 and
inserting the following new item:
``Sec. 712. Support by military healthcare system of medical
requirements of combatant commands.''.
SEC. 713. TOURS OF DUTY OF COMMANDERS OR DIRECTORS OF MILITARY
TREATMENT FACILITIES.
(a) In General.--Not later than January 1, 2021, the Secretary of
Defense shall establish a minimum length for the tour of duty of an
individual as a commander or director of a military treatment facility.
(b) Tours of Duty.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
length of the tour of duty as a commander or director of a
military treatment facility of any individual assigned to such
position after January 1, 2021, may not be shorter than the
longer of--
(A) the length established pursuant to subsection
(a); or
(B) four years.
(2) Waiver.--
(A) In general.--The Secretary of the military
department concerned, in coordination with the Director
of the Defense Health Agency, may authorize a tour of
duty of an individual as a commander or director of a
military treatment facility of a shorter length than is
otherwise provided for in paragraph (1) if the
Secretary determines, in the discretion of the
Secretary, that there is good cause for a tour of duty
in such position of shorter length.
(B) Case-by-case basis.--Any determination under
subparagraph (A) shall be made on a case-by-case basis.
SEC. 714. EXPANSION OF STRATEGY TO IMPROVE ACQUISITION OF MANAGED CARE
SUPPORT CONTRACTS UNDER TRICARE PROGRAM.
Section 705(c)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 10 U.S.C. 1073a note) is amended,
in the matter preceding subparagraph (A), by striking ``, other than
overseas medical support contracts''.
SEC. 715. ESTABLISHMENT OF REGIONAL MEDICAL HUBS TO SUPPORT COMBATANT
COMMANDS.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish not more
than four regional medical hubs, consistent with the defense health
regions established under section 712 of the John S. McCain National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), to
support operational medical requirements of the combatant commands.
(b) Timing.--Establishment of regional medical hubs under
subsection (a) shall commence not later than October 1, 2020, and shall
be completed not later than October 1, 2022.
(c) Leadership.--Each regional medical hub established under
subsection (a) shall be led by a commander or director who is a member
of the Armed Forces serving in a grade not higher than major general or
rear admiral and who shall be--
(1) selected by the Director of the Defense Health Agency
from among members of the Armed Forces recommended by the
military departments for service in such position; and
(2) under the authority, direction, and control of the
Director while serving in such position.
(d) Designation of Primary Center.--
(1) In general.--Each regional medical hub established
under subsection (a) shall include a major military medical
center designated by the Secretary to serve as the primary
center for the provision of specialized medical services in
that region.
(2) Capabilities.--A major military medical center may not
be designated under paragraph (1) unless the center--
(A) includes one or more large graduate medical
education training platforms; and
(B) provides, at a minimum, role 4 medical care.
(3) Location.--
(A) In general.--Any major military medical center
designated under paragraph (1) shall be geographically
located so as to maximize the support provided by
uniformed medical resources to the combatant commands.
(B) Collocation with major aerial debarkation
points.--In designating major military medical centers
under paragraph (1), the Secretary shall give
consideration to the collocation of such centers with
major aerial debarkation points of patients in the
medical evacuation system of the United States
Transportation Command.
(4) Major health care delivery platform.--A major military
medical center designated under paragraph (1) shall serve as
the major health care delivery platform for the provision of
complex specialized medical care in the region, whether through
patient referrals from other military medical treatment
facilities or through referrals from either civilian medical
facilities or healthcare facilities of the Department of
Veterans Affairs.
(e) Additional Military Medical Centers.--Consistent with section
1073d of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary, in establishing
regional medical hubs under subsection (a), may establish additional
military medical centers in the following locations:
(1) Locations with large beneficiary populations.
(2) Locations that serve as the primary readiness platforms
of the Armed Forces.
(f) Patient Referrals and Coordination.--In implementing the
regional medical hubs established under subsection (a), the Director of
the Defense Health Agency shall ensure effective and efficient medical
care referrals and coordination among military medical treatment
facilities and among local or regional high-performing health systems
through local or regional partnerships with institutional or individual
civilian providers.
SEC. 716. MONITORING OF ADVERSE EVENT DATA ON DIETARY SUPPLEMENT USE BY
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall modify the
electronic health record system of the military health system to
include data regarding the use by members of the Armed Forces of
dietary supplements and adverse events with respect to dietary
supplements.
(b) Requirements.--The modifications required by subsection (a)
shall ensure that the electronic health record system of the military
health system--
(1) records adverse event report data regarding dietary
supplement use by members of the Armed Forces;
(2) generates standard reports on adverse event data that
can be aggregated for analysis;
(3) issues automated alerts to signal a significant change
in adverse event reporting or to signal a risk of interaction
with a medication or other treatment; and
(4) provides for reporting of adverse event report data
regarding dietary supplement use by members of the Armed Forces
to the Food and Drug Administration.
(c) Outreach.--The Secretary shall conduct outreach to health care
providers in the military health system to educate such providers on
the importance of entering adverse event report data regarding dietary
supplement use by members of the Armed Forces into the electronic
health record system of the military health system and reporting such
data to the Food and Drug Administration.
(d) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Adverse event.--The term ``adverse event'' has the
meaning given that term in section 761(a) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 379aa-1(a)).
(2) Dietary supplement.--The term ``dietary supplement''
has the meaning given that term in section 201(ff) of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 321(ff)).
SEC. 717. ENHANCEMENT OF RECORDKEEPING WITH RESPECT TO EXPOSURE BY
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES TO CERTAIN OCCUPATIONAL AND
ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS WHILE DEPLOYED OVERSEAS.
(a) Inclusion in Medical Tracking System of Occupational and
Environmental Health Risks in Deployment Area.--
(1) Elements of medical tracking system.--Subsection
(b)(1)(A) of section 1074f of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(A) in clause (ii), by striking ``and'' at the end;
(B) in clause (iii), by striking the period at the
end and inserting ``; and''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new clause:
``(iv) accurately record any exposure to
occupational and environmental health risks during the
course of their deployment.''.
(2) Recordkeeping.--Subsection (c) of such section is
amended by inserting after ``deployment area'' the following:
``(including the results of any assessment performed by the
Secretary of occupational and environmental health risks for
such area)''.
(b) Postdeployment Medical Examination and Reassessments.--Section
1074f of title 10, United States Code, as amended by subsection (a), is
further amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(g) Additional Requirements for Postdeployment Medical
Examinations and Health Reassessments.--(1) The Secretary of Defense
shall standardize and make available to a provider that conducts a
postdeployment medical examination or reassessment under the system
described in subsection (a) questions relating to occupational and
environmental health exposure.
``(2) The Secretary, to the extent practicable, shall ensure that
the medical record of a member includes information on the external
cause relating to a diagnosis of the member, including by associating
an external cause code (as issued under the International Statistical
Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th Revision
(or any successor revision)).''.
(c) Access to Information in Burn Pit Registry.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that
all medical personnel of the Department of Defense have access
to the information contained in the burn pit registry.
(2) Burn pit registry defined.--In this subsection, the
term ``burn pit registry'' means the registry established under
section 201 of the Dignified Burial and Other Veterans'
Benefits Improvement Act of 2012 (Public Law 112-260; 38 U.S.C.
527 note).
Subtitle C--Reports and Other Matters
SEC. 721. EXTENSION AND CLARIFICATION OF AUTHORITY FOR JOINT DEPARTMENT
OF DEFENSE-DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS MEDICAL
FACILITY DEMONSTRATION FUND.
Title XVII of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2567) is amended--
(1) in section 1701(a)--
(A) by striking ``Subject to subsection (b), the''
and inserting ``The'';
(B) by striking subsection (b); and
(C) by redesignating subsections (c) through (f) as
subsections (b) through (e), respectively;
(2) in section 1702(a)(1), by striking ``hereafter in this
title'' and inserting ``in this section'';
(3) in section 1703, in subsections (a) and (c), by
striking ``the facility'' and inserting ``the James A. Lovell
Federal Health Care Center'';
(4) in section 1704--
(A) in subsections (a)(3), (a)(4)(A), and (b)(1),
by striking ``the facility'' and inserting ``the James
A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center''; and
(B) in subsection (e), as most recently amended by
section 731 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-
232), by striking ``September 30, 2020'' and inserting
``September 30, 2021'';
(5) in section 1705--
(A) in subsection (a), by striking ``the facility''
and inserting ``the James A. Lovell Federal Health Care
Center (in this section referred to as the
`JALFHCC')'';
(B) in subsection (b), in the matter preceding
paragraph (1), by striking ``the facility'' and
inserting ``the JALFHCC''; and
(C) in subsection (c)--
(i) by striking ``the facility'' each place
it appears and inserting ``the JALFHCC''; and
(ii) by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(4) To permit the JALFHCC to enter into personal services
contracts to carry out health care responsibilities in the
JALFHCC to the same extent and subject to the same conditions
and limitations as apply under section 1091 of title 10, United
States Code, to the Secretary of Defense with respect to health
care responsibilities in medical treatment facilities of the
Department of Defense.''.
SEC. 722. APPOINTMENT OF NON-EX OFFICIO MEMBERS OF THE HENRY M. JACKSON
FOUNDATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF MILITARY MEDICINE.
(a) Appointment by Non-ex Officio Members.--Subparagraph (C) of
paragraph (1) of section 178(c) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:
``(C) six members, each of whom shall be appointed at the
expiration of the term of a member appointed under this
subparagraph, as provided for in paragraph (2), by the members
currently serving on the Council pursuant to this subparagraph
and paragraph (2), including the member whose expiring term is
so being filled by such appointment.''.
(b) Repeal of Obsolete Authority Establishing Staggered Terms.--
Paragraph (2) of such section is amended--
(1) by striking ``except that--'' and all that follows
through ``any person'' and inserting ``except that any
person'';
(2) by striking ``; and'' and inserting a period; and
(3) by striking subparagraph (B).
(c) Effective Date.--
(1) In general.--The amendments made by this section shall
take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act.
(2) Construction for current members.--Nothing in the
amendments made by this section shall be construed to terminate
or otherwise alter the appointment or term of service of
members of the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement
of Military Medicine who are so serving on the date of the
enactment of this Act pursuant to an appointment under
paragraph (1)(C) or (2) of section 178(c) of title 10, United
States Code, made before that date.
SEC. 723. OFFICERS AUTHORIZED TO COMMAND ARMY DENTAL UNITS.
Section 7081(d) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``Dental Corps Officer'' and inserting ``Army Medical
Department Officer''.
SEC. 724. ESTABLISHMENT OF ACADEMIC HEALTH SYSTEM IN NATIONAL CAPITAL
REGION.
(a) In General.--Chapter 104 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by inserting after section 2113a the following new section:
``Sec. 2113b. Academic Health System
``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may establish an
Academic Health System to integrate the health care, health professions
education, and health research activities of the military health
system, including under this chapter, in the National Capital Region.
``(b) Leadership.--(1) The Secretary may appoint employees of the
Department of Defense to leadership positions in the Academic Health
System established under subsection (a).
``(2) Such positions may include responsibilities for management of
the health care, health professions education, and health research
activities described in subsection (a) and are in addition to similar
leadership positions for members of the armed forces.
``(c) Administration.--The Secretary may use such authorities under
this chapter relating to the health care, health professions education,
and health research activities of the military health system as the
Secretary considers appropriate for the administration of the Academic
Health System established under subsection (a).
``(d) National Capital Region Defined.--In this section, the term
`National Capital Region' means the area, or portion thereof, as
determined by the Secretary, in the vicinity of the District of
Columbia.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 104 of such title is amended by inserting after the item
relating to section 2113a the following new item:
``2113b. Academic Health System.''.
SEC. 725. PROVISION OF VETERINARY SERVICES BY VETERINARY PROFESSIONALS
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE IN EMERGENCIES.
(a) In General.--Chapter 53 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 1060c. Provision of veterinary services in emergencies
``(a) In General.--A veterinary professional described in
subsection (b) may provide veterinary services for the purposes
described in subsection (c) in any State, the District of Columbia, or
a territory or possession of the United States, without regard to where
such veterinary professional or the patient animal are located, if the
provision of such services is within the scope of the authorized duties
of such veterinary professional for the Department of Defense.
``(b) Veterinary Professional Described.--A veterinary professional
described in this subsection is an individual who is--
``(1)(A) a member of the armed forces, a civilian employee
of the Department of Defense, or otherwise credentialed and
privileged at a Federal veterinary institution or location
designated by the Secretary of Defense for purposes of this
section; or
``(B) a member of the National Guard performing training or
duty under section 502(f) of title 32;
``(2) certified as a veterinary professional by a
certification recognized by the Secretary of Defense; and
``(3) currently licensed by a State, the District of
Columbia, or a territory or possession of the United States to
provide veterinary services.
``(c) Purposes Described.--The purposes described in this
subsection are veterinary services in response to any of the following:
``(1) A national emergency declared by the President
pursuant to the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1601 et
seq.).
``(2) A major disaster or an emergency (as those terms are
defined in section 102 of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster
Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5122)).
``(3) A public health emergency declared by the Secretary
of Health and Human Services under section 319 of the Public
Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 247d).
``(4) An extraordinary emergency, as determined by the
Secretary of Agriculture under section 10407(b) of the Animal
Health Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 8306(b)).''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 53 of such title is amended by inserting after the item
relating to section 1060b the following new item:
``1060c. Provision of veterinary services in emergencies.''.
SEC. 726. FIVE-YEAR EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO CONTINUE THE DOD-VA
HEALTH CARE SHARING INCENTIVE FUND.
Section 8111(d)(3) of title 38, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``September 30, 2020'' and inserting, ``September 30, 2025''.
SEC. 727. PILOT PROGRAM ON CIVILIAN AND MILITARY PARTNERSHIPS TO
ENHANCE INTEROPERABILITY AND MEDICAL SURGE CAPABILITY AND
CAPACITY OF NATIONAL DISASTER MEDICAL SYSTEM.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out a pilot
program to establish partnerships with public, private, and nonprofit
health care organizations, institutions, and entities in collaboration
with the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, the Secretary of Health and
Human Services, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and the Secretary
of Transportation to enhance the interoperability and medical surge
capability and capacity of the National Disaster Medical System under
section 2812 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300hh-11) in
the vicinity of major aeromedical transport hubs of the Department of
Defense.
(b) Duration.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out the pilot
program under subsection (a) for a period of not more than five years.
(c) Locations.--The Secretary shall carry out the pilot program
under subsection (a) at not fewer than five aeromedical transport hub
regions in the United States.
(d) Requirements.--In establishing partnerships under the pilot
program under subsection (a), the Secretary, in collaboration with the
Secretary of Veterans Affairs, the Secretary of Health and Human
Services, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and the Secretary of
Transportation, shall establish requirements under such partnerships
for staffing, specialized training, medical logistics, telemedicine,
patient regulating, movement, situational status reporting, tracking,
and surveillance.
(e) Evaluation Metrics.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish
metrics to evaluate the effectiveness of the pilot program under
subsection (a).
(f) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--
(A) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the
commencement of the pilot program under subsection (a),
the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives
a report on the pilot program.
(B) Elements.--The report required by subparagraph
(A) shall include the following:
(i) A description of the pilot program.
(ii) The requirements established under
subsection (d).
(iii) The evaluation metrics established
under subsection (e).
(iv) Such other matters relating to the
pilot program as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(2) Final report.--
(A) In general.--Not later than 180 days after
completion of the pilot program under subsection (a),
the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives
a report on the pilot program.
(B) Elements.--The report required by subparagraph
(A) shall include the following:
(i) A description of the pilot program,
including the partnerships established under
the pilot program as described in subsection
(a).
(ii) An assessment of the effectiveness of
the pilot program.
(iii) Such recommendations for legislative
or administrative action as the Secretary
considers appropriate in light of the pilot
program, including recommendations for
extending or making permanent the authority for
the pilot program.
SEC. 728. MODIFICATION OF REQUIREMENTS FOR LONGITUDINAL MEDICAL STUDY
ON BLAST PRESSURE EXPOSURE OF MEMBERS OF THE ARMED
FORCES.
Section 734 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1444) is amended--
(1) in subsection (b)--
(A) in paragraph (2), by striking ``; and'' and
inserting a semicolon;
(B) in paragraph (3), by striking the period at the
end and inserting ``; and''; and
(C) by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(4) assess the feasibility and advisability of--
``(A) uploading the data gathered from the study
into the Defense Occupational and Environmental Health
Readiness System - Industrial Hygiene (DOEHRS-IH) or
similar system; and
``(B) allowing personnel of the Department of
Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs to have
access to such system.''; and
(2) in subsection (c)--
(A) by redesignating paragraph (2) as paragraph
(3); and
(B) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following
new paragraph (2):
``(2) Annual status report.--Not later than January 1 of
each year during the period beginning on the date of the
enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2020 and ending on the completion of the study under
subsection (a), the Secretary shall submit to the Committees on
Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a
status report on the study.''.
TITLE VIII--ACQUISITION POLICY, ACQUISITION MANAGEMENT, AND RELATED
MATTERS
Subtitle A--Contracting and Acquisition Provisions
SEC. 801. PILOT PROGRAM ON INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY EVALUATION FOR
ACQUISITION PROGRAMS.
(a) Pilot Program.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this act, the Secretary of Defense and the Secretaries of
the military departments may jointly carry out a pilot program to
assess mechanisms to evaluate intellectual property, such as technical
data deliverables and associated license rights, including commercially
available intellectual property valuation analysis and techniques, in
acquisition programs for which they are responsible to better
understand the benefits associated with these techniques on--
(1) the development of cost-effective intellectual property
strategies, and
(2) assessment and management of the value and costs of
intellectual property during acquisition and sustainment
activities (including source selection evaluation factors)
throughout the acquisition lifecycle for any acquisition
program selected by the Secretary concerned.
(b) Activities.--Activities carried out under the pilot program may
include the following:
(1) Establishing a team of Department of Defense and
private sector subject matter experts to identify, to the
maximum extent practicable at each milestone for a selected
acquisition programs, intellectual property evaluation
techniques to obtain quantitative and qualitative analysis
related to the value of intellectual property during the
procurement, production and deployment, and operations and
support phases of the acquisition of the systems under the
program.
(2) Assessment of commercial valuation techniques for
intellectual property for use by the Department of Defense.
(3) Assessment of the feasibility of agency-level oversight
to standardize intellectual property evaluation practices and
procedures.
(4) Assessment of contracting mechanisms to speed delivery
of intellectual property to the Armed Forces or reduce
sustainment costs.
(5) Assessment of agency acquisition planning to ensure
procurement of intellectual property deliverables and
intellectual property rights necessary for Government-planned
sustainment activities.
(6) Engagement with the commercial industry to--
(A) support the development of strategies and
program requirements to aid in acquisition and
transition planning for intellectual property;
(B) support the development and improvement of
intellectual property strategies as part of life-cycle
sustainment plans; and
(C) propose and implement alternative and
innovative methods of intellectual property valuation,
prioritization, and evaluation techniques for
intellectual property.
(7) Recommending to the cognizant program manager for an
acquisition program evaluation techniques and contracting
mechanisms for implementation into the acquisition and
sustainment activities of that acquisition program.
(c) Acquisition of Commercial and Nondevelopmental Items, Products,
and Services.--The pilot program shall provide criteria to ensure the
appropriate consideration of commercial items and non-developmental
items as alternatives to items to be specifically developed for the
acquisition program, including evaluation of the benefits of reduced
risk regarding cost, schedule, and performance associated with
commercial and non-developmental items, products, and services.
(d) Assessments.--Not later than November 1, 2020, and annually
thereafter through 2023, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with
the Secretaries concerned, shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a joint report on the pilot program conducted under this
section. The report shall, at a minimum, include--
(1) a description of the acquisition programs selected by
the Secretary concerned;
(2) a description of the specific activities in paragraph
(b) that were performed under each program;
(3) an assessment of the effectiveness of the activities;
(4) an assessment of improvements to acquisition or
sustainment activities related to the pilot program; and
(5) an assessment of cost-savings from the activities
related to the pilot program, including any improvement to
mission success during the operations and support phase of the
program.
SEC. 802. PILOT PROGRAM TO USE ALPHA CONTRACTING TEAMS FOR COMPLEX
REQUIREMENTS.
(a) In General.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall select at least
2, and up to 5, initiatives to participate in a pilot to use teams
that, with the advice of expert third parties, focus on the development
of complex contract technical requirements for services, with each team
focusing on developing achievable technical requirements that are
appropriately valued and identifying the most effective acquisition
strategy to achieve those requirements.
(2) The Secretary shall develop metrics for tracking progress of
the program at improving quality and acquisition cycle time.
(b) Development of Criteria and Initiatives.--(1) Not later than
February 1, 2020, the Secretary of Defense shall establish the pilot
program and notify the congressional defense committees of the criteria
used to select initiatives and the metrics used to track progress.
(2) Not later than May 1, 2020, the Secretary shall notify the
congressional defense committees of the initiatives selected for the
program.
(3) Not later than December 1, 2020, the Secretary shall brief the
congressional defense committees on the progress of the selected
initiatives, including the progress of the initiatives at improving
quality and acquisition cycle time according to the metrics developed
under subsection (a)(2).
SEC. 803. MODIFICATION OF WRITTEN APPROVAL REQUIREMENT FOR TASK AND
DELIVERY ORDER SINGLE CONTRACT AWARDS.
Section 2304a(d)(3) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (B), by redesignating clauses (i) and
(ii) as subclauses (I) and (II), respectively;
(2) by redesignating subparagraphs (A), (B), (C), and (D)
as clauses (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv), respectively;
(3) by striking ``No task or delivery order contract'' and
inserting ``(A) Except as provided under subparagraph (B), no
task or delivery order contract''; and
(4) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(B) A task or delivery order contract in an amount estimated to
exceed $100,000,000 (including all options) may be awarded to a single
source without the written determination otherwise required under
subparagraph (A) if the head of the agency has made a written
determination pursuant to section 2304(c) of this title that other than
competitive procedures may be used for the awarding of such
contract.''.
SEC. 804. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY TO ACQUIRE PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
PRODUCED IN COUNTRIES ALONG A MAJOR ROUTE OF SUPPLY TO
AFGHANISTAN.
Section 801(f) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2399), as most recently amended
by section 1214 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1649), is further amended by
striking ``December 31, 2019'' and inserting ``December 31, 2021''.
SEC. 805. MODIFICATION OF DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONAL TEST AND EVALUATION
REPORT.
Section 139(h)(5) of title 10, United States Code, is amended to
read as follows:
``(5) The Director shall solicit comments from the Secretaries of
the military departments on each report of the Director to Congress
under this section and summarize the comments in the report. The
Director shall determine the amount of time available for the
Secretaries to comment on the draft report on a case by case basis, and
consider the extent to which substantive discussions have already been
held between the Director and the military department. The Director
shall reserve the right to issue the report without comment from a
military department if the department's comments are not received
within the time provided, and shall indicate any such omission in the
report.''.
SEC. 806. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE USE OF FIXED-PRICE CONTRACTS.
(a) Department of Defense Review.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment shall review how the Department of
Defense informs decisions to use fixed-price contracts to
support broader acquisition objectives, to ensure that such
decisions are made strategically and consistently. The review
should include decisions on the use of the various types of
fixed price contracts, including fixed-price incentive
contracts.
(2) Briefing.--Not later than February 1, 2020, the Under
Secretary shall brief the congressional defense committees on
the findings of the review required under paragraph (1).
(b) Comptroller General Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than February 1, 2021, the
Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the Department of
Defense's use of fixed-price contracts, including different
types of fixed-price contracts.
(2) Elements.--The report required under paragraph (1)
shall include the following elements:
(A) A description of the extent to which fixed-
price contracts have been used over time and the
conditions in which they are used.
(B) An assessment of the effects of the decisions
to use of fixed-price contract types, such as any
additional costs or savings or efficiencies in contract
administration.
(C) An assessment of how decisions to use various
types of fixed-price contracts affects the contract
closeout process.
(c) Delayed Implementation of Regulations Requiring the Use of
Fixed-price Contracts for Foreign Military Sales.--The regulations
prescribed pursuant to section 830(a) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 22 U.S.C.
2762 note) shall not take effect until December 31, 2020. The
regulations as so prescribed shall take into account the findings of
the review conducted under subsection (a)(1).
SEC. 807. PILOT PROGRAM TO ACCELERATE CONTRACTING AND PRICING
PROCESSES.
Section 890 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (b);
(2) by redesignating subsections (c) and (d) as subsections
(b) and (c), respectively;
(3) in subsection (b), as redesignated by paragraph (2), by
striking ``and an assessment of whether the program should be
continued or expanded''; and
(4) in subsection (c), as so redesignated, by striking
``January 2, 2021'' and inserting ``January 2, 2023''.
SEC. 808. PILOT PROGRAM TO STREAMLINE DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES FOR
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
(a) Candidate Acquisition Programs.--
(1) In general.--Not later than February 1, 2020, each
Service Acquisition Executive shall recommend to the Secretary
of Defense at least one major defense acquisition program for a
pilot program to include tailored measures to streamline the
entire milestone decision process, with the results evaluated
and reported for potential wider use.
(2) Elements.--Each pilot program selected pursuant to
paragraph (1) shall include the following elements:
(A) Delineating the appropriate information needed
to support milestone decisions, assuring program
accountability and oversight, which should be based on
the business case principles needed for well-informed
milestone decisions, including user-defined
requirements, reasonable acquisition and life-cycle
cost estimates, and a knowledge-based acquisition plan
for maturing technologies, stabilizing the program
design, and ensuring key manufacturing processes are in
control.
(B) Developing an efficient process for providing
this information to the milestone decision authority
by--
(i) minimizing any reviews between the
program office and the different functional
staff offices within each chain of command
level; and
(ii) establishing frequent, regular
interaction between the program office and
milestone decision makers, in lieu of
documentation reviews, to help expedite the
process.
(b) Briefing.--Not later than May 1, 2020, the Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment shall provide to the
congressional defense committees an informal briefing detailing--
(1) the acquisition programs selected pursuant to
subsection (a);
(2) the associated action plans, including timelines, for
each program; and
(3) the manner in which each program conforms to the
requirements set forth in subsection (a)(2).
SEC. 809. DOCUMENTATION OF MARKET RESEARCH RELATED TO COMMERCIAL ITEM
DETERMINATIONS.
(a) In General.--Section 2377(c) of title 10, United States Code,
is amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (4) as paragraph (5); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following new
paragraph:
``(4) The head of an agency shall document the results of
market research in a manner appropriate to the size and
complexity of the acquisition.''.
(b) Conforming Amendment Related to Prospective Amendment.--Section
836(d)(3)(C)(ii) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended by striking
``in paragraph (4)'' and inserting ``in paragraph (5)''.
SEC. 810. MODIFICATION TO SMALL PURCHASE THRESHOLD EXCEPTION TO
SOURCING REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTAIN ARTICLES.
Subsection (h) of section 2533a of title 10, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:
``(h) Exception for Small Purchases.--Subsection (a) does not apply
to purchases for amounts not greater than $150,000. A proposed purchase
or contract for an amount greater than $150,000 may not be divided into
several purchases or contracts for lesser amounts in order to qualify
for this exception. On October 1 of each year evenly divisible by 5,
the Secretary of Defense may adjust the dollar threshold in this
subsection based on changes in the Consumer Price Index. The Secretary
shall publish notice of any such adjustment in the Federal Register,
and the new price threshold shall take effect on the date of
publication.''.
Subtitle B--Provisions Relating to Major Defense Acquisition Programs
SEC. 821. NAVAL VESSEL CERTIFICATION REQUIRED BEFORE MILESTONE B
APPROVAL.
Section 2366b(a) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (3)(O), by striking ``; and'' and
inserting a semicolon;
(2) in paragraph (4), by striking the period at the end and
inserting ``; and''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(5) in the case of a naval vessel program, certifies
compliance with the requirements of section 8669b of this
title.''.
Subtitle C--Industrial Base Matters
SEC. 831. MODERNIZATION OF ACQUISITION PROCESSES TO ENSURE INTEGRITY OF
INDUSTRIAL BASE.
(a) Digitization and Modernization.--The Secretary of Defense shall
streamline and digitize the existing Department of Defense approach for
identifying and mitigating risks to the defense industrial base across
the acquisition process, creating a continuous model that uses digital
tools, technologies, and approaches designed to ensure the
accessibility of data to key decision-makers in the Department.
(b) Analytical Framework.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment, in coordination with the Defense
Security Service (or successor entity) and other organizations
as appropriate, shall develop an analytical framework for risk
mitigation across the acquisition process.
(2) Elements.--The analytical framework required under
paragraph (1) shall include the following elements:
(A) Characterization and monitoring of supply chain
risks, including--
(i) material sources and fragility;
(ii) counterfeit parts;
(iii) cybersecurity of contractors;
(iv) vendor vetting in contingency or
operational environments; and
(v) other risk areas as determined
appropriate.
(B) Characterization and monitoring of risks posed
by contractor behavior that constitute violations of
laws or regulations, including those relating to--
(i) fraud;
(ii) ownership structures;
(iii) trafficking in persons;
(iv) workers' health and safety;
(v) affiliation with the enemy; and
(vi) other risk areas as deemed
appropriate.
(C) Characterization of the Department's
acquisition processes and procedures, including--
(i) market research;
(ii) responsibility determinations,
including consideration of the need for special
standards of responsibility to address the
risks described in subparagraphs (A) and (B);
(iii) facilities clearances;
(iv) contract requirements definition and
technical evaluation;
(v) contract awards and contractor
mobilization;
(vi) contractor mobilization to include
hiring, training, and establishing facilities;
(vii) contract administration, contract
management, and oversight;
(viii) contract audit for closeout;
(ix) contractor business system reviews;
and
(x) other relevant processes and
procedures.
(D) Characterization and monitoring of the health
and activities of the defense industrial base,
including those relating to--
(i) balance sheets, revenues,
profitability, and debt;
(ii) investment, innovation, and
technological and manufacturing sophistication;
(iii) finances, access to capital markets,
and cost of raising capital within those
markets;
(iv) corporate governance, leadership, and
culture of performance; and
(v) history of performance on past
Department of Defense and government contracts.
(c) Roles and Responsibilities.--The Secretary of Defense shall
designate the roles and responsibilities of organizations and
individuals to execute activities under this section, including--
(1) the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and
Sustainment, including the Office of Defense Pricing and
Contracting and the Office of Industrial Policy;
(2) Service Acquisition Executives;
(3) program offices and procuring contracting officers;
(4) administrative contracting officers within the Defense
Contract Management Agency and the Supervisor of Shipbuilding;
(5) the Defense Security Service and the Defense
Counterintelligence Security Agency;
(6) the Defense Contract Audit Agency;
(7) departments, agencies, or activities which own or
operate systems containing data relevant to Department of
Defense contractors;
(8) the Under Secretary for Research and Engineering; and
(9) other relevant organizations and individuals.
(d) Enabling Data, Tools, and Systems.--
(1) Assessment of existing data sources, systems, and
tools.--
(A) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment, in consultation with the
Chief Data Officer of the Department of Defense, and
the Defense Security Service (or successor entity),
shall assess the extent to which existing systems of
record relevant to risk assessments and contracting are
producing, exposing, and timely maintaining valid and
reliable data for the purposes of the Department's
continuous assessment and mitigation of risks in the
defense industrial base.
(B) Elements.--The assessment required under
subparagraph (A) shall include the following elements:
(i) Identification of the necessary source
data, to include data from contractors,
intelligence and security activities, program
offices, and commercial research entities.
(ii) A description of the modern data
infrastructure, tools, and applications and
what changes would improve the effectiveness
and efficiency of mitigating the risks
described in subsection (b)(2).
(iii) An assessment of the following
systems owned or operated outside of the
Department of Defense:
(I) The Federal Awardee Performance
and Integrity Information System
(FAPIIS).
(II) The System for Award
Management (SAM).
(III) The Federal Procurement Data
System-Next Generation (FPDS-NG).
(iv) An assessment of systems owned or
operated by the Department of Defense,
including the Defense Security Service (or
successor entity) and other defense agencies
and field activities used to capture and
analyze the performance of vendors and
contractors.
(2) Modernization of data collection, exposure, and
analysis methods.--Based on the findings pursuant to paragraph
(1), the Secretary of Defense shall develop a unified set of
activities to modernize the systems of record, data sources and
collection methods, and data exposure mechanisms. The unified
set of activities should feature--
(A) the ability to continuously collect data on,
assess, and mitigate risks;
(B) data analytics and business intelligence tools
and methods; and
(C) continuous development and continuous delivery
of secure software to implement the activities.
(e) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than November 15, 2019, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on actions taken pursuant to this section,
including recommendations for any further authorities or
legislation.
(2) Second report.--Not later than April 15, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on actions taken pursuant to this section,
including recommendations for any further legislation.
(f) Comptroller General Reviews.--
(1) Briefing.--Not later than February 15, 2020, the
Comptroller General of the United States shall brief the
congressional defense committees on Department of Defense
efforts over the previous 5 years to continuously assess and
mitigate risks to the defense industrial base across the
acquisition process, and a summary of current and planned
efforts.
(2) Annual assessments.--Not later than June 15, 2020, and
annually thereafter, the Comptroller General of the United
States shall submit to the congressional defense committees an
assessment of Department of Defense progress in implementing
the framework required under subsection (b).
SEC. 832. ASSESSMENT OF PRECISION-GUIDED MISSILES FOR RELIANCE ON
FOREIGN-MADE MICROELECTRONIC COMPONENTS.
(a) In General.--Not later than August 31, 2020, the Secretary of
the Air Force shall brief the congressional defense committees on the
findings of an assessment of the Air Force's precision-guided missiles
for reliance on foreign-made microelectronic components.
(b) Elements.--The assessment required under subsection (a) shall--
(1) consider certain risks such as--
(A) where microelectronic components for all of the
Air Force's precision-guided missiles currently in
production were made;
(B) the contract tier level of the microelectronic
components supplier; and
(C) which of the microelectronic components are
cyber security concerns; and
(2) identify mitigation strategies.
SEC. 833. MITIGATING RISKS RELATED TO FOREIGN OWNERSHIP, CONTROL, OR
INFLUENCE OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CONTRACTORS OR
SUBCONTRACTORS.
(a) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Beneficial owner; beneficial ownership.--The terms
``beneficial owner'' and ``beneficial ownership'' shall be
determined in the manner set forth in section 240.13d-3 of
title 17, Code of Federal Regulations.
(2) Company.--The term ``company'' means any corporation,
company, limited liability company, limited partnership,
business trust, business association, or other similar entity.
(3) Covered contractor or subcontractor.--The term
``covered contractor or subcontractor'' means a company that is
an existing or prospective contractor or subcontractor of the
Department of Defense on a contract or subcontract with a value
in excess of $5,000,000, except as provided in subsection (c).
(4) Foreign ownership, control, or influence; foci.--The
terms ``foreign ownership, control, or influence'' and ``FOCI''
have the meanings given those terms under the policy, factors,
and procedures of the National Industrial Security Program
Operating Manual, DOD 5220.22-M, or a successor document.
(b) Improved Assessment and Mitigation of Risks Related to Foreign
Ownership, Control, or Influence.--
(1) In general.--In developing and implementing the
analytical framework for mitigating risk relating to ownership
structures, as required by section 831(b)(2)(B)(ii), the
Secretary of Defense shall improve the process and procedures
for the assessment and mitigation of risks related to foreign
ownership, control, or influence (FOCI) of contractors and
subcontractors doing business with the Department of Defense.
(2) Elements.--The process and procedures for the
assessment and mitigation of risk relating to ownership
structures referred to in paragraph (1) shall include the
following elements:
(A) Assessment of foci.--(i) A requirement for
covered contractors and subcontractors to disclose to
the Defense Security Service, or its successor
organization, their beneficial ownership and whether
they are under FOCI.
(ii) A requirement to update such disclosures when
significant changes occur to information previously
provided, consistent with or similar to the procedures
for updating FOCI information under the National
Industrial Security Program.
(iii) A requirement for covered contractors and
subcontractors determined to be under FOCI to disclose
contact information for each of its foreign owners that
is a beneficial owner.
(iv) A requirement that, at a minimum, the
disclosures required by this paragraph be provided at
the time the contract or subcontract is awarded,
amended, or renewed, but in no case later than one year
after the Secretary prescribes regulations to carry out
this subsection.
(B) Responsibility determination.--Consistent with
section 831(b)(2)(C)(ii), consideration of FOCI risks
as part of responsibility determinations, including--
(i) whether to establish a special standard
of responsibility relating to FOCI risks for
covered contractors or subcontractors, and the
extent to which the policies and procedures
consistent with or similar to those relating to
FOCI under the National Industrial Security
Program shall be applied to covered contractors
or subcontractors;
(ii) procedures for contracting officers
making responsibility determinations regarding
whether covered contractors and subcontractors
may be under foreign ownership, control, or
influence and for determining whether there is
reason to believe that such foreign ownership,
control, or influence would pose a risk to
national security or potential risk of
compromise because of sensitive data, systems,
or processes, such as personally identifiable
information, cybersecurity, or national
security systems involved with the contract or
subcontract; and
(iii) modification of policies, directives,
and practices to provide that an assessment
that a covered contractor or subcontractor is
under FOCI may be a sufficient basis for a
contracting officer to determine that a
contractor or subcontractor is not responsible.
(C) Contract requirements, administration, and
oversight relating to foci.--
(i) Requirements for contract clauses
providing for and enforcing disclosures related
to changes in FOCI during performance of the
contract, consistent with subparagraph (A), and
necessitating the effective mitigation of risks
related to FOCI throughout the duration of the
contract or subcontract.
(ii) Pursuant to section 831(c),
designation of the appropriate Department of
Defense official responsible to approve and to
take actions relating to award, modification,
termination of a contract, or direction to
modify or terminate a subcontract due to an
assessment by the Defense Security Service, or
its successor organization, that a covered
contractor or subcontractor under FOCI poses a
risk to national security or potential risk of
compromise.
(iii) A requirement for the provision of
additional information regarding beneficial
ownership and control of any covered contractor
or subcontractor on the contract or
subcontract.
(iv) Other measures as necessary to be
consistent with other relevant practices,
policies, regulations, and actions, including
those under the National Industrial Security
Program.
(c) Applicability to Contracts and Subcontracts for Commercial
Products and Services and Other Forms of Acquisition Agreements.--
(1) Commercial products and services.--The disclosure
requirements under subsection (b) shall not apply to a contract
or subcontract for commercial products or services, unless a
designated senior official specifically requires the
disclosures described in such subparagraphs with respect to the
contract or subcontract based on a determination by the
designated senior official that the contract or subcontract
involves a risk to national security or potential risk of
compromise because of sensitive data, systems, or processes,
such as personally identifiable information, cybersecurity, or
national security systems.
(2) Research and development and procurement activities.--
The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the requirements of
this section are applied to research and development and
procurement activities, including for the delivery of services,
established through any means including those under section
2358(b) of title 10, United States Code.
(d) Availability of Resources.--The Secretary shall ensure that
sufficient resources, including subject matter expertise, are allocated
to execute the functions necessary to carry out this section, including
the assessment, mitigation, contract administration, and oversight
functions.
(e) Reporting Requirements and Limited Availability of Beneficial
Ownership Data.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
establish a process to update systems of record to improve the
assessment and mitigation of risks associated with FOCI through
the inclusion and updating of all appropriate associated
uniquely identifying information about the contracts and
contractors and subcontracts and subcontractors in the Federal
Awardee Performance and Integrity Information System (FAPIIS),
administered by the General Services Administration, and the
Commercial and Government Entity (CAGE) database, administered
by the Defense Logistics Agency.
(2) Limited availability of information.--The Secretary of
Defense shall ensure that the information required to be
disclosed pursuant to this subsection is--
(A) not made public;
(B) made available via the FAPIIS and CAGE
databases; and
(C) made available to appropriate government
departments or agencies.
SEC. 834. EXTENSION AND REVISIONS TO NEVER CONTRACT WITH THE ENEMY.
(a) Extension.--Section 841(n) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (10 U.S.C. 2302 note) is amended
by striking ``December 31, 2021'' and inserting ``December 31, 2023''.
(b) Expansion of Program.--Section 841(a) of such Act is amended--
(1) in the heading, by striking ``Identification of Persons
and Entities'' and inserting ``Program'';
(2) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by striking
``establish in'' and all that follows and inserting ``establish
a program to mitigate threats posed by vendors supporting
operations outside the United States. The program shall use
available intelligence to identify persons and entities that--
'';
(3) in paragraph (1), by striking ``; or'' and inserting a
semicolon;
(4) in paragraph (2), by striking the period and inserting
a semicolon; and
(5) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(3) directly or indirectly support a covered person or
entity or otherwise pose a force protection risk to personnel
of the United States or coalition forces; or
``(4) pose an unacceptable national security risk.''.
(c) Inclusion of All Contracts.--Sections 841 and 842 of such Act
are further amended by striking ``covered contract'' each place it
appears and inserting ``contract''.
(d) Inclusion of All Combatant Commands.--Sections 841 and 842 of
such Act are further amended by striking ``covered combatant command''
each place it appears and inserting ``combatant command''.
(e) Covered Person or Entity.--Section 843(6) of such Act is
amended to read as follows:
``(6) Covered person or entity.--The term `covered person
or entity' means a person that is--
``(A) engaging in acts of violence against
personnel of the United States or coalition forces;
``(B) providing financing, logistics, training, or
intelligence to a person described in subparagraph (A);
``(C) engaging in foreign intelligence activities
against the United States or against coalition forces;
``(D) engaging in transnational organized crime or
criminal activities; or
``(E) engaging in other activities that present a
direct or indirect risk to the national security of the
United States or coalition forces.''.
(f) Delegation Authority of Combatant Commander.--
(1) Use of designees.--Sections 841 and 842 of such Act are
further amended by striking ``specified deputies'' each place
it appears and inserting ``designee''.
(2) Removal of limitations on delegation.--Section 841 of
such Act is further amended by striking subsection (g).
(g) Authorities To Terminate, Void, and Restrict.--Section 841(c)
of such Act is further amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) by inserting ``to a person or entity'' after
``concerned''; and
(B) by striking ``the contract'' and all that
follows through the period at the end and inserting
``the person or entity has been identified under the
program established under subsection (a).'';
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``has failed'' and all
that follows and inserting ``has been identified under the
program established under subsection (a).''; and
(3) in paragraph (3), by striking ``the contract'' and all
that follows through the period at the end and inserting ``the
contractor, or the recipient of the grant or cooperative
agreement, has been identified under the program established
under subsection (a).''.
(h) Contract Clause.--Section 841(d)(2)(B) of such Act is amended
by inserting ``and restrict future award to any contractor, or
recipient of a grant or cooperative agreement, that has been identified
under the program established under subsection (a)'' after ``subsection
(c)''.
(i) Participation of Secretary of State.--Section 841 of such Act
is further amended--
(1) in subsection (a) in the matter preceding paragraph
(1), by striking ``in consultation with''; and
(2) in subsection (f)(1), by striking ``in consultation
with''.
(j) Sharing of Information on Supporters of the Enemy.--Section
841(h)(1) of such Act is further amended by striking ``may be
providing'' and all that follows through ``or entity'' and inserting
``have been identified under the program established under subsection
(a)''.
(k) Inapplicability to Certain Contracts, Grants, and Cooperative
Agreements.--Section 841(j) of such Act is amended by striking
``contracts, grants, and cooperative agreements'' and all that follows
through the period at the end and inserting ``a contract, grant, or
cooperative agreement that is performed entirely inside the United
States unless the recipient of such contract, grant, or cooperative
agreement is a foreign entity.''.
(l) Construction With Other Authorities.--Section 841 of such Act
is further amended--
(1) in subsection (l), by striking ``Except as provided in
subsection (m), the'' and inserting ``The''; and
(2) by striking subsection (m).
(m) Additional Access to Records.--Section 842 of such Act is
further amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``, except as
provided under subsection (c)(1),'';
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``ensure that
funds'' and all that follows through the period at the
end and inserting ``support the program established
under section 841(a).'';
(C) in paragraph (3), by striking ``that funds''
and all that follows through the period at the end and
inserting ``that the examination of such records will
support the program established under section
841(a).''; and
(D) by striking paragraph (4); and
(2) by striking subsection (c).
(n) Reports.--Subtitle E of title VIII of such Act (10 U.S.C. 2302
note) is further amended--
(1) in section 841(i)(1), in the matter preceding
subparagraph (A), by striking ``2016, 2017, and 2018'' and
inserting ``2016 through 2023''; and
(2) in section 842(b)(1), by striking ``2016, 2017, and
2018'' and inserting ``2016 through 2023''.
(o) Technical and Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Section heading.--The heading of section 841 of such
Act is amended by striking ``providing funds to'' and inserting
``supporting''.
(2) Redesignations.--Section 841 of such Act is further
amended by redesignating subsections (h) through (l) and (n)
(as amended by subsections (a) through (n) of this section) as
subsections (g) through (l), respectively.
(3) Definitions.--Section 843 of such Act is amended by
striking paragraphs (2) through (5) and redesignating
paragraphs (6) through (9) as paragraphs (2) through (5),
respectively.
Subtitle D--Small Business Matters
SEC. 841. REAUTHORIZATION AND IMPROVEMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
MENTOR-PROTEGE PROGRAM.
(a) Permanent Authorization.--Section 831 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991 (Public Law 101-510; 10 U.S.C.
2302 note) is amended by striking subsection (j).
(b) Office of Small Business Programs Oversight.--Section 831 of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991 (Public Law
101-510; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note) is amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (n) as subsection (o); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (m) the following new
subsection:
``(n) Establishment of Performance Goals and Periodic Reviews.--The
Office of Small Business Programs of the Department of Defense shall--
``(1) establish performance goals consistent with the
stated purpose of the Mentor-Protege Program and outcome-based
metrics to measure progress in meeting those goals; and
``(2) submit to the congressional defense committees, not
later than February 1, 2020, a report on progress made toward
implementing these performance goals and metrics, based on
periodic reviews of the procedures used to approve mentor-
protege agreements.''.
(c) Modification of Disadvantaged Small Business Concern
Definition.--Subsection (o)(2) of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 1991 (Public Law 101-510; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note), as
redesignated by subsection (b)(1) of this section, is amended by
striking ``has less than half the size standard corresponding to its
primary North American Industry Classification System code'' and
inserting ``is not more than the size standard corresponding to its
primary North American Industry Classification System code''.
(d) Removal of Pilot Program References.--Section 831 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991 (Public Law
101-510; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note) is amended--
(1) in the subsection heading for subsection (a), by
striking ``Pilot''; and
(2) by striking ``pilot'' each place it appears.
(e) Independent Report on Program Effectiveness.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense shall direct the
Defense Business Board to submit to the congressional defense
committees a report evaluating the effectiveness of the Mentor-
Protege Program established under section 831 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1991 (Public Law 101-
510; 10 U.S.C. 2302 note), including recommendations for
improving the program in terms of performance metrics, forms of
assistance, and overall program effectiveness not later than
March 31, 2022.
(2) Congressional defense committees defined.--In this
subsection, the term ``congressional defense committees'' has
the meaning given that term in section 101(a)(16) of title 10,
United States Code.
SEC. 842. MODIFICATION OF JUSTIFICATION AND APPROVAL REQUIREMENT FOR
CERTAIN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CONTRACTS.
(a) Modification of Justification and Approval Requirement.--
Notwithstanding section 811 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2405)--
(1) no justification and approval is required under such
section for a sole-source contract awarded by the Department of
Defense in a covered procurement for an amount not exceeding
$100,000,000; and
(2) for purposes of subsections (a)(2) and (c)(3)(A) of
such section, the appropriate official designated to approve
the justification for a sole-source contract awarded by the
Department of Defense in a covered procurement exceeding
$100,000,000 is the official designated in section
2304(f)(1)(B)(ii) of title 10, United States Code.
(b) Guidance.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue guidance to
implement the authority under subsection (a).
(c) Comptroller General Review.--
(1) Data tracking and collection.--The Department of
Defense shall track the use of the authority provided pursuant
to subsection (a) and make the data available to the
Comptroller General for purposes of the report required under
paragraph (2).
(2) Report.--Not later than February 1, 2022, the
Comptroller General of the United States shall submit a report
to the congressional defense committees on the use of the
authority provided pursuant to subsection (a) through the end
of fiscal year 2021.
Subtitle E--Provisions Related to Software-Driven Capabilities
SEC. 851. IMPROVED MANAGEMENT OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND CYBERSPACE
INVESTMENTS.
(a) Improved Management.--
(1) In general.--The Chief Information Officer of the
Department of Defense shall work with the Chief Data Officer of
the Department of Defense to optimize the Department's process
for accounting for, managing, and reporting its information
technology and cyberspace investments. The optimization should
include alternative methods of presenting budget justification
materials to the public and congressional staff to more
accurately communicate when, how, and with what frequency
capability is delivered to end users, in accordance with best
practices for managing and reporting on information technology
investments.
(2) Briefing.--Not later than February 3, 2020, the Chief
Information Officer of the Department of Defense shall brief
the congressional defense committees on the process
optimization undertaken pursuant to paragraph (1), including
any recommendations for legislation.
(b) Delivery of Information Technology Budget.--The Secretary of
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees the
Department of Defense budget request for information technology not
later than 15 days after the submittal to Congress of the budget of the
President for a fiscal year pursuant to section 1105 of title 31,
United States Code.
SEC. 852. SPECIAL PATHWAYS FOR RAPID ACQUISITION OF SOFTWARE
APPLICATIONS AND UPGRADES.
(a) Guidance Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall establish
guidance authorizing the use of special pathways for the rapid
acquisition of software applications and upgrades that are intended to
be fielded within one year.
(b) Software Acquisition Pathways.--
(1) Use of proven technologies and solutions.--The guidance
required by subsection (a) shall provide for the use of proven
technologies and solutions to continuously engineer and deliver
capabilities in software.
(2) Objectives.--The objectives of using the acquisition
authority under this section shall be to begin the engineering
of new capabilities quickly, to demonstrate viability and
effectiveness of those capabilities in operation, and to
continue updating and delivering new capabilities iteratively
afterwards.
(3) Treatment not as acquisition program.--An acquisition
using the authority under this section shall not be treated as
an acquisition program for the purpose of section 2430 of title
10, United States Code, or Department of Defense Directive
5000.01 without the specific direction of the Under Secretary
of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment or a Senior
Acquisition Executive.
(4) Pathways.--The guidance shall provide for the following
two rapid acquisition pathways:
(A) Applications.--The applications software
acquisition pathway shall provide for the use of rapid
development and implementation of applications and
other software and software improvements running on
commercial commodity hardware (including modified
hardware) operated by the Department of Defense.
(B) Embedded systems.--The embedded systems
software acquisition pathway shall provide for the
rapid development and insertion of upgrades and
improvements for software embedded in weapon systems
and other military-unique hardware systems.
(c) Expedited Process.--
(1) In general.--The guidance required by subsection (a)
shall provide for a streamlined and coordinated requirements,
budget, and acquisition process that results in the rapid
fielding of software applications and software upgrades to
embedded systems in a period of not more than one year from the
time that the process is initiated. It shall also require the
collection of data on the version fielded and continuous
engagement with the users of that software, so as to enable
engineering and delivery of additional versions in periods of
not more than one year each.
(2) Expedited software requirements process.--
(A) Inapplicability of existing guidance.--Software
acquisitions conducted under the authority of this
provision shall not be subject to the Joint
Capabilities Integration and Development System (JCIDS)
Manual and Department of Defense Directive 5000.01,
except to the extent specifically provided in the
guidance required under subsection (a) or by the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment or
a Senior Acquisition Executive.
(B) Requirements.--The guidance required by
subsection (a) shall provide the following with respect
to requirements:
(i) Requirements for covered acquisitions
are developed on an iterative basis through
engagement with the user community, and the use
of user feedback in order to regularly define
and set priorities for software requirements
and evaluate the software capabilities
acquired.
(ii) The requirements process begins with
the identification of the warfighter or user
need, including the rationale for how these
software capabilities will support increased
lethality and efficiency, and the
identification of a relevant user community.
(iii) Initial contract requirements are
stated in the form of a summary-level list of
problems and shortcomings in existing software
systems and desired features or capabilities of
new or upgraded software systems.
(iv) Contract requirements are continuously
refined and set in priority order in an
evolutionary process through discussions with
users that may continue throughout the
development and implementation period.
(v) Issues related to lifecycle costs and
systems interoperability are continuously
considered.
(vi) Issues of logistics support in cases
where the software developer may stop
supporting the software system are addressed.
(vii) Rapid contracting procedures, to
include timeframes for award, contract types,
teaming, and options.
(viii) Execution processes, including
supporting development and test infrastructure,
automation and tools, data collection and
sharing, the role of developmental and
operational testing activities, and key
decisionmaking and oversight events, and
supporting processes and activities such as
independent costing activity, operational
demonstration, and performance metrics.
(ix) Administrative procedures, including
procedures related to the roles and
responsibilities of the implementing project or
product teams and supporting activities, team
selection and staffing process, oversight roles
and responsibilities, and appropriate
independent technology assessments, testing,
and cost estimation, including relevant
thresholds or designation criteria.
(x) Mechanisms and waivers designed to
ensure flexibility in the implementation of the
authority, including the use of other
transaction authority, broad agency
announcements, and other procedures.
Subtitle F--Other Matters
SEC. 861. NOTIFICATION OF NAVY PROCUREMENT PRODUCTION DISRUPTIONS.
(a) In General.--Chapter 137 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2339b. Notification of Navy procurement production disruptions
``(a) Requirement for Contractor To Provide Notice of Delays.--The
Secretary of the Navy shall require prime contractors of any Navy
procurement program to report within 15 calendar days any stop work
order or other manufacturing disruption of 15 calendar days or more, by
the prime contractor or any sub-contractor, to the respective program
manager and Navy technical authority.
``(b) Quarterly Reports.--The Secretary of the Navy shall submit to
the congressional defense committees not later than 15 calendar days
after the end of each quarter of a fiscal year a report listing all
notifications made pursuant to subsection (a) during the preceding
quarter.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 137 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting
after the item relating to section 2339a the following new item:
``2339b. Notification of Navy procurement production disruptions.''.
SEC. 862. MODIFICATION TO ACQUISITION AUTHORITY OF THE COMMANDER OF THE
UNITED STATES CYBER COMMAND.
Section 807 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 10 U.S.C. 2224 note) is amended by
inserting ``on new contract efforts'' after ``may not obligate or
expend more than $75,000,000''.
SEC. 863. PROHIBITION ON OPERATION OR PROCUREMENT OF FOREIGN-MADE
UNMANNED AIRCRAFT SYSTEMS.
(a) Prohibition on Agency Operation or Procurement.--The Secretary
of Defense may not operate or enter into or renew a contract for the
procurement of--
(1) a covered unmanned aircraft system that--
(A) is manufactured in a covered foreign country or
by an entity domiciled in a covered foreign country;
(B) uses flight controllers, radios, data
transmission devices, cameras, or gimbals manufactured
in a covered foreign country or by an entity domiciled
in a covered foreign country;
(C) uses a ground control system or operating
software developed in a covered foreign country or by
an entity domiciled in a covered foreign country; or
(D) uses network connectivity or data storage
located in or administered by an entity domiciled in a
covered foreign country; or
(2) a system manufactured in a covered foreign country or
by an entity domiciled in a covered foreign country for the
detection or identification of covered unmanned aircraft
systems.
(b) Exemption.--The Secretary of Defense is exempt from the
restriction under subsection (a) if the operation or procurement is for
the purposes of--
(1) Counter-UAS surrogate testing and training; or
(2) intelligence, electronic warfare, and information
warfare operations, testing, analysis, and training.
(c) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the restriction
under subsection (a) on a case by case basis by certifying in writing
to the congressional defense committees that the operation or
procurement is required in the national interest of the United States.
(d) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Covered foreign country.--The term ``covered foreign
country'' means the People's Republic of China.
(2) Covered unmanned aircraft system.--The term ``covered
unmanned aircraft system'' means an unmanned aircraft system
and any related services and equipment.
SEC. 864. PROHIBITION ON CONTRACTING WITH PERSONS THAT HAVE BUSINESS
OPERATIONS WITH THE MADURO REGIME.
(a) Prohibition.--Except as provided under subsections (c), (d),
and (e), the Department of Defense may not enter into a contract for
the procurement of goods or services with any person that has business
operations with an authority of the Government of Venezuela that is not
recognized as the legitimate Government of Venezuela by the United
States Government.
(b) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Business operations.--The term ``business operations''
means engaging in commerce in any form, including acquiring,
developing, maintaining, owning, selling, possessing, leasing,
or operating equipment, facilities, personnel, products,
services, personal property, real property, or any other
apparatus of business or commerce.
(2) Government of venezuela.--(A) The term ``Government of
Venezuela'' includes the government of any political
subdivision of Venezuela, and any agency or instrumentality of
the Government of Venezuela.
(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A), the term ``agency or
instrumentality of the Government of Venezuela'' means an
agency or instrumentality of a foreign state as defined in
section 1603(b) of title 28, United States Code, with each
reference in such section to ``a foreign state'' deemed to be a
reference to ``Venezuela''.
(3) Person.--The term ``person'' means--
(A) a natural person, corporation, company,
business association, partnership, society, trust, or
any other nongovernmental entity, organization, or
group;
(B) any governmental entity or instrumentality of a
government, including a multilateral development
institution (as defined in section 1701(c)(3) of the
International Financial Institutions Act (22 U.S.C.
262r(c)(3))); and
(C) any successor, subunit, parent entity, or
subsidiary of, or any entity under common ownership or
control with, any entity described in subparagraph (A)
or (B).
(c) Exceptions.--
(1) In general.--The prohibition under subsection (a) does
not apply to a contract that the Secretary of Defense
determines--
(A) is necessary--
(i) for purposes of providing humanitarian
assistance to the people of Venezuela;
(ii) for purposes of providing disaster
relief and other urgent life-saving measures;
(iii) to carry out noncombatant
evacuations; or
(iv) to carry out stabilization activities;
or
(B) is vital to the national security interests of
the United States.
(2) Notification requirement.--The Secretary of Defense
shall notify the congressional defense committees of any
contract entered into on the basis of an exception provided for
under paragraph (1).
(d) Office of Foreign Assets Control Licenses.--The prohibition in
subsection (a) shall not apply to a person that has a valid license to
operate in Venezuela issued by the Office of Foreign Assets Control.
(e) American Diplomatic Mission in Venezuela.--The prohibition in
subsection (a) shall not apply to contracts related to the operation
and maintenance of the United States Government's consular offices and
diplomatic posts in Venezuela.
(f) Applicability.--This section shall apply with respect to any
contract entered into on or after the date of the enactment of this
section.
SEC. 865. COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES REPORT ON DEPARTMENT
OF DEFENSE EFFORTS TO COMBAT HUMAN TRAFFICKING THROUGH
PROCUREMENT PRACTICES.
(a) In General.--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 appropriate congressional committees a report on
Department of Defense efforts to combat human trafficking.
(b) Elements.--The report required under subsection (a) shall
evaluate--
(1) the efforts of the Department of Defense to combat
human trafficking in its contracting and supply chain policy,
regulation, and practices, to include implementation of title
XVII of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2013 (Public Law 112-239; 126 Stat. 2092) and Executive Order
13627 (77 Fed. Reg. 60029), as well as the nature and extent of
training for Department of Defense contract officers on how to
evaluate compliance plans, monitor contractor adherence to the
plans, and respond to reports of noncompliance;
(2) the role of the current trafficking in person's office
within the Department of Defense in helping the Department
address all forms of human trafficking, and what, if any,
improvements should be made to the office;
(3) the process used by contract officers to evaluate
compliance plans with regards to preventing human trafficking;
and
(4) how many instances of human trafficking have been
reported to the Inspector General of the Department of Defense
and the outcome of those cases.
(c) Appropriate Congressional Committees Defined.--In this section
, the term ``appropriate congressional committees'' means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
the Judiciary of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services and the Committee on
the Judiciary of the House of Representatives.
TITLE IX--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT
Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of Defense and Related Matters
SEC. 901. HEADQUARTERS ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE MATTERS.
(a) Assessment and Reform of Enterprise Business Operations.--
Subsection (b) of section 921 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232; 10 U.S.C.
2222 note) is amended to read as follows:
``(b) Assessment and Reform of Enterprise Business Operations.--
``(1) Periodic assessments and actions.--Not later than
January 1, 2020, and not less frequently than once every five
years thereafter, the Secretary of Defense shall, acting
through the Chief Management Officer of the Department of
Defense--
``(A) assess enterprise business operations of the
Department of Defense across all organizations and
elements of the Department; and
``(B) take or direct the taking of such actions as
will minimize the duplication of efforts and maximize
efficiency and effectiveness in mission execution.
``(2) CMO reports.--Not later than January 1 of every fifth
calendar year beginning with January 1, 2025, the Chief
Management Officer shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report that describes the assessments carried out
and the actions taken by the Chief Management Officer, and by
other officers or employees of the Department at the direction
of the Chief Management Office, under this subsection during
the preceding five years, including the following:
``(A) A description of the metrics for performance
relating to minimization of duplication of efforts and
maximization of efficiency and effectiveness in mission
execution established for applicable organizations and
elements of the Department.
``(B) A certification of any costs avoided or cost
savings achieved as a result of such assessments and
actions.''.
(b) Report on Military and Civilian Personnel for the NGB and
National Guard Joint Staff.--Not later than January 1, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report setting forth the following:
(1) The total number of members of the Armed Forces and
civilian employees of the Department of Defense assigned to the
Office of the Chief of the National Guard Bureau and the
National Guard Joint Staff.
(2) A recommendation for the total number of members and
employees required for the Office of the Chief of the National
Guard Bureau and the National Guard Joint Staff to execute the
missions and functions of the National Guard Bureau and the
National Guard Joint Staff.
(c) Repeal of Superseded Limitations.--The following provisions are
repealed:
(1) Section 601 of the Goldwater-Nichols Department of
Defense Reorganization Act of 1986 (10 U.S.C. 194 note).
(2) Section 1111 of the Duncan Hunter National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2009 (10 U.S.C. 143 note).
(d) Modification of Limitations on Number of Personnel in OSD and
Other DoD Headquarters.--
(1) OSD.--Section 143 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(A) in subsection (a), by striking ``3,767'' and
inserting ``4,000''; and
(B) in subsection (b), by striking ``, civilian,
and detailed personnel'' and inserting ``and civilian
personnel''.
(2) Joint staff.--
(A) In general.--Section 155(h) of such title is
amended--
(i) in paragraph (1), by striking ``2,069''
and inserting ``2,250''; and
(ii) in paragraph (2), by striking
``1,500'' and inserting ``1,600''.
(B) Effective date.--The amendments made by
subparagraph (A) shall take effect on December 31,
2019, immediately after the coming into effect of the
amendment made by section 903(b) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public
Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2344), to which such amendments
relate
(3) Office of secretary of the army.--Section 7014(f) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``3,105'' and
inserting ``3,250''; and
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``1,865'' and
inserting ``1,900''.
(4) Office of secretary of the navy.--Section 8014(f) of
such title is amended--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``2,866'' and
inserting ``3,000''; and
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``1,720'' and
inserting ``1,800''.
(5) Office of secretary of the air force.--Section 9014(f)
of such title is amended--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``2,639'' and
inserting ``2,750''; and
(B) in paragraph (2), by striking ``1,585'' and
inserting ``1,650''.
(e) Sunset of Reduction in Funding for DoD Headquarters,
Administrative, and Support Activities.--Section 346 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (10 U.S.C. 111 note) is
amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(c) Sunset.--No action is required under this section with
respect to any fiscal year after fiscal year 2019.''.
SEC. 902. RESPONSIBILITY OF UNDER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR ACQUISITION
AND SUSTAINMENT FOR PROCUREMENT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Section 2411(3) of title 10, United States Code,
is amended by striking ``Secretary of Defense acting through the
Director of the Defense Logistics Agency'' and inserting ``Secretary of
Defense acting through the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition
and Sustainment''.
(b) Authority to Pay Administrative and Other Costs.--Section 2417
of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking ``Director of
the Defense Logistics Agency'' and inserting ``Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment''.
SEC. 903. RETURN TO CHIEF INFORMATION OFFICER OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR BUSINESS SYSTEMS AND
RELATED MATTERS.
(a) Return of Responsibility.--
(1) In general.--Section 142(b)(1) of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by striking ``systems and'' each place
it appears in subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C).
(2) Conforming amendments to cmo authorities.--Section
132a(b) of such title is amended--
(A) in paragraph (2), by striking ``performance
measurement and management, and business information
technology management and improvement activities and
programs'' and inserting ``and performance measurement
and management activities and programs'';
(B) by striking paragraphs (4) and (5); and
(C) by redesignating paragraphs (6) and (7) as
paragraphs (4) and (5), respectively.
(b) Chief Data Officer Responsibility for DoD Data Sets.--
(1) In general.--In addition to any other functions and
responsibilities specified in section 3520(c) of title 44,
United States, Code, the Chief Data Officer of the Department
of Defense shall also be the official in the Department of
Defense with principal responsibility for providing for the
availability of common, usable, Defense-wide data sets.
(2) Access to all dod data.--In order to carry out the
responsibility specified in paragraph (1), the Chief Data
Officer shall have access to all Department of Defense data,
including data in connection with warfighting missions and
back-office data.
(3) Responsible to cio.--The Chief Data Officer shall
report directly to the Chief Information Officer of the
Department of Defense in the performance of the responsibility
specified in paragraph (1).
(4) Report.--Not later than December 1, 2019, the Secretary
of Defense shall submit to the Committees on Armed Services of
the Senate and the House of Representatives a report setting
forth such recommendations for legislative or administrative
action as the Secretary considers appropriate to carry out this
subsection.
SEC. 904. SENIOR MILITARY ADVISOR FOR CYBER POLICY AND DEPUTY PRINCIPAL
CYBER ADVISOR.
(a) Advisor.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Policy
shall, acting through the Joint Staff, designate an officer
within the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy
to serve within that Office as the Senior Military Advisor for
Cyber Policy, and concurrently, as the Deputy Principal Cyber
Advisor.
(2) Officers eligible for designation.--The officer
designated pursuant to this subsection shall be designated from
among commissioned regular officers of the Armed Forces in a
general or flag officer grade who are qualified for designation
(3) Grade.--The officer designated pursuant to this
subsection shall have the grade of major general or rear
admiral while serving in that position, without vacating the
officer's permanent grade.
(b) Scope of Positions.--
(1) In general.--The officer designated pursuant to
subsection (a) is each of the following:
(A) The Senior Military Advisor for Cyber Policy to
the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.
(B) The Deputy Principal Cyber Advisor to the Under
Secretary of Defense for Policy.
(2) Direction and control and reporting.--In carrying out
duties under this section, the officer designed pursuant to
subsection (a) shall be subject to the authority, direction,
and control of, and shall report directly to, the following:
(A) The Under Secretary with respect to Senior
Military Advisor for Cyber Policy duties.
(B) The Principal Cyber Advisor with respect to
Deputy Principal Cyber Advisor duties.
(c) Duties.--
(1) Duties as senior military advisor for cyber policy.--
The duties of the officer designated pursuant to subsection (a)
as Senior Military Advisor for Cyber Policy are as follows:
(A) To serve as the principal uniformed military
advisor on military cyber forces and activities to the
Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.
(B) To assess and advise the Under Secretary on
aspects of policy relating to military cyberspace
operations, resources, personnel, cyber force
readiness, cyber workforce development, and defense of
Department of Defense networks.
(C) To advocate, in consultation with the Joint
Staff, and senior officers of the Armed Forces and the
combatant commands, for consideration of military
issues within the Office of the Under Secretary of
Defense for Policy, including coordination and
synchronization of Department cyber forces and
activities.
(D) To maintain open lines of communication between
the Chief Information Officer of the Department of
Defense, senior civilian leaders within the Office of
the Under Secretary, and senior officers on the Joint
Staff, the Armed Forces, and the combatant commands on
cyber matters, and to ensure that military leaders are
informed on cyber policy decisions.
(2) Duties as deputy principal cyber advisor.--The duties
of the officer designated pursuant to subsection (a) as Deputy
Principal Cyber Advisor are as follows:
(A) To synchronize, coordinate, and oversee
implementation of the Cyber Strategy of the Department
of Defense and other relevant policy and planning.
(B) To advise the Secretary of Defense on cyber
programs, projects, and activities of the Department,
including with respect to policy, training, resources,
personnel, manpower, and acquisitions and technology.
(C) To oversee implementation of Department policy
and operational directives on cyber programs, projects,
and activities, including with respect to resources,
personnel, manpower, and acquisitions and technology.
(D) To assist in the overall supervision of
Department cyber activities relating to offensive
missions.
(E) To assist in the overall supervision of
Department defensive cyber operations, including
activities of component-level cybersecurity service
providers and the integration of such activities with
activities of the Cyber Mission Force.
(F) To advise senior leadership of the Department
on, and advocate for, investment in capabilities to
execute Department missions in and through cyberspace.
(G) To identify shortfalls in capabilities to
conduct Department missions in and through cyberspace,
and make recommendations on addressing such shortfalls
in the Program Budget Review process.
(H) To coordinate and consult with stakeholders in
the cyberspace domain across the Department in order to
identify other issues on cyberspace for the attention
of senior leadership of the Department.
(I) On behalf of the Principal Cyber Advisor, to
lead the cross-functional team established pursuant to
932(c)(3) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2014 (10 U.S.C. 2224 note) in order to
synchronize and coordinate military and civilian cyber
forces and activities of the Department.
SEC. 905. LIMITATION ON TRANSFER OF STRATEGIC CAPABILITIES OFFICE.
(a) Limitation.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Research and
Engineering may not transfer the Strategic Capabilities Office or
change the reporting structure of the Office, as in effect on the day
before the date of the enactment of this Act, until the Secretary of
Defense, acting through the Chief Management Officer and the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering and in consultation
with the United States Indo-Pacific, Europe, and Special Operations
Command, submits the report required by subsection (b)(1).
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report that evaluates the
following options for transferring the Office:
(A) Transferring the Office so that the Director of
the Office reports directly to the Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment.
(B) Maintaining the arrangement in effect on the
day before the date of the enactment of this Act such
that the Director continues to report to the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering.
(C) Transferring the Office to the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency.
(D) Such other options as the Under Secretary may
identify.
(2) Contents.--The report submitted under paragraph (1)
shall include, for each option evaluated under such paragraph,
an evaluation of whether the option considered will provide
for--
(A) responding to the critical needs of combatant
commanders;
(B) augmentation of cross-Department of Defense
efforts with respect to developing strategic
capabilities;
(C) developing new and innovative ways to counter
advanced threats;
(D) providing sound technical and program
management for activities of the Strategic Capabilities
Office;
(E) coordinating appropriately with other research
and technology development activities of the
Department; and
(F) partnering with and responding to senior
leadership across the Department.
Subtitle B--Organization and Management of Other Department of Defense
Offices and Elements
SEC. 911. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE MILITARY DEPARTMENTS FOR ENERGY,
INSTALLATIONS, AND ENVIRONMENT.
(a) Assistant Secretary of the Army.--Section 7016(b) of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(6) One of the Assistant Secretaries shall be the Assistant
Secretary of the Army for Energy, Installations, and Environment.''.
(b) Assistant Secretary of the Navy.--Section 8016(b) of such title
is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(5) One of the Assistant Secretaries shall be the Assistant
Secretary of the Navy for Energy, Installations, and Environment.''.
(c) Assistant Secretary of the Air Force.--Section 9016(b) of such
title is amended by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(5) One of the Assistant Secretaries shall be the Assistant
Secretary of the Air Force for Energy, Installations, and
Environment.''.
SEC. 912. REPEAL OF CONDITIONAL DESIGNATION OF EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE
DISPOSAL CORPS AS A BASIC BRANCH OF THE ARMY.
Section 582 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1415) is repealed, and the
amendment otherwise provided for by subsection (a) of that section
shall not be made.
Subtitle C--Other Matters
SEC. 921. EXCLUSION FROM LIMITATIONS ON PERSONNEL IN THE OFFICE OF THE
SECRETARY OF DEFENSE AND DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
HEADQUARTERS OF FELLOWS APPOINTED UNDER THE JOHN S.
MCCAIN DEFENSE FELLOWS PROGRAM.
Section 932(f)(3) of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232; 132 Stat.
1935; 10 U.S.C. prec. 1580 note) is amended by adding at the end the
following new sentence: ``An individual appointed pursuant to this
paragraph shall not count against the limitation on the number of
Office of the Secretary of Defense personnel in section 143 of title
10, United States Code, or any similar limitation in law on the number
of personnel in headquarters of the Department that would otherwise
apply to the office or headquarters to which appointed.''.
SEC. 922. REPORT ON RESOURCES TO IMPLEMENT THE CIVILIAN CASUALTY POLICY
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
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, in unclassified form, on the resources necessary
over the period of the future-years defense plan for fiscal year 2020
under section 221 of title United States Code, to fulfill the
requirements of section 936 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232l 132 Stat.
1939; 10 U.S.C. 134 note) and fully implement policies developed as a
result of such section.
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 2020 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
$4,000,000,000.
(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. MODIFICATION OF REQUIRED ELEMENTS OF ANNUAL REPORTS ON
EMERGENCY AND EXTRAORDINARY EXPENSES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE.
Paragraph (2) of section 127(d) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended to read as follows:
``(2) Each report submitted under paragraph (1) shall include, for
each individual expenditure covered by such report in an amount in
excess of $20,000, the following:
``(A) A detailed description of the purpose of such
expenditure.
``(B) The amount of such expenditure.
``(C) An identification of the approving authority for such
expenditure.
``(D) A justification why other authorities available to
the Department could not be used for such expenditure.
``(E) Any other matters the Secretary considers
appropriate.''.
SEC. 1003. INCLUSION OF MILITARY CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS IN ANNUAL
REPORTS ON UNFUNDED PRIORITIES OF THE ARMED FORCES AND
THE COMBATANT COMMANDS.
(a) Inclusion of Military Construction Projects Among Unfunded
Priorities.--Subsection (d) of section 222a of title 10, United States
Code, is amended in the matter preceding paragraph (1) by inserting ``,
including a military construction project,'' after ``program, activity,
or mission requirement''.
(b) Order of Urgency of Priority.--Paragraph (2) of subsection (c)
of such section is amended to read as follows:
``(2) Prioritization of priorities.--Each report shall
present the unfunded priorities covered by such report as
follows:
``(A) In overall order of urgency of priority.
``(B) In overall order of urgency of priority among
unfunded priorities (other than military construction
projects).
``(C) In overall order of urgency of priority among
military construction projects.''.
SEC. 1004. PROHIBITION ON DELEGATION OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR SUBMITTAL TO
CONGRESS OF OUT-YEAR UNCONSTRAINED TOTAL MUNITIONS
REQUIREMENTS AND OUT-YEAR INVENTORY NUMBERS.
Section 222c of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``subsection (b)'' and
inserting ``subsection (c)'';
(2) by redesignating subsections (b), (c), and (d) as
subsections (c), (d), and (e), respectively;
(3) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new
subsection (b):
``(b) Prohibition on Delegation of Submittal Responsibility.--The
responsibility of the chief of staff of an armed force in subsection
(a) to submit a report may not be delegated outside the armed force
concerned.''; and
(4) in subsection (c), as redesignated by paragraph (2), by
striking ``subsection (c)'' in paragraph (6) and inserting
``subsection (d)''.
SEC. 1005. ELEMENT IN ANNUAL REPORTS ON THE FINANCIAL IMPROVEMENT AND
AUDIT REMEDIATION PLAN ON ACTIVITIES WITH RESPECT TO
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.
Section 240b(b)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (B), by adding at the end the following
new clause:
``(ix) A description of audit activities
and results for classified programs, including
a description of the use of procedures and
requirements to prevent unauthorized exposure
of classified information in such
activities.''; and
(2) in subparagraph (C)(i), by inserting ``or (ix)'' after
``clause (vii)''.
SEC. 1006. MODIFICATION OF SEMIANNUAL BRIEFINGS ON THE CONSOLIDATED
CORRECTIVE ACTION PLAN OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FOR
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT INFORMATION.
(a) In General.--Paragraph (2) of section 240b(b) of title 10,
United States Code, is amended to read as following:
``(2) Semiannual briefings.--
``(A) In general.--Not later than February 28 and
September 30 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
consolidated corrective action plan referred to in
paragraph (1)(B)(i) as of the end of the most recent
calendar half-year ending before such briefing.
``(B) Elements.--Each briefing under subparagraph
(A) shall include the following:
``(i) The absolute number, and the
percentage, of personnel performing the amount
of auditing or audit remediation services being
performed by professionals meeting the
qualifications described in section 240d(b) of
this title as of the last day of the calendar
half-year covered by such briefing.
``(ii) With respect to each finding and
recommendation issued in connection with the
audit of the financial statements of a
department, agency, component, or other element
of the Department of Defense, or the Department
of Defense as a whole, that was received by the
Department during the calendar half-year
covered by such briefing, each of the
following:
``(I) A description of the manner
in which the corrective action plan of
such department, agency, component, or
element and the corrective action plan
of the Department as a whole, or the
corrective action plan of the
Department as a whole (in the case of a
finding or recommendation regarding the
Department as a whole), has been
modified in order to incorporate such
finding or recommendation into such
plans or plan.
``(II) An identification of the
processes, systems, procedures, and
technologies required to implement such
corrective action plans or plan, as so
modified.
``(III) A determination of the
funds required to procure, obtain, or
otherwise implement each process,
system, and technology identified
pursuant to subclause (II).
``(IV) An identification the manner
in which such corrective action plans
or plan, as so modified, support the
National Defense Strategy (NDS) of the
United States.''.
(b) Technical Amendment.--Paragraph (1)(B)(i) of such section is
amended by striking ``section 253a'' and inserting ``section 240c''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall
take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and shall apply
with respect to calender half-years that end on or after that date.
SEC. 1007. UPDATE OF AUTHORITIES AND RENAMING OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
ACQUISITION WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT FUND.
(a) Renaming as Account.--
(1) In general.--Section 1705 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(A) in subsection (a), by striking ``the
`Department of Defense Acquisition Workforce
Development Fund' (in this section referred to as the
`Fund')'' and inserting ``the `Department of Defense
Acquisition Workforce Development Account' (in this
section referred to as the `Account')''; and
(B) by striking ``Fund'' each place it appears
(other than subsection (e)(6)) and inserting
``Account''.
(2) Conforming and clerical amendments.--
(A) Section heading.--The heading of such section
is amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 1705. Department of Defense Acquisition Workforce Development
Account''.
(B) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at
the beginning of subchapter I of chapter 87 of such
title is amended by striking the item relating to
section 1705 and inserting the following new item:
``1705. Department of Defense Acquisition Workforce Development
Account.''.
(b) Management.--Such section is further amended by striking
``Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and
Logistics'' each place it appears and inserting ``Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment''.
(c) Appropriations as Sole Elements of Account.--Subsection (d) of
such section is amended to read as follows:
``(d) Elements.--The Account shall consist of amounts appropriated
to the Account by law.''.
(d) Availability of Amounts in Account.--Subsection (e)(6) of such
section is amended by striking ``credited to the Fund'' and all that
follows and inserting ``appropriated to the Account pursuant to
subsection (d) shall remain available for expenditure for the fiscal
year in which appropriated and the succeeding fiscal year.''.
(e) Effective Date.--
(1) In general.--The amendments made by this section shall
take effect on October 1, 2019, and shall apply with respect to
fiscal years that begin on or after that date.
(2) Duration of availability of previously deposited
funds.--Nothing in the amendments made by this section shall
modify the duration of availability of amounts in the
Department of Defense Acquisition Workforce Development Fund
that were appropriated or credited to, or deposited, in the
Fund, before October 1, 2019, as provided for in section
1705(e)(6) of title 10, United States Code, as in effect on the
day before such date.
Subtitle B--Counterdrug Activities
SEC. 1011. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO SUPPORT A UNIFIED COUNTERDRUG
AND COUNTERTERRORISM CAMPAIGN IN COLOMBIA.
Section 1021(a)(1) of the Ronald W. Reagan National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2005 (Public Law 108-375; 118 Stat.
2042), as most recently amended by section 1011(1) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131
Stat. 1545), is further amended by striking ``organizations designated
as'' and all that follows and inserting ``terrorist organizations or
other illegally armed groups that the Secretary of Defense, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of State, determines pose a threat to the
national security interests of the United States.''.
SEC. 1012. TWO-YEAR EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR JOINT TASK FORCES TO
PROVIDE SUPPORT TO LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES CONDUCTING
COUNTER-TERRORISM ACTIVITIES.
Section 1022(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2004 (10 U.S.C. 271 note) is amended by striking ``2020''
and inserting ``2022''.
Subtitle C--Naval Vessels and Shipyards
SEC. 1016. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO PURCHASE VESSELS USING FUNDS IN
NATIONAL DEFENSE SEALIFT FUND.
(a) In General.--Section 2218(f)(3)(E) of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) in clause (i), by striking ``ten new sealift vessels''
and inserting ``ten new vessels that are sealift vessels,
auxiliary vessels, or a combination of such vessels''; and
(2) in clause (ii), by striking ``sealift''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendments made by subsection (a) shall
take effect on October 1, 2019, and shall apply with respect to fiscal
years beginning on or after that date.
SEC. 1017. SENIOR TECHNICAL AUTHORITY FOR EACH NAVAL VESSEL CLASS.
(a) Senior Technical Authority for Each Class Required.--Chapter
863 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting after
section 8669a the following new section:
``Sec. 8669b. Senior Technical Authority for each naval vessel class
``(a) Senior Technical Authority.--
``(1) Designation for each vessel class required.--The
Secretary of the Navy shall designate, in writing, a Senior
Technical Authority for each class of naval vessels as follows:
``(A) In the case of a class of vessels which has
received Milestone A approval, an approval to enter
into technology maturation and risk reduction, or an
approval to enter into a subsequent Department of
Defense or Department of the Navy acquisition phase as
of the date of the enactment of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020, not later than
30 days after such date of enactment.
``(B) In the case of any class of vessels which has
not received any approval described in subparagraph (A)
as of such date of enactment, at or before the first of
such approvals.
``(2) Prohibition on delegation.--The Secretary may not
delegate designations under paragraph (1).
``(3) Individuals eligible for designation.--Each
individual designated as a Senior Technical Authority under
paragraph (1) shall be an employee of the Navy in the Senior
Executive Service in an organization of the Navy that--
``(A) possesses the technical expertise required to
carry out the responsibilities specified in subsection
(b); and
``(B) operates independently of chains-of-command
for acquisition program management.
``(4) Term.--Each Senior Technical Authority shall be
designated for a term, not fewer than six years, specified by
the Secretary at the time of designation.
``(5) Removal.--An individual may be removed involuntarily
from designation as a Senior Technical Authority only by the
Secretary. Not later than 15 days after the involuntary removal
of an individual from designation as a Senior Technical
Authority, the Secretary shall notify, in writing, the
congressional defense committees of the removal, including the
reasons for the removal.
``(b) Responsibilities and Authority.--Each Senior Technical
Authority shall be responsible for, and have the authority to,
establish, monitor, and approve technical standards, tools, and
processes for the class of naval vessels for which designated under
this section in conformance with applicable Department of Defense and
Department of the Navy policies, requirements, architectures, and
standards.
``(c) Limitation on Obligation of Funds on Lead Vessel in Vessel
Class.--
``(1) In general.--On or after October 1, 2020, funds
authorized to be appropriated for Shipbuilding and Conversion,
Navy or Other Procurement, Navy may not be obligated for the
first time on the lead vessel in a class of naval vessels
unless the Secretary of the Navy certifies as described in
paragraph (2).
``(2) Certification elements.--The certification on a class
of naval vessels described in this paragraph is a certification
containing each of the following:
``(A) The name of the individual designated as the
Senior Technical Authority for such class of vessels,
and the qualifications and professional biography of
the individual so designated.
``(B) A description by the Senior Technical
Authority of the systems engineering, technology, and
ship integration risks for such class of vessels.
``(C) The designation by the Senior Technical
Authority of each critical hull, mechanical,
electrical, propulsion, and combat system of such class
of vessels, including systems relating to power
generation, power distribution, and key operational
mission areas.
``(D) The date on which the Senior Technical
Authority approved the systems engineering, engineering
development, and land-based engineering and testing
plans for such class of vessels.
``(E) A description by the Senior Technical
Authority of the key technical knowledge objectives and
demonstrated system performance of each plan approved
as described in subparagraph (D).
``(F) A determination by the Senior Technical
Authority that such plans are sufficient to achieve
thorough technical knowledge of critical systems of
such class of vessels before the start of detail design
and construction.
``(G) A determination by the Senior Technical
Authority that actual execution of activities in
support of such plans as of the date of the
certification have been and continue to be effective
and supportive of the acquisition schedule for such
class of vessels.
``(H) A description by the Senior Technical
Authority of other technology maturation and risk
reduction efforts not included in such plans for such
class of vessels taken as of the date of the
certification.
``(I) A certification by the Senior Technical
Authority that each critical system covered by
subparagraph (C) has been demonstrated through testing
of a prototype or identical component in its final
form, fit, and function in a realistic environment.
``(J) A determination by the Secretary that the
plans approved as described in subparagraph (D) are
fully funded and will be fully funded in the future-
years defense program for the fiscal year beginning in
the year in which the certification is submitted.
``(K) A determination by the Secretary that the
Senior Technical Authority will approve, in writing,
the ship specification for such class of vessels before
the request for proposals for detail design,
construction, or both, as applicable, is released.
``(3) Deadline for submittal of certification.--The
certification required by this subsection with respect to a
class of naval vessels shall be submitted, in writing, to the
congressional defense committees not fewer than 30 days before
the Secretary obligates for the first time funds authorized to
be appropriated for Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy or Other
Procurement, Navy for the lead vessel in such class of naval
vessels.
``(d) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `class of naval vessels'--
``(A) means any group of similar undersea or
surface craft procured with Shipbuilding and
Conversion, Navy or Other Procurement, Navy funds,
including manned, unmanned, and optionally-manned
craft; and
``(B) includes--
``(i) a substantially new class of craft
(including craft procured using `new start'
procurement); and
``(ii) a class of craft undergoing a
significant incremental change in its existing
class (such as a next `flight' of destroyers or
next `block' of attack submarines).
``(2) The term `future-years defense program' has the
meaning given that term in section 221 of this title.
``(3) The term `Milestone A approval' has the meaning given
that term in section 2431a of this title.''
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 863 of such title is amended by inserting after the item
relating to section 8669a the following new item:
``8669b. Senior Technical Authority for each naval vessel class.''.
SEC. 1018. PERMANENT AUTHORITY FOR SUSTAINING OPERATIONAL READINESS OF
LITTORAL COMBAT SHIPS ON EXTENDED DEPLOYMENT.
Section 8680(a)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking subparagraph (D).
Subtitle D--Counterterrorism
SEC. 1021. EXTENSION OF PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR TRANSFER OR
RELEASE OF INDIVIDUALS DETAINED AT UNITED STATES NAVAL
STATION, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA, TO THE UNITED STATES.
Section 1033 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended by striking
``December 31, 2019'' and inserting ``December 31, 2020''.
SEC. 1022. EXTENSION OF 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.
Section 1034(a) of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended
by striking ``December 31, 2019'' and inserting ``December 31, 2020''.
SEC. 1023. EXTENSION OF PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR TRANSFER OR
RELEASE OF INDIVIDUALS DETAINED AT UNITED STATES NAVAL
STATION, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA, TO CERTAIN COUNTRIES.
Section 1035 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-232) is amended by striking
``December 31, 2019'' and inserting ``December 31, 2020''.
SEC. 1024. EXTENSION OF PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO CLOSE OR
RELINQUISH CONTROL OF UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION,
GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA.
Section 1036 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1551), as amended by section
1032 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), is further amended by striking
``or 2019'' and inserting ``, 2019, or 2020''.
SEC. 1025. AUTHORITY TO TRANSFER INDIVIDUALS DETAINED AT UNITED STATES
NAVAL STATION, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA, TO THE UNITED STATES
TEMPORARILY FOR EMERGENCY OR CRITICAL MEDICAL TREATMENT.
(a) Temporary Transfer for Medical Treatment.--Notwithstanding
section 1033 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), or any similar provision of
law enacted after September 30, 2015, the Secretary of Defense may,
after consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, temporarily
transfer an individual detained at Guantanamo to a Department of
Defense medical facility in the United States for the sole purpose of
providing the individual medical treatment if the Secretary of Defense
determines that--
(1) the medical treatment of the individual is necessary to
prevent death or imminent significant injury or harm to the
health of the individual;
(2) the necessary medical treatment is not available to be
provided at United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
without incurring excessive and unreasonable costs; and
(3) the Department of Defense has provided for appropriate
security measures for the custody and control of the individual
during any period in which the individual is temporarily in the
United States under this section.
(b) Limitation on Exercise of Authority.--The authority of the
Secretary of Defense under subsection (a) may be exercised only by the
Secretary of Defense or another official of the Department of Defense
at the level of Under Secretary of Defense or higher.
(c) Conditions of Transfer.--An individual who is temporarily
transferred under the authority in subsection (a) shall--
(1) while in the United States, remain in the custody and
control of the Secretary of Defense at all times; and
(2) be returned to United States Naval Station, Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, as soon as feasible after a Department of Defense
physician determines, in consultation with the Commander, Joint
Task Force-Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, that any necessary follow-up
medical care may reasonably be provided the individual at
United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay.
(d) Status While in United States.--An individual who is
temporarily transferred under the authority in subsection (a), while in
the United States--
(1) shall be deemed at all times and in all respects to be
in the uninterrupted custody of the Secretary of Defense, as
though the individual remained physically at United States
Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba;
(2) shall not at any time be subject to, and may not apply
for or obtain, or be deemed to enjoy, any right, privilege,
status, benefit, or eligibility for any benefit under any
provision of the immigration laws (as defined in section
101(a)(17) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(17)), or any other law or regulation;
(3) shall not be permitted to avail himself of any right,
privilege, or benefit of any law of the United States beyond
those available to individuals detained at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay; and
(4) shall not, as a result of such transfer, have a change
in any designation that may have attached to that detainee
while detained at United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay,
pursuant to the Authorization for Use of Military Force (Public
Law 107-40), as determined in accordance with applicable law
and regulations.
(e) No Cause of Action.--Any decision to transfer or not to
transfer an individual made under the authority in subsection (a) shall
not give rise to any claim or cause of action.
(f) Limitation on Judicial Review.--
(1) Limitation.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), no
court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear or
consider any claim or action against the United States or its
departments, agencies, officers, employees, or agents arising
from or relating to any aspect of the detention, transfer,
treatment, or conditions of confinement of an individual
transferred under this section.
(2) Exception for habeas corpus.--The United States
District Court for the District of Columbia shall have
exclusive jurisdiction to consider an application for writ of
habeas corpus seeking release from custody filed by or on
behalf of an individual who is in the United States pursuant to
a temporary transfer under the authority in subsection (a).
Such jurisdiction shall be limited to that required by the
Constitution, and relief shall be only as provided in paragraph
(3). In such a proceeding the court may not review, halt, or
stay the return of the individual who is the object of the
application to United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, pursuant to subsection (c).
(3) Relief.--A court order in a proceeding covered by
paragraph (2)--
(A) may not order the release of the individual
within the United States; and
(B) shall be limited to an order of release from
custody which, when final, the Secretary of Defense
shall implement in accordance with section 1034 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016
(10 U.S.C. 801 note).
(g) Notification.--Whenever a temporary transfer of an individual
detained at Guantanamo is made under the authority of subsection (a),
the Secretary of Defense shall notify the Committees on Armed Services
of the Senate and the House of Representatives of the transfer not
later than five days after the date on which the transfer is made.
(h) Individual Detained at Guantanamo Defined.--In this section,
the term ``individual detained at Guantanamo'' means an individual
located at United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as of
October 1, 2009, who--
(1) is not a national of the United States (as defined in
section 101(a)(22) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C. 1101(a)(22)) or a member of the Armed Forces of the
United States; and
(2) is--
(A) in the custody or under the control of the
Department of Defense; or
(B) otherwise detained at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay.
(i) Applicability.--This section shall apply to an individual
temporarily transferred under the authority in subsection (a)
regardless of the status of any pending or completed proceeding or
detention on the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 1026. CHIEF MEDICAL OFFICER AT UNITED STATES NAVAL STATION,
GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA.
(a) Chief Medical Officer.--
(1) In general.--There shall be at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, a Chief Medical Officer of
United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay (in this section
referred to as the ``Chief Medical Officer'').
(2) Grade.--The individual serving as Chief Medical Officer
shall be an officer of the Armed Forces who holds a grade not
below the grade of colonel, or captain in the Navy.
(3) Chain of command.--The Chief Medical Officer shall
report to the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs
in the performance of duties and the exercise of powers of the
Chief Medical Officer under this section.
(b) Duties.--
(1) In general.--The Chief Medical Officer shall oversee
the provision of medical care to individuals detained at
Guantanamo.
(2) Quality of care.--The Chief Medical Officer shall
ensure that medical care provided as described in paragraph (1)
meets applicable standards of care.
(c) Powers.--
(1) In general.--The Chief Medical Officer shall make
medical determinations relating to medical care for individuals
detained at Guantanamo, including--
(A) decisions regarding assessment, diagnosis, and
treatment; and
(B) determinations concerning medical
accommodations to living conditions and operating
procedures for detention facilities.
(2) Resolution of declination to follow determinations.--If
the commander of Joint Task Force Guantanamo declines to follow
a determination of the Chief Medical Officer under paragraph
(1), the matter covered by such determination shall be jointly
resolved by the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special
Operations and Low Intensity Conflict and the Assistant
Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs not later than seven
days after receipt of notification of the matter by either
Assistant Secretary.
(3) Security clearances.--The appropriate departments or
agencies of the Federal Government shall, to the extent
practicable in accordance with existing procedures and
requirements, process expeditiously any application and
adjudication for a security clearance required by the Chief
Medical Officer to carry out the Chief Medical Officer's duties
and powers under this section.
(d) Access to Individuals, Information, and Assistance.--
(1) In general.--The Chief Medical Officer may secure
directly from the Department of Defense access to any
individual, information, or assistance that the Chief Medical
Officer considers necessary to enable the Chief Medical Officer
to carry out this section, including full access to the
following:
(A) Any individual detained at Guantanamo.
(B) Any medical records of any individual detained
at Guantanamo.
(C) Medical professionals of the Department who are
working, or have worked, at United States Naval
Station, Guantanamo Bay.
(2) Access upon request.--Upon request of the Chief Medical
Officer, the Department shall make available to the Chief
Medical Officer on an expeditious basis access to individuals,
information, and assistance as described in paragraph (1).
(3) Lack of expeditious availability.--If access to
individuals, information, or assistance is not made available
to the Chief Medical Officer upon request on an expeditious
basis as required by paragraph (2), the Chief Medical Officer
shall notify the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health
Affairs, who shall take actions to resolve the matter
expeditiously.
(e) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Individual detained at guantanamo defined.--The term
``individual detained at Guantanamo'' means an individual
located at United States Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
as of October 1, 2009, who--
(A) is not a national of the United States (as
defined in section 101(a)(22) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(22)) or a member of
the Armed Forces of the United States; and
(B) is--
(i) in the custody or under the control of
the Department of Defense; or
(ii) otherwise detained at United States
Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay.
(2) Medical care.--The term ``medical care'' means physical
and mental health care.
(3) Standard of care.--The term ``standard of care'' means
evaluation and treatment that is accepted by medical experts
and reflected in peer-reviewed medical literature as the
appropriate medical approach for a condition, symptoms,
illness, or disease and that is widely used by healthcare
professionals.
Subtitle E--Miscellaneous Authorities and Limitations
SEC. 1031. CLARIFICATION OF AUTHORITY OF MILITARY COMMISSIONS UNDER
CHAPTER 47A OF TITLE 10, UNITED STATES CODE, TO PUNISH
CONTEMPT.
(a) Clarification.--
(1) In general.--Subchapter IV of chapter 47A of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new section:
``Sec. 949o-1. Contempt
``(a) Authority to Punish.--(1) With respect to any proceeding
under this chapter, a judicial officer specified in paragraph (2) may
punish for contempt any person who--
``(A) uses any menacing word, sign, or gesture in the
presence of the judicial officer during the proceeding;
``(B) disturbs the proceeding by any riot or disorder; or
``(C) willfully disobeys a lawful writ, process, order,
rule, decree, or command issued with respect to the proceeding.
``(2) A judicial officer referred to in paragraph (1) is any of the
following:
``(A) Any judge of the United States Court of Military
Commission Review.
``(B) Any military judge detailed to a military commission
or any other proceeding under this chapter.
``(b) Punishment.--The punishment for contempt under subsection (a)
may not exceed confinement for 30 days, a fine of $1,000, or both.
``(c) Review.--(1) A punishment under this section--
``(A) is not reviewable by the convening authority of a
military commission under this chapter;
``(B) if imposed by a military judge, shall constitute a
judgment, subject to review in the first instance only by the
United States Court of Military Commission Review and then only
by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit; and
``(C) if imposed by a judge of the United States Court of
Military Commission Review, shall constitute a judgment of the
court subject to review only by the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
``(2) In reviewing a punishment for contempt imposed under this
section, the reviewing court shall affirm such punishment unless the
court finds that imposing such punishment was an abuse of the
discretion of the judicial officer who imposed such punishment.
``(3) A petition for review of punishment for contempt imposed
under this section shall be filed not later than 60 days after the date
on which the authenticated record upon which the contempt punishment is
based and any contempt proceedings conducted by the judicial officer
are served on the person punished for contempt.
``(d) Punishment Not Conviction.--Punishment for contempt is not a
conviction or sentence within the meaning of section 949m of this
title. The imposition of punishment for contempt is not governed by
other provisions of this chapter applicable to military commissions,
except that the Secretary of Defense may prescribe procedures for
contempt proceedings and punishments, pursuant to the authority
provided in section 949a of this title.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of subchapter IV of such chapter is amended by adding
at the end the following new item:
``949o-1. Contempt.''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--Section 950t of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) by striking paragraph (31); and
(2) by redesignating paragraph (32) as paragraph (31).
(c) Rule of Construction.--The amendments made by subsections (a)
and (b) shall not be construed to affect the lawfulness of any
punishment for contempt adjudged prior to the effective date of such
amendments.
(d) Applicability.--The amendments made by subsections (a) and (b)
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and shall
apply with respect to conduct by a person that occurs on or after such
date.
SEC. 1032. COMPREHENSIVE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE POLICY ON COLLECTIVE
SELF-DEFENSE.
(a) Comprehensive Policy Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall
prescribe a comprehensive written policy for the Department of Defense
on the issuance of authorization for, and the provision by members and
units of the United States Armed Forces of, collective self-defense to
designated foreign nationals, their facilities, and their property.
(b) Elements.--The policy required by subsection (a) shall address
the following:
(1) Each basis under domestic and international law
pursuant to which a member or unit of the United States Armed
Forces has been or may be authorized to provide collective
self-defense to designated foreign nationals, their facilities,
or their property under each circumstance as follows:
(A) Inside an area of active hostilities, or in a
country or territory in which United States forces are
authorized to conduct or support direct action
operations.
(B) Outside an area of active hostilities, or in a
country or territory in which United States forces are
not authorized to conduct direct action military
operations.
(C) When United States personnel, facilities, or
equipment are not threatened, including both as
described in subparagraph (A) and as described in
subparagraph (B).
(D) When members of the United States Armed Forces
are not participating in a military operation as part
of an international coalition.
(E) Any other circumstance not encompassed by
subparagraphs (A) through (D) in which a member or unit
of the United States Armed Forces has been or may be
authorized to provide such collective self-defense.
(2) A list and explanation of any limitations imposed by
law or policy on the provision of collective self-defense to
designated foreign nationals, their facilities, and their
property under any of the bases in domestic or international
law in the circumstances enumerated in paragraph (1), and the
conditions under which any such limitation applies.
(3) The procedure by which a proposal that any member or
unit of the United States Armed Forces provide collective self-
defense in support of designated foreign nationals, their
facilities, and their property is to be submitted, processed,
and endorsed through offices, officers, and officials of the
Department to the applicable approval authority for final
decision, and a list of any information, advice, or opinion to
be included with such proposal in order to inform appropriate
action on such proposal by such approval authority.
(4) The title and duty position of any officers and
officials of the Department empowered to render a final
decision on a proposal described in paragraph (3), and the
conditions applicable to, and limitations on, the exercise of
such decisionmaking authority by each such officer or official.
(5) A description of the Rules of Engagement applicable to
the provision of collective self-defense to designated foreign
nationals, their facilities, and their property under any of
the bases in domestic or international law in the circumstances
enumerated in paragraph (1), and the conditions under which any
such Rules of Engagement would be modified.
(6) A description of the process through which policy
guidance pertaining to the authorization for, and the provision
by members of the United States Armed Forces of, collective
self-defense to designated foreign nationals, their facilities,
and their property is to be disseminated to the level of
tactical execution.
(7) Such other matters as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
(c) Report on Policy.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 60 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report setting forth the
policy required by subsection (a).
(2) DoD general counsel statement.--The Secretary shall
include in the report under paragraph (1) a statement by the
General Counsel of the Department of Defense as to whether the
policy prescribed pursuant to subsection (a) is consistent with
domestic and international law.
(3) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) may be
submitted in classified form.
(d) Briefing on Policy.--Not later than 30 days after the date of
the submittal of the report required by subsection (c), the Secretary
shall provide the congressional defense committees a classified
briefing on the policy prescribed pursuant to subsection (a). The
briefing shall make use of vignettes designated to illustrate real
world application of the policy in each the circumstances enumerated in
subsection (b)(1).
SEC. 1033. OVERSIGHT OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EXECUTE ORDERS.
(a) Review of Execute Orders.--Upon a written request by the
Chairman or Ranking Member of a congressional defense committee, the
Secretary of Defense shall provide the committee, including
appropriately designated staff of the committee, with an execute order
approved by the Secretary or the commander of a combatant command for
reveiw within 30 days of receiving the written request.
(b) Exception.--
(1) In general.--In extraordinary circumstances necessary
to protect operations security, the sensitivity of the execute
order, or other appropriate considerations, the Secretary may
limit review of an execute order.
(2) Summary and other information.--In extraordinary
circumstances described in paragraph (1) with respect to an
execute order, the Secretary shall provide the committee
concerned, including appropriately designated staff of the
committee, a detailed summary of the execute order and other
information necessary for the conduct of the oversight duties
of the committee within 30 days of receiving the written
request under subsection (a).
SEC. 1034. PROHIBITION ON OWNERSHIP OR TRADING OF STOCKS IN CERTAIN
COMPANIES BY DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE OFFICERS AND
EMPLOYEES.
(a) Prohibition on Ownership and Trading by Certain Senior
Officials.--
(1) Prohibition.--An official of the Department of Defense
described in paragraph (2) may not own or trade a publicly
traded stock of a company if, during the preceding calendar
year, the company received more than $1,000,000,000 in revenue
from the Department of Defense, including through one or more
contracts with the Department.
(2) Department of defense officials.--An official of the
Department of Defense described in this paragraph is any
current Department of Defense official described by section
847(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2008 (10 U.S.C. 1701 note).
(3) Administrative actions.--In the event that an official
of the Department of Defense described in subsection (a)
knowingly fails to comply with the requirements of this
subsection, the Secretary of Defense may take administrative
action against the official, including suspension or
termination, in accordance with the procedures otherwise
applicable to administrative actions against such officials.
(b) Prohibition on Ownership and Trading by All Officers and
Employees.--An officer or employee of the Department of Defense may not
own or trade a publicly traded stock of a company that is a contractor
or subcontractor of the Department if the Office of Standards and
Compliance of the Office of the General Counsel of the Department of
Defense determines that the value of the stock may be directly or
indirectly influenced by any official action of the officer or employee
for the Department.
(c) Inapplicability to Mutual Funds.--For purposes of this section,
publically-traded stock does not include a widely-held investment fund
described in section 102(f)(8) of the Ethics in Government Act of 1978
(5 U.S.C. App.).
SEC. 1035. POLICY REGARDING THE TRANSITION OF DATA AND APPLICATIONS TO
THE CLOUD.
(a) Policy Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Chief Information Officer of the Department
of Defense and the Chief Data Officer of the Department shall, in
consultation with the J6 of the Joint Staff and the Chief Management
Officer, develop and issue enterprise-wide policy and implementing
instructions regarding the transition of data and applications to the
cloud under the Department cloud strategy in accordance with subsection
(b).
(b) Design.--The policy required by subsection (a) shall be
designed to dramatically improve support to operational missions and
management processes, including by the use of artificial intelligence
and machine learning technologies, by--
(1) making the data of the Department available to support
new types of analyses;
(2) preventing, to the maximum extent practicable, the
replication in the cloud of data stores that cannot readily be
accessed by applications for which the data stores were not
originally engineered;
(3) ensuring that data sets can be readily discovered and
combined with others to enable new insights and capabilities;
and
(4) ensuring that data and applications are readily
portable and not tightly coupled to a specific cloud
infrastructure or platform.
SEC. 1036. MODERNIZATION OF INSPECTION AUTHORITIES APPLICABLE TO THE
NATIONAL GUARD AND EXTENSION OF INSPECTION AUTHORITY TO
THE CHIEF OF THE NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU.
(a) Modernization of Inspection Authorities of Secretaries of the
Army and Air Force.--Subsection (a) of section 105 of title 32, United
States Code, is amended--
(1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1)--
(A) by striking ``by him, the Secretary of the Army
shall have'' and inserting ``by such Secretary, the
Secretary of the Army and the Secretary of the Air
Force shall each have'';
(B) by striking ``, if necessary,''; and
(C) by striking ``the Regular Army'' and inserting
``the Regular Army or the Regular Air Force'';
(2) by striking ``Army National Guard'' each place it
appears and inserting ``Army National Guard or Air National
Guard''; and
(3) by striking the flush matter following paragraph (7).
(b) Inspection Authority of Chief of the National Guard Bureau.--
Such section is further amended by adding at the end the following new
subsection:
``(c) Under regulations prescribed by the Chief of the National
Guard Bureau, the Chief of the National Guard Bureau may have an
inspection made by inspectors general, or by commissioned officers of
the Army National Guard of the United States or the Air National Guard
of the United States detailed for that purpose, in order to determine
the following:
``(1) Whether the units and members of the Army National
Guard comply with Federal law and policy applicable to the
National Guard, including policies issued by the Department of
Defense, the Department of the Army, and the National Guard
Bureau.
``(2) Whether the units and members of the Air National
Guard comply with Federal law and policy applicable to the
National Guard, including policies issued by the Department of
Defense, the Department of the Air Force, and the National
Guard Bureau.''.
SEC. 1037. ENHANCEMENT OF AUTHORITIES ON FORFEITURE OF FEDERAL BENEFITS
BY THE NATIONAL GUARD.
(a) In General.--The text of section 108 of title 32, United States
Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(a) Availability of Funds Contingent on Compliance With Federal
Law and Policy.--The availability of Federal funds provided to the
National Guard of individual States is contingent upon compliance with
Federal law and policy applicable to the National Guard.
``(b) Bar of States for Failure To Comply.--If, within a time fixed
by the President, a State fails to comply with Federal law or policy
applicable to the National Guard, a requirement of this title, or a
regulation prescribed under this title, the National Guard of that
State is barred, in whole or in part (as the President may prescribe),
from receiving such money or other aid, benefit, or privilege
authorized by law with respect to the National Guard of that State as
the President may prescribe.
``(c) Bar or Withdrawal of Recognition of Officers for Failure To
Comply.--If, within a time fixed by the President, an officer of the
National Guard fails to comply with Federal law or policy applicable to
the National Guard, the President may bar the officer from receiving
Federal funds, or withdraw the officer's Federal recognition under
section 323 of this title.
``(d) Bar or Withdrawal of Recognition of Units for Failure To
Comply.--If, within a time fixed by the President, a unit of the
National Guard fails to comply with Federal law or policy applicable to
the National Guard, the President may bar the unit from receiving
Federal funds, or withdraw the unit's Federal recognition.
``(e) Advance Notice to Congress on Final Actions.--Before taking a
final action under subsection (c) or (d), President shall notify the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives of such final action.
``(f) Limitation on Delegation of Final Actions.--The President may
not delegate the authority to take a final action under subsection (c)
or (d) to any official other than the Secretary of Defense.''.
(b) Effective Date.--The amendment made by subsection (a) shall
take effect on October 1, 2019, and shall apply with respect to amounts
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years that begin on or after
that date.
SEC. 1038. MODERNIZATION OF AUTHORITIES ON PROPERTY AND FISCAL OFFICERS
OF THE NATIONAL GUARD.
(a) Property and Fiscal Officer for Each State From NGB.--Section
708 of title 32, United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (a) and inserting the following
new subsection (a):
``(a) Property and Fiscal Officer for Each State.--(1) The Chief of
the National Guard Bureau shall assign, designate, or detail, subject
to the approval of the Secretary of the Army or the Secretary of the
Air Force, as applicable, a qualified commissioned officer ordered to
active duty in the National Guard Bureau under section 12402(a) of
title 10 to be the property and fiscal officer of each State,
Territory, and the District of Columbia.
``(2)(A) An officer may not be assigned, designated, or detailed as
the property and fiscal officer of a State, Territory, or the District
of Columbia under paragraph (1) if the officer has served within such
jurisdiction during the 36 months preceding such assignment,
designation, or detail.
``(B) The Secretary of the Army or the Secretary of the Air Force
may waive the applicability of subparagraph (A) to the assignment,
designation, or detail of a particular officer if such Secretary
considers the waiver to be in the best interests of the State,
Territory, or District of Columbia, as applicable, concerned.
``(3) An officer assigned, designated, or detailed as a property
and fiscal officer under paragraph (1) shall, while so serving as such
an officer, serve in a grade commensurate with the functions and
responsibilities of the officer, but not above the grade of colonel.'';
and
(2) by striking subsection (d).
(b) Support Staff.--Such section is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (b) and (c) as subsections
(c) and (d), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (a), as amended by
subsection (a) of this section, the following new subsection
(b):
``(b) Support Staff.--The Chief of the National Guard Bureau shall
assign, designate, or detail other personnel of the National Guard
Bureau to serve as the Federal support staff for the property and
fiscal officer for the National Guard of each State, Territory, or the
District of Columbia under subsection (a).''.
(c) Responsibilities.--Subsection (c) of such section, as
redesignated by subsection (b)(1) of this section, is amended--
(1) by inserting ``Responsibilities of Officers.--'' after
``(c)'';
(2) in paragraph (1), by striking ``he'' and inserting
``such officer''; and
(3) in paragraph (2), by inserting ``, the Chief of Staff
of the Army or the Chief of Staff of the Air Force (as
applicable), or the Chief of the National Guard Bureau'' before
the period at the end.
(d) Other Matters.--Such section is further amended--
(1) by striking subsection (d), as redesignated by
subsection (b)(1) of this section; and
(2) by striking subsection (e).
(e) Intrustment of Monies.--Such section is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (d); and
(2) in subsection (d), as so redesignated--
(A) by inserting ``Intrustment of Monies.--'' after
``(d)'';
(B) by striking ``an officer'' and inserting ``a
Federally recognized officer'';
(C) by striking ``him'' and inserting ``such agent
officer''; and
(D) by striking ``he'' and inserting ``the agent
officer''.
SEC. 1039. LIMITATION ON PLACEMENT BY THE UNDER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
FOR PERSONNEL AND READINESS OF WORK WITH FEDERALLY FUNDED
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTERS.
(a) Limitation.--The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and
Readiness may not place any work with a federally funded research and
development center (FFRDC) until the Under Secretary submits to the
Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a report on all studies, reports, and other analyses
being undertaken for the Under Secretary as of the date of the report
by federally funded research and development centers.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall set
forth the following:
(1) A list of each study, report, and analysis described by
subsection (a).
(2) For each study, report, or analysis, the following:
(A) Title.
(B) Federally funded research and development
center undertaking.
(C) Amount of contract.
(D) Anticipated completion date.
SEC. 1040. TERMINATION OF REQUIREMENT FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
FACILITY ACCESS CLEARANCES FOR JOINT VENTURES COMPOSED OF
PREVIOUSLY-CLEARED ENTITIES.
A clearance for access to a Department of Defense installation or
facility may not be required for a joint venture if that joint venture
is composed entirely of entities that are currently cleared for access
to such installation or facility.
SEC. 1041. DESIGNATION OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE STRATEGIC ARCTIC PORTS.
(a) Findings.--Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The strategic importance of the Arctic continues to
increase as the United States and other countries recognize the
military significance of the sea lanes and choke points within
the region and understand the potential for power projection
from the Arctic into multiple regions.
(2) On January 19, 2018, Secretary of Defense James Mattis
released the document titled ``2018 National Defense Strategy
of the United States of America'' in which the Secretary
outlined the reemergence of long-term, strategic competition by
countries classified by the National Security Strategy as
revisionist powers.
(3) Russia and China have conducted military exercises
together in the Arctic, have agreed to connect the Northern Sea
Route, claimed by Russia, with China's Maritime Silk Road, and
are working together in developing natural gas resources in the
Arctic.
(4) The Government of the Russian Federation--
(A) has prioritized the development of Arctic
capabilities and has made significant investments in
military infrastructure in the Arctic, including the
creation of a new Arctic Command and the construction
or refurbishment of 16 deepwater ports and 14 airfields
in the region;
(B) has approximately 40 icebreakers as of May
2019, including several nuclear-powered icebreakers, is
currently constructing four icebreakers, and is
planning to build an additional eight icebreakers; and
(C) conducted the largest military exercise since
the 1980s, Vostok 2018, which included--
(i) 300,000 troops;
(ii) 1,000 aircraft;
(iii) 80 ships;
(iv) 36,000 vehicles; and
(v) notably, 3,200 Chinese troops, 30
Chinese rotary and fixed-wing aircraft, and 900
Chinese tanks.
(5) The Government of the People's Republic of China--
(A) released, in January 2018, its new Arctic
Strategy, the Polar Silk Road, in which it declares
itself as a ``near-Arctic state'', even though its
nearest territory to the Arctic is 900 miles away;
(B) has publicly stated that it seeks to expand its
``Belt and Road Initiative'' to the Arctic region,
including current investment in the natural gas fields
in the Yamal Peninsula in Russia, rare-earth element
mines in Greenland, and the real estate, alternative
energy, and fisheries in Iceland; and
(C) has shown great interest in expanding its
Arctic presence, including through--
(i) the operation of research vessels in
the region;
(ii) the recent construction of the Xuelong
2, or Snow Dragon II, the only polar research
boat vessel in the world that can break ice
while going forward or backward;
(iii) a freedom of navigation operation in
the Aleutian Islands in 2015; and
(iv) its recent plans to develop a 33,000
ton nuclear-powered icebreaker.
(6) The economic significance of the Arctic continues to
grow as countries around the globe begin to understand the
potential for maritime transportation through, and economic and
trade development in, the region.
(7) The Arctic is home to 13 percent of the world's
undiscovered oil, 30 percent of its undiscovered gas, an
abundance of uranium, rare earth minerals, gold, diamonds, and
millions of square miles of untapped resources, including
abundant fisheries.
(8) The Bering Strait is experiencing significant increases
in international traffic from vessels transiting the Northern
Sea Route, increases which are projected to continue if
decreases in sea ice coverage continue.
(9) Along a future ice-free Arctic shipping route, a ship
sailing from South Korea to Germany would have an average
travel time of just 23 days, compared to 34 days via the Suez
Canal and 46 days via the Cape of Good Hope.
(10) In a speech at the Arctic Forum in September 2011,
Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin highlighted the
Northern Sea Route as a potential alternative to the Suez Canal
and has publicly stated plans to invest $11,400,000,000 along
the Northern Sea Route by 2024.
(11) Increases in human, maritime, and resource development
activity in the Arctic region are expected to create additional
mission requirements for the Department of Defense and the
Department of Homeland Security, given--
(A) the strategic focus of the Government of the
Russian Federation and the Government of the People's
Republic of China on the Arctic;
(B) overlapping territorial claims; and
(C) the potential for maritime accidents, oil
spills, and illegal fishing near the exclusive economic
zone of the United States.
(12) The increasing role of the United States in the Arctic
has been highlighted in each of the last four National Defense
Authorization Acts.
(13) Section 1068 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 992)
required a new Department of Defense strategy to protect United
States national security interests in the Arctic region.
(14) Section 1095 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2438)
required the Department of Defense to create criteria to
designate a Department of Defense Strategic Arctic Port.
(15) Section 122 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1310)
authorized the procurement of one polar-class heavy icebreaker
vessel.
(16) Section 151 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232)
authorized the procurement of five additional polar-class
icebreaker vessels and expressed that the Coast Guard should--
(A) maintain an inventory of not fewer than six
polar-class icebreaker vessels;
(B) award a contract for the first new polar-class
icebreaker not later than fiscal year 2019 and deliver
the icebreaker not later than fiscal year 2023; and
(C) deliver the second through sixth polar-class
icebreakers at a rate of one vessel per year in fiscal
years 2025 through 2029.
(17) In January 2017, the Department of Defense released a
report entitled ``Report to Congress on Strategy to Protect
United States National Security Interests in the Arctic
Region'' to update ``the ways and means'' the Department of
Defense intends to use to achieve its objectives as it
implements the 2013 National Strategy for the Arctic Region,
including--
(A) enhancing the capability of United States
forces to defend the homeland and exercise sovereignty;
(B) strengthening deterrence at home and abroad;
(C) preserving freedom of the seas in the Arctic;
and
(D) evolving the infrastructure and capabilities of
the Department in the Arctic consistent with changing
conditions and needs.
(18) The United States Coast Guard Arctic Strategic Outlook
released in April 2019 states, ``Demonstrating commitment to
operational presence, Canada, Denmark, and Norway have made
strategic investments in ice-capable patrol ships charged with
national or homeland security missions. [The United States] is
the only Arctic State that has not made similar investments in
ice-capable surface maritime security assets. This limits the
ability of the Coast Guard, and the Nation, to credibly uphold
sovereignty or respond to contingencies in the Arctic''.
(19) On January 12, 2017, Secretary of Defense James Mattis
stated, ``The Arctic is key strategic terrain . . . Russia is
taking aggressive steps to increase its presence there . . . I
will prioritize the development of an integrated strategy for
the Arctic. I believe that our interests and the security of
the Arctic would benefit from increasing the focus of the
Department of Defense on this region''.
(20) On January 9, 2019, Secretary of the Air Force Heather
Wilson and Chief of Staff of the Air Force General David
Goldfein wrote, ``. . . the Arctic has become even more
important to the nation. Both a northern approach to the United
States, as well as a critical location for projecting American
power, its geo-strategic significance is difficult to
overstate''.
(21) On February 26, 2019, General John Hyten, Commander of
the United States Strategic Command, stated, ``In particular,
the Arctic is an area that we really need to focus on and
really look at investing. That is no longer a buffer zone. We
need to be able to operate there. We need to be able to
communicate there. We need to have a presence there that we
have not invested in in the same way that our adversaries have.
And they see that as a vulnerability from us, whereas it is
becoming a strength for them and it is a weakness for us, we
need to flip that equation''.
(22) On February 26, 2019, General Terrence O'Shaughnessy,
Commander of the United States Northern Command stated, ``It
has become clear that defense of the homeland depends on our
ability to detect and defeat threats operating both in the
Arctic and passing through the Arctic. Russia's fielding of
advanced, long-range cruise missiles capable of flying through
the northern approaches and striking targets in the United
States and Canada has emerged as the dominant military threat
in the Arctic. . . . Meanwhile, China has declared that it is
not content to remain a mere observer in the Arctic and has
taken action to normalize its naval and commercial presence in
the region in order to increase its access to lucrative
resources and shipping routes. I view the Arctic as the front
line in the defense of the United States and Canada . . .''.
(23) On May 6, 2019, Admiral Karl Schultz, Commandant of
the Coast Guard stated, ``We talk about the Arctic as a
competitive space. We've seen China, we see Russia investing
extensively. China built icebreakers in the time since we
updated our strategy. China's been operating off the Alaskan
Arctic for a good part of the last six years on an annual
basis. [The Coast Guard is] championing increased capabilities
in the Arctic . . . better communications, better domain
awareness . . . . I want to see the Arctic remain a peaceful
domain. China's a self-declared Arctic state. They're not one
of the eight Arctic nations, so for me, for the service, its
presence equals influence''.
(24) On May 6, 2019, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo stated
that--
(A) the Arctic ``has become an arena for power and
for competition'', and the United States is ``entering
a new age of strategic engagement in the Arctic,
complete with new threats to the Arctic and its real
estate, and to all of our interests in that region.'';
(B) ``Arctic sea lanes could become the 21st
century Suez and Panama Canals.'';
(C) ``We're concerned about Russia's claim over the
international waters of the Northern Sea Route,
including its newly announced plans to connect it with
China's Maritime Silk Road.'';
(D) ``In the Northern Sea Route, Moscow already
illegally demands other nations request permission to
pass, requires Russian maritime pilots to be aboard
foreign ships, and threatens to use military force to
sink any that fail to comply with their demands.'';
(E) there is a ``pattern of aggressive Russian
behavior here in the Arctic'' and ``we know Russian
territorial ambitions can turn violent''; and
(F) we do not want ``the Arctic Ocean to transform
into a new South China Sea, fraught with militarization
and competing territorial claims'', nor do we want
``the fragile Arctic environment exposed to the same
ecological devastation caused by China's fishing fleet
in the seas off its coast, or unregulated industrial
activity in its own country''.
(25) On December 6, 2018, Secretary of the Navy Richard
Spencer stated, ``We need to have a strategic Arctic port up in
Alaska. We need to be doing FONOPs in the northwest - in the
northern passage. . . . peace through presence with a submarine
is a little tough''.
(26) Meanwhile, the two closest strategic seaports, as
designated by the Department of Defense, to the Arctic Circle
are the Port of Anchorage and the Port of Tacoma, located
approximately 1,500 nautical miles and 2,400 nautical miles
away, respectively, and approximately 1,900 nautical miles and
2,800 nautical miles respectively from Barrow, Alaska.
(27) The distance from Bangor, Maine, to Key West, Florida,
is approximately 1,450 nautical miles.
(b) Sense of Congress.--It is the sense of Congress that--
(1) the Arctic is a region of strategic importance to the
national security interests of the United States and the
Department of Defense must better align its presence, force
posture, and capabilities to meet the growing array of
challenges in the region; and
(2) although much progress has been made to increase
awareness of Arctic issues and to promote increased presence in
the region, additional measures, including the designation of
one or more strategic Arctic ports, are needed to show the
commitment of the United States to this emerging strategic
choke point of future great power competition.
(c) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in
consultation with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
the Commanding General of the United States Army Corps of
Engineers, the Commandant of the Coast Guard, and the
Administrator of the Maritime Administration, shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report evaluating
potential sites for one or more strategic ports in the Arctic.
(2) Elements.--Consistent with the updated military
strategy for the protection of United States national security
interests in the Arctic region set forth in the report required
under section 1068 of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 992), the
report required under paragraph (1) shall include--
(A) an evaluation of the amount of sufficient and
suitable space needed to create capacity for port and
other necessary infrastructure for at least one of each
of type of Navy or Coast Guard vessel, including an
Arleigh Burke class destroyer of the Navy, a national
security cutter, and a heavy polar ice breaker of the
Coast Guard;
(B) an evaluation of the amount of sufficient and
suitable space needed to create capacity for equipment
and fuel storage, technological infrastructure, and
civil infrastructure to support military and civilian
operations, including--
(i) aerospace warning;
(ii) maritime surface and subsurface
warning;
(iii) maritime control and defense;
(iv) maritime domain awareness;
(v) homeland defense;
(vi) defense support to civil authorities;
(vii) humanitarian relief;
(viii) search and rescue;
(ix) disaster relief;
(x) oil spill response;
(xi) medical stabilization and evacuation;
and
(xii) meteorological measurements and
forecasting;
(C) an identification of proximity and road access
required to an airport designated as a commercial
service airport by the Federal Aviation Administration
that is capable of supporting military and civilian
aircraft for operations designated in subparagraph (B);
(D) a description of the requirements, to include
infrastructure and installations, communications, and
logistics necessary to improve response effectiveness
to support military and civilian operations described
in subparagraph (B);
(E) an identification of the sites that the
Secretary recommends as potential sites for designation
as Department of Defense Strategic Arctic Ports;
(F) the estimated cost of sufficient construction
necessary to initiate and sustain expected operations
at such sites; and
(G) such other information as the Secretary deems
relevant.
(d) Designation of Strategic Arctic Ports.--Not later than 90 days
after the date on which the report required under subsection (c) is
submitted, the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Commanding General of the United
States Army Corps of Engineers, the Commandant of the Coast Guard, and
the Administrator of the Maritime Administration, shall designate one
or more ports as Department of Defense Strategic Arctic Ports from the
sites identified under subsection (c)(2)(E).
(e) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section may be construed
to authorize any additional appropriations for the Department of
Defense for the establishment of any port designated pursuant to this
section.
(f) Arctic Defined.--In this section, the term ``Arctic'' has the
meaning given that term in section 112 of the Arctic Research and
Policy Act of 1984 (15 U.S.C. 4111).
SEC. 1042. EXTENSION OF NATIONAL SECURITY COMMISSION ON ARTIFICIAL
INTELLIGENCE.
(a) Extension.--Subsection (e) of section 1051 of the John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public
Law 115-232; 132 Stat. 1962) is amended by striking ``October 1, 2020''
and inserting ``March 1, 2021''.
(b) Reports.--Subsection (c) of such section is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``Not later than 180 days
after the date of the enactment of this Act'' and inserting
``Not later than August 1, 2019'';
(2) by redesignating paragraph (3) as paragraph (4); and
(3) by inserting after paragraph (1) the following new
paragraphs:
``(2) Interim reports.--Not later than each of December 1,
2019, and December 1, 2020, the Commission shall submit as
described in that paragraph an interim report on the review
required under subsection (b).
``(3) Final report.--Not later than March 1, 2021, the
Commission shall submit as described in paragraph (1) a
comprehensive final report on the review required under
subsection (b).''.
SEC. 1043. AUTHORITY TO TRANSFER FUNDS FOR BIEN HOA DIOXIN CLEANUP.
(a) Transfer Authority.--Notwithstanding section 2215 of title 10,
United States Code, the Secretary of Defense may transfer to the
Secretary of State, for use by the United States Agency for
International Development, amounts to be used for the Bien Hoa dioxin
cleanup in Vietnam.
(b) Limitation on Amount.--Not more than $15,000,000 may be
transferred in fiscal year 2020 under the authority in subsection (a).
(c) Additional Transfer Authority.--The transfer authority in
subsection (a) is in addition to any other transfer authority available
to the Department of Defense.
SEC. 1044. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS TO HOUSE CHILDREN SEPARATED FROM
PARENTS.
(a) In General.--None of the amounts authorized to be appropriated
by this Act to the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2020 may be
used to house a child separated from a parent.
(b) Child Separated From a Parent Defined.--The term ``child
separated from a parent'' means a person who--
(1) entered the United States, before attaining 18 years of
age, at a port of entry or between ports of entry; and
(2) was separated from his or her parent or legal guardian
by the Department of Homeland Security, and the Department of
Homeland Security failed to demonstrate in a hearing that the
parent or legal guardian was unfit or presented a danger to the
child.
Subtitle F--Studies and Reports
SEC. 1051. MODIFICATION OF ANNUAL REPORTING REQUIREMENTS ON DEFENSE
MANPOWER.
(a) Conversion of Annual Requirements Report Into Annual Profile
Report.--Section 115a of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by
striking the first two sentences and inserting the
following new sentence: ``Not later than April 1 each
year, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to Congress
a defense manpower profile report.'';
(B) in paragraph (1), by adding ``and'' at the end;
(C) in paragraph (2), by striking ``; and'' and
inserting a period; and
(D) by striking paragraph (3);
(2) in subsection (b)--
(A) by striking ``(1)''; and
(B) by striking paragraphs (2) and (3);
(3) in subsection (c), by striking ``the following:'' and
all that follows and inserting ``the manpower required for
support and overhead functions within the armed forces and the
Department of Defense.'';
(4) by striking subsections (e) and (h); and
(5) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively.
(b) Conversion of Certain Current Report Elements Into Separate,
Modified Reports.--Such section is further amended--
(1) in subsection (e), as redesignated by subsection (a)(5)
of this section--
(A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by
striking ``The Secretary shall also include in each
such report'' and inserting ``Not later than June 1
each year, the Secretary shall submit to Congress a
report that sets forth''; and
(B) in paragraph (1), by striking ``and estimates
of such numbers for the current fiscal year and
subsequent fiscal years''; and
(2) in subsection (f), as so redesignated--
(A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by
striking ``In each report submitted under subsection
(a), the Secretary shall also include a detailed
discussion'' and inserting ``Not later than September 1
each year, the Secretary shall submit to Congress a
report that sets forth a detailed discussion, current
as of the preceding fiscal year''; and
(B) by striking ``the year'' each place it appears
and inserting ``the fiscal year''.
(c) Conforming and Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 115a. Annual defense manpower profile report and related
reports''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 3 of such title is amended by striking the
item relating to section 115a and inserting the following new
item:
``115a. Annual defense manpower profile report and related reports.''.
SEC. 1052. REPORT ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EFFORTS TO IMPLEMENT A FORCE
PLANNING PROCESS IN SUPPORT OF IMPLEMENTATION OF THE 2018
NATIONAL DEFENSE STRATEGY.
(a) Report Required.--Not later than February 1, 2020, the Under
Secretary of Defense for Policy shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report setting forth the plan and processes of the
Department of Defense to provide analytic support to senior leaders of
the Department for the force planning required to implement the 2018
National Defense Strategy. The analytic support shall be designed to
weigh options, examine tradeoffs across the joint force, and drive
decisions on force sizing, shaping, capability, and concept development
in order to address the threats outlined in the 2018 National Defense
Strategy.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
an assessment of the following:
(1) The major elements, products, and milestones of the
force planning process of the Department.
(2) The conclusions and recommendations of the Defense
Planning and Analysis Community initiative.
(3) The progress of the Department in implementing the
recommendations of the Comptroller General of the United States
set forth in Government Accountability Office Report GAO-19-
40C.
(4) The progress of the Under Secretary, the Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Director of Cost Assessment
and Program Evaluation in implementing paragraph (5) of section
134(b) of title 10, United States Code, as added by section
902(b) of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232).
SEC. 1053. EXTENSION OF ANNUAL REPORTS ON CIVILIAN CASUALTIES IN
CONNECTION WITH UNITED STATES MILITARY OPERATIONS.
Section 1057(e) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1572) is amended by
striking ``the date this is five years after the date of the enactment
of this Act'' and inserting ``December 31, 2025''.
SEC. 1054. REPORT ON JOINT FORCE PLAN FOR IMPLEMENTATION OF STRATEGIES
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FOR THE ARCTIC.
(a) In General.--Not later than 270 days after the date on which
the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional defense
committees the report on an updated Arctic strategy to improve and
enhance joint operations required by section 1071 of the John S. McCain
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law
115-232), the Secretary of Defense shall, in coordination with the
Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of
the Air Force, submit to the congressional defense committees a joint
force plan for implementation of the following:
(1) The December 2016 Report to Congress on the Strategy to
Protect United States National Security Interests in the Arctic
Region.
(2) The updated Arctic strategy to improve and enhance
joint operations.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
the following in connection with the strategies for the Arctic referred
to in that subsection:
(1) A description of the specific means for--
(A) enhancing the capability of the Armed Forces to
defend the homeland and exercise sovereignty;
(B) strengthening deterrence at home and abroad;
(C) strengthening alliances and partnerships;
(D) preserving freedom of the seas in the Arctic;
(E) engaging public, private, and international
partners to improve domain awareness in the Arctic;
(F) developing Department of Defense Arctic
infrastructure and capabilities consistent with
changing conditions and needs;
(G) providing support to civil authorities, as
directed;
(H) partnering with other departments, agencies,
and countries to support human and environmental
security; and
(I) supporting international institutions that
promote regional cooperation and the rule of law.
(2) An analysis of the operational and contingency plans
for the protection of United States national security interests
in the Arctic region.
(3) A description of training, capability, and resource
gaps that must be addressed to execute each mission described
in the updated Arctic strategy.
(4) A description of the current and projected Arctic
capabilities of the Russian Federation and the People's
Republic of China, and an analysis of United States
capabilities for satisfying--
(A) each mission described in the updated Arctic
strategy; and
(B) the strategic objectives in the National
Defense Strategy.
(c) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted
in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
SEC. 1055. REPORT ON USE OF NORTHERN TIER BASES IN IMPLEMENTATION OF
ARCTIC STRATEGY OF THE UNITED STATES.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with
the Secretary of the Air Force, shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report outlining how bases in the northern
latitudes, including Northern Tier bases, may be used in the
implementation of--
(1) recommendations included in the report submitted by the
Secretary of Defense to Congress in December 2016 entitled
``Report to Congress on Strategy to Protect United States
National Security Interests in the Arctic Region''; and
(2) the updated Arctic strategy to improve and enhance
joint operations required to be submitted to the congressional
defense committees under section 1071 of the John S. McCain
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public
Law 115-232).
(b) Inclusion of Mission Sets.--The report under subsection (a)
shall include a description of current and future mission sets at
Northern Tier bases that may further the Arctic strategy of the United
States.
(c) Northern Tier Bases Defined.--In this section, the term
``Northern Tier bases'' means installations in the continental United
States that are located in States bordering Canada.
SEC. 1056. REPORT ON THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE PLAN FOR MASS-CASUALTY
DISASTER RESPONSE OPERATIONS IN THE ARCTIC.
(a) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the Department of Defense may be called upon to support
the Coast Guard and other agencies of the Department of
Homeland Security in responding to any mass-casualty disaster
response operations in the Arctic;
(2) coordination between the Department of Defense and the
Coast Guard might be necessary for responding to a mass-
casualty event in the Arctic; and
(3) prior planning for Arctic mass-casualty disaster
response operations will bolster the response of the Federal
Government to a mass-casualty disaster in the Arctic
environment.
(b) Report.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in coordination
with the Secretary of Homeland Security, submit to the appropriate
committees of Congress a report on the plan of the Department of
Defense for assisting mass-casualty disaster response operations in the
Arctic.
(c) Elements.--The report required by subsection (b) shall include
the following:
(1) A description of the assets that could be made
available to support other agencies and departments of the
Federal Government for mass-casualty disaster response
operations in the Arctic.
(2) A description and assessment of the command, control,
and coordination relationships that would be useful to
integrate rescue forces for such operations from multiple
departments and agencies of the Federal Government.
(3) A description and assessment of the communications
assets that could be made available in support of other
agencies and departments of the Federal Government for
communication and coordination in such operations.
(4) A description of any cooperative arrangements with
Canada and other regional partners in providing rescue assets
and infrastructure in connection with such operations.
(5) A description of available medical infrastructure and
assets that could be made available in support of other
agencies and departments of the Federal Government for
aeromedical evacuation in connection with such operations.
(6) A description of available shelter locations that could
be made available in support of other agencies and departments
of the Federal Government for use in connection with such
operations, including the number of people that can be
sheltered per location.
(7) An assessment of logistical challenges that evacuations
from the Arctic in connection with such operations entail,
including potential rotary and fixed-wing aircraft trans-load
locations and onward movement requirements.
(d) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, and the Committee
on Appropriations of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Homeland Security, and the Committee on Appropriations of the
House of Representatives.
SEC. 1057. ANNUAL REPORTS ON APPROVAL OF EMPLOYMENT OR COMPENSATION OF
RETIRED GENERAL OR FLAG OFFICERS BY FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS
FOR EMOLUMENTS CLAUSE PURPOSES.
(a) Annual Reports.--Section 908 of title 37, United States Code,
is amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(d) Annual Reports on Approvals for Retired General and Flag
Officers.--(1) Not later than January 31 each year, the Secretaries of
the military departments shall jointly submit to the appropriate
committees and Members of Congress a report on each approval under
subsection (b) for employment or compensation described in subsection
(a) for a retired member of the armed forces in a general or flag
officer grade that was issued during the preceding year.
``(2) In this subsection, the appropriate committees and Members of
Congress are--
``(A) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Relations, and the Committee on Appropriations of the
Senate;
``(B) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Affairs, and the Committee on Appropriations of the
House of Representatives;
``(C) the Majority Leader and the Minority Leader of the
Senate; and
``(D) the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the
Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.''.
(b) Scope of First Report.--The first report submitted pursuant to
subsection (d) of section 908 of title 37, United States Code (as added
by subsection (a) of this section), after the date of the enactment of
this Act shall cover the five-year period ending with the year before
the year in which such report is submitted.
SEC. 1058. TRANSMITTAL TO CONGRESS OF REQUESTS FOR ASSISTANCE RECEIVED
BY THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FROM OTHER DEPARTMENTS.
(a) Requests for Assistance.--Not later than seven calendar days
after the receipt by the Department of Defense of a Request for
Assistance from the Department of Homeland Security or the Department
of Health and Human Services, the Secretary of Defense shall
electronically transmit to the Committees on Armed Services of the
Senate and the House of Representatives a copy of such Request for
Assistance.
(b) Responses to Requests.--At the same time the Secretary of
Defense submits to the Secretary of Homeland Security or the Secretary
of Health and Human Services an official response of the Department of
Defense to a Request for Assistance from the Department of Homeland
Security or the Department of Health and Human Services, as applicable,
the Secretary of Defense shall transmit to the Committees on Armed
Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a copy of such
official response.
SEC. 1059. SEMIANNUAL REPORT ON CONSOLIDATED ADJUDICATION FACILITY OF
THE DEFENSE COUNTERINTELLIGENCE AND SECURITY AGENCY.
Not less frequently than once every six months until the Director
of the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency determines that
a steady-state level has been achieved for the Consolidated
Adjudication Facility of the Agency, the Director shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on inventory and timeliness
metrics relating to such facility.
SEC. 1060 COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES REPORT ON POST-
GOVERNMENT EMPLOYMENT OF FORMER DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
OFFICIALS.
Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Comptroller General of the United States shall initiate a review
updating the information and findings contained in the May 2008
Government Accountability Office report entitled, ``Defense
Contracting: Post-Government Employment of Former DOD Officials Needs
Greater Transparency'' (GAO-08-485). The Comptroller General shall
provide an interim briefing on the status of the review to the
congressional defense committees not later than December 31, 2020, with
a report to follow by a date agreed upon with the committees.
Subtitle G--Treatment of Contaminated Water Near Military Installations
SEC. 1071. SHORT TITLE.
This subtitle may be cited as the ``Prompt and Fast Action to Stop
Damages Act of 2019''.
SEC. 1072. DEFINITIONS.
In this subtitle:
(1) PFOA.--The term ``PFOA'' means perfluorooctanoic acid.
(2) PFOS.--The term ``PFOS'' means perfluorooctane
sulfonate.
SEC. 1073. PROVISION OF WATER UNCONTAMINATED WITH PERFLUOROOCTANOIC
ACID (PFOA) AND PERFLUOROOCTANE SULFONATE (PFOS) FOR
AGRICULTURAL PURPOSES.
(a) Authority.--
(1) In general.--Using amounts authorized to be
appropriated or otherwise made available for operation and
maintenance for the military department concerned, or for
operation and maintenance Defense-wide in the case of the
Secretary of Defense, the Secretary concerned may provide water
sources uncontaminated with perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl
substances, including PFOA and PFOS, or treatment of
contaminated waters, for agricultural purposes used to produce
products destined for human consumption in an area in which a
water source has been determined pursuant to paragraph (2) to
be contaminated with such compounds by reason of activities on
a military installation under the jurisdiction of the Secretary
concerned.
(2) Applicable standard.--For purposes of paragraph (1), an
area is determined to be contaminated with PFOA or PFOS if--
(A) the level of contamination is above the
Lifetime Health Advisory for contamination with such
compounds issued by the Environmental Protection Agency
and printed in the Federal Register on May 25, 2016; or
(B) on or after the date the Food and Drug
Administration sets a standard for PFOA and PFOS in raw
agricultural commodities and milk, the level of
contamination is above such standard.
(b) Secretary Concerned Defined.--In this section, the term
``Secretary concerned'' means the following:
(1) The Secretary of the Army, with respect to the Army.
(2) The Secretary of the Navy, with respect to the Navy,
the Marine Corps, and the Coast Guard (when it is operating as
a service in the Navy).
(3) The Secretary of the Air Force, with respect to the Air
Force.
(4) The Secretary of Defense, with respect to the Defense
Agencies.
SEC. 1074. ACQUISITION OF REAL PROPERTY BY AIR FORCE.
(a) Authority.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of the Air Force may acquire
one or more parcels of real property within the vicinity of an
Air Force base that has shown signs of contamination from PFOA
and PFOS due to activities on the base and which would extend
the contiguous geographic footprint of the base and increase
the force protection standoff near critical infrastructure and
runways.
(2) Improvements and personal property.--The authority
under paragraph (1) to acquire real property described in that
paragraph shall include the authority to purchase improvements
and personal property located on that real property.
(3) Relocation expenses.--The authority under paragraph (1)
to acquire real property described in that paragraph shall
include the authority to provide Federal financial assistance
for moving costs, relocation benefits, and other expenses
incurred in accordance with the Uniform Relocation Assistance
and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (42 U.S.C.
4601 et seq.).
(b) Environmental Activities.--The Air Force shall conduct such
activities at a parcel or parcels of real property acquired under
subsection (a) as are necessary to remediate contamination from PFOA
and PFOS related to activities at the Air Force base.
(c) Funding.--Funds for the land acquisitions authorized under
subsection (a) shall be derived from amounts authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2020 for military construction or the
unobligated balances of appropriations for military construction that
are enacted after the date of the enactment of this Act.
(d) Rule of Construction.--The authority under this section
constitutes authority to carry out land acquisitions for purposes of
section 2802 of title 10, United States Code.
SEC. 1075. REMEDIATION PLAN.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to
Congress a remediation plan for cleanup of all water at or adjacent to
a military base that is contaminated with PFOA or PFOS.
(b) Study.--In preparing the remediation plan under subsection (a),
the Secretary shall conduct a study on the contamination of water at
military bases with PFOA or PFOS.
(c) Budget Amount.--The Secretary shall ensure that each budget of
the President submitted to Congress under section 1105(a) of title 31,
United States Code, requests funding in amounts necessary to address
remediation efforts under the remediation plan submitted under
subsection (a).
Subtitle H--Other Matters
SEC. 1081. REVISION TO AUTHORITIES RELATING TO MAIL SERVICE FOR MEMBERS
OF THE ARMED FORCES AND DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CIVILIANS
OVERSEAS.
(a) Eligibility for Free Mail.--Section 3401(a) of title 39, United
States Code, is amended to read as follows:
``(a)(1) First-class letter mail having the character of personal
correspondence shall be carried, at no cost to the sender, in the
manner provided by this section, when mailed by an eligible individual
described in paragraph (2) and addressed to a place within the delivery
limits of a United States post office, if--
``(A) such letter mail is mailed by the eligible
individual at an Armed Forces post office established
in an overseas area designated by the President, where
the Armed Forces of the United States are deployed for
a contingency operation as determined by the Secretary
of Defense; or
``(B) the eligible individual is hospitalized as a
result of disease or injury incurred as a result of
service in an overseas area designated by the President
under subparagraph (A).
``(2) An eligible individual described in this paragraph
is--
``(A) a member of the Armed Forces of the United
States on active duty, as defined in section 101 of
title 10; or
``(B) a civilian employee of the Department of
Defense or a military department who is providing
support to military operations.''.
(b) Surface Shipment of Mail Authorized.--Section 3401 of title 39,
United States Code, is amended--
(1) by striking subsection (c);
(2) by redesignating subsections (d), (e), (f), and (g) as
subsections (c), (d), (e), and (f), respectively; and
(3) by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
``(b) There shall be transported by surface or air, consistent with
the service purchased by the mailer, between Armed Forces post offices
or from an Armed Forces post office to a point of entry into the United
States, the following categories of mail matter which are mailed at any
such Armed Forces post office:
``(1) Letter mail communications having the character of
personal correspondence.
``(2) Any parcel exceeding 1 pound in weight but less than
70 pounds in weight and less than 130 inches in length and
girth combined.
``(3) Publications published not less frequently than once
per week and featuring principally current news of interest to
members of the Armed Forces of the United States and the
general public.''.
(c) Technical and Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Section 3401 of title 39, United States Code, is
amended in the section heading by striking ``and of friendly
foreign nations''.
(2) The table of sections for chapter 34 of title 39,
United States Code, is amended by striking the item relating to
section 3401 and inserting the following:
``3401. Mailing privileges of members of Armed Forces of the United
States.''.
SEC. 1082. ACCESS TO AND USE OF MILITARY POST OFFICES BY UNITED STATES
CITIZENS EMPLOYED OVERSEAS BY THE NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY
ORGANIZATION WHO PERFORM FUNCTIONS IN SUPPORT OF MILITARY
OPERATIONS OF THE ARMED FORCES.
Section 406 of title 39, United States Code, is amended by adding
at the end the following:
``(c)(1) The Secretary of Defense may authorize the use of a post
office established under subsection (a) in a location outside the
United States by citizens of the United States--
``(A) who--
``(i) are employed by the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization; and
``(ii) perform functions in support of the Armed
Forces of the United States; and
``(B) if the Secretary makes a written determination that
such use is--
``(i) in the best interests of the Department of
Defense; and
``(ii) otherwise authorized by applicable host
nation law or agreement.
``(2) No funds may be obligated or expended to establish, maintain,
or expand a post office established under subsection (a) for the
purpose of use described in paragraph (1) of this subsection.''.
SEC. 1083. GUARANTEE OF RESIDENCY FOR SPOUSES OF MEMBERS OF UNIFORMED
SERVICES.
(a) In General.--Title VI of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act
(50 U.S.C. 4021 et seq.) is amended by adding at the end the following
new section:
``SEC. 707. GUARANTEE OF RESIDENCY FOR SPOUSES OF SERVICEMEMBERS.
``For the purposes of establishing the residency of a spouse of a
servicemember for any purpose, the spouse of a servicemember may elect
to use the same residence as the servicemember regardless of the date
on which the marriage of the spouse and the servicemember occurred.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents in section 1(b) of
such Act is amended by inserting after the item relating to section 706
the following new item:
``Sec. 707. Guarantee of residency for spouses of servicemembers.''.
SEC. 1084. EXTENSION OF REQUIREMENT FOR BRIEFINGS ON THE NATIONAL
BIODEFENSE STRATEGY.
Section 1086(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2423; 6 U.S.C. 104) is
amended by striking ``March 1, 2019'' and inserting ``March 1, 2025''.
SEC. 1085. EXTENSION OF NATIONAL COMMISSION ON MILITARY AVIATION
SAFETY.
(a) Extension of Deadline for Report.--Section 1087(h)(2) of the
John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019
(Public Law 115-232; 132 Stat. 1995) is amended by striking ``March 1,
2020'' and inserting ``December 31, 2020''.
(b) Calendar Year 2020 Funding.--Of the amount authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2020 for the Department of Defense by this
Act, $3,000,000 shall be available for the National Commission on
Aviation Safety under section 1087 of the John S. McCain National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 in calendar year 2020.
TITLE XI--CIVILIAN PERSONNEL MATTERS
SEC. 1101. MODIFICATION OF TEMPORARY ASSIGNMENTS OF DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE EMPLOYEES TO A PRIVATE-SECTOR ORGANIZATION.
Section 1599g(e)(2)(A) of title 10, United States Code, is amended
by inserting ``permanent'' after ``without the''.
SEC. 1102. MODIFICATION OF NUMBER OF AVAILABLE APPOINTMENTS FOR CERTAIN
AGENCIES UNDER PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT AUTHORITY TO ATTRACT
EXPERTS IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING.
Section 1599h(b)(1) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``40'' and inserting
``10''; and
(2) in subparagraph (B), by striking ``100'' and inserting
``130''.
SEC. 1103. 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 most recently
amended by section 1115 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), is further
amended by striking ``2020'' and inserting ``2021''.
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 1104(a) of the John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public
Law 115-232), is further amended by striking ``through 2019'' and
inserting ``through 2020''.
SEC. 1105. REIMBURSEMENT OF FEDERAL EMPLOYEES FOR FEDERAL, STATE, AND
LOCAL INCOME TAXES INCURRED DURING TRAVEL,
TRANSPORTATION, AND RELOCATION.
(a) In General.--5724b of title 5, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in the section heading by striking ``of employees
transferred'';
(2) in subsection (a)--
(A) in the first sentence, by striking ``employee,
or by an employee and such employee's spouse (if filing
jointly), for any moving or storage'' and inserting
``individual, or by an individual and such individual's
spouse (if filing jointly), for any travel,
transportation, or relocation''; and
(B) in the second sentence, by striking
``employee'' and inserting ``individual, or the
individual''; and
(3) by striking subsection (b) and inserting the following:
``(b) For purposes of this section, the term `travel,
transportation, or relocation expenses' means all travel,
transportation, or relocation expenses reimbursed or furnished in kind
pursuant to this subchapter or chapter 41.''.
(b) Technical and Conforming Amendment.--The table of sections for
chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code, is amended by striking the
item relating to section 5724b and inserting the following:
``5724b. Taxes on reimbursements for travel, transportation, and
relocation expenses.''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall--
(1) take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act;
and
(2) apply to travel, transportation, or relocation expenses
incurred on or after that date.
TITLE XII--MATTERS RELATING TO FOREIGN NATIONS
Subtitle A--Assistance and Training
SEC. 1201. EXTENSION OF SUPPORT OF SPECIAL OPERATIONS FOR IRREGULAR
WARFARE.
Section 1202(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1639) is amended by
striking ``fiscal years 2018 through 2020'' and inserting ``fiscal
years 2020 through 2025''.
SEC. 1202. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR CROSS SERVICING AGREEMENTS FOR
LOAN OF PERSONNEL PROTECTION AND PERSONNEL SURVIVABILITY
EQUIPMENT IN COALITION OPERATIONS.
Section 1207(e) of the Carl Levin and Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015 (10 U.S.C. 2342
note) is amended by striking ``September 30, 2019'' and inserting
``September 30, 2024''.
SEC. 1203. TWO-YEAR EXTENSION OF PROGRAM AUTHORITY FOR GLOBAL SECURITY
CONTINGENCY FUND.
Section 1207 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2012 (22 U.S.C. 2151 note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (i)(1), by striking ``September 30,
2019'' and inserting ``September 30, 2021''; and
(2) in subsection (o)--
(A) in the first sentence, by striking ``September
30, 2019'' and inserting ``September 30, 2021''; and
(B) in the second sentence, by striking ``through
2019'' and inserting ``through 2021''.
SEC. 1204. MODIFICATION OF REPORTING REQUIREMENT FOR USE OF FUNDS FOR
SECURITY COOPERATION PROGRAMS AND ACTIVITIES.
Section 381(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``30 days'' and inserting ``60 days''.
SEC. 1205. INSTITUTIONAL LEGAL CAPACITY BUILDING INITIATIVE FOR FOREIGN
DEFENSE FORCES.
(a) Authorization.--The Secretary of Defense may carry out,
consistent with section 332 of title 10, United States Code, an
initiative of institutional legal capacity building in collaboration
with the appropriate institutions of one or more foreign countries to
enhance the capacity of the applicable foreign country to organize,
administer, manage, maintain, sustain, or oversee the military legal
institutions of such country.
(b) Purpose.--The purpose of the initiative under subsection (a) is
to enhance, as appropriate, the institutional legal capacity of the
applicable foreign country to do the following:
(1) Integrate legal matters into the authority, doctrine,
and policies of the defense ministry of such country.
(2) Provide appropriate legal support to commanders
conducting military operations.
(3) With respect to military law, institutionalize
education, training, and professional development for military
personnel, including military lawyers, officers, and civilian
leadership within such defense ministry.
(4) Establish a military justice system that is objective,
transparent, and impartial.
(5) Build the legal capacity of military forces to provide
equitable, transparent, and accountable institutions and
provide for anti-corruption measures within such defense
ministry.
(6) Build capacity--
(A) to provide for the protection of civilians
consistent with the law of armed conflict; and
(B) to investigate incidents of civilian
casualties.
(7) Promote understanding and observance of--
(A) the law of armed conflict;
(B) human rights and fundamental freedoms;
(C) the rule of law; and
(D) civilian control of the military.
(c) Elements.--The initiative under subsection (a) shall include
the following elements:
(1) An assessment of the organizational weaknesses for
institutional legal capacity building of the applicable foreign
country, including baseline information, an assessment of gaps
in the capability and capacity of the appropriate institutions
of such country, and any other indicator of efficacy for
purposes of monitoring and evaluation, as determined by the
Secretary.
(2) A multi-year engagement plan for building institutional
capacity that addresses the weaknesses identified under
paragraph (1), including objectives, milestones, and a
timeline.
(3) The assignment of advisors, as appropriate, to the
ministry of defense or other institutions of such country to
assist in building core legal institutional capacity,
competencies, and capabilities.
(4) A measure for monitoring the implementation of the
initiative and evaluating the efficiency and effectiveness of
the initiative, consistent with section 383 of title 10, United
States Code.
(d) Reports.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 30 days after the end of
each fiscal year beginning in fiscal year 2020 through the
fiscal year in which the initiative under subsection (a)
terminates, the Secretary shall submit to the Committee on
Armed Services of the Senate and the Committee on Armed
Services of the House of Representatives a report on the
progress of the legal capacity building activities under this
section.
(2) Matters to be included.--Each report under paragraph
(1) shall include, for the preceding fiscal year, the
following:
(A) The names of the one or more countries in which
the initiative was conducted.
(B) For each such country--
(i) the purpose of the initiative;
(ii) the objectives, milestones, and
timeline of the initiative;
(iii) the number and type of advisors
assigned and deployed to the country, as
applicable;
(iv) an assessment of the progress of the
implementation of the initiative; and
(v) an evaluation of the efficiency and
effectiveness of the initiative.
(e) Sunset.--The initiative under subsection (a) shall terminate on
the date that is five years after the date of the enactment of this
Act.
SEC. 1206. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE SUPPORT FOR STABILIZATION ACTIVITIES
IN NATIONAL SECURITY INTEREST OF THE UNITED STATES.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may, with the concurrence
of the Secretary of State and in consultation with the Administrator of
the United States Agency for International Development, provide support
for the stabilization activities of other Federal agencies specified
under subsection (c).
(b) Designation of Foreign Areas.--
(1) In general.--Amounts authorized to be provided pursuant
to this section shall be available only for support for
stabilization activities--
(A) in a country specified in paragraph (2); and
(B) that the Secretary of Defense, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of State, has determined
are in the national security interest of the United
States.
(2) Specified countries.--The countries specified in this
paragraph are as follows:
(A) Iraq.
(B) Syria.
(C) Afghanistan.
(D) Somalia.
(E) Yemen.
(F) Libya.
(c) Support to Other Agencies.--
(1) In general.--Support may be provided for stabilization
activities under subsection (a) to the Department of State, the
United States Agency for International Development, or other
Federal agencies, on a reimbursable or nonreimbursable basis.
(2) Type of support.--Support under subsection (a) may
consist of--
(A) logistic support, supplies, and services; and
(B) equipment.
(d) Requirement for a Stabilization Strategy.--
(1) Limitation.--With respect to any country specified in
subsection (b)(2), no amount of support may be provided under
subsection (a) until 15 days after the date on which the
Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of the Secretary of
State, submits to the appropriate committees of Congress a
detailed report setting forth a stabilization strategy for such
country.
(2) Elements of strategy.--The stabilization strategy
required by paragraph (1) shall set forth the following:
(A) The United States interests in conducting
stabilization activities in the country specified in
subsection (b)(2).
(B) The key foreign partners and actors in such
country.
(C) The desired end states and objectives of the
United States stabilization activities in such country.
(D) The Department of Defense support intended to
be provided for the stabilization activities of other
Federal agencies under subsection (a).
(E) Any mechanism for civil-military coordination
regarding support for stabilization activities.
(F) The mechanisms for monitoring and evaluating
the effectiveness of Department of Defense support for
United States stabilization activities in the area.
(e) Implementation in Accordance With Guidance.--Support provided
under subsection (a) shall be implemented in accordance with the
guidance of the Department of Defense entitled ``DoD Directive 3000.05
Stabilization'', dated December 13, 2018 (or successor guidance).
(f) Report.--The Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of the
Secretary of State, shall submit to the appropriate committees of
Congress on an annual basis a report that includes the following:
(1) The identification of each foreign area within
countries specified in subsection (b)(2) for which support to
stabilization has occurred.
(2) The total amount spent by the Department of Defense,
broken out by recipient Federal agency and activity.
(3) An assessment of the contribution of each activity
toward greater stability.
(4) An articulation of any plans for continued Department
of Defense support to stabilization in the specified foreign
area in order to maintain or improve stability.
(5) Other matters as the Secretary of Defense considers to
be appropriate.
(g) Use of Funds.--
(1) Source of funds.--Amounts for activities carried out
under this section in a fiscal year shall be derived only from
amounts authorized to be appropriated for such fiscal year for
the Department of Defense for Operation and Maintenance,
Defense-wide.
(2) Limitation.--Not more than $25,000,000 in each fiscal
year is authorized to be used to provide nonreimbursable
support under this section.
(h) Expiration.--The authority provided under this section may not
be exercised after December 31, 2020.
(i) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Appropriate committees of congress.--The term
``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(A) the Committee on Armed Services and the
Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
(B) the Committee on Armed Services and the
Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives.
(2) Logistic support, supplies, and services.--The term
``logistic support, supplies, and services'' has the meaning
given the term in section 2350(1) of title 10 United States
Code.
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.--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 1221 of the John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public
Law 115-232), is further amended by striking ``December 31, 2020'' and
inserting ``December 31, 2021''.
(b) Excess Defense Articles.--Subsection (i)(2) of such section
1222, as so amended, is further amended by striking ``December 31,
2020'' each place it appears and inserting ``December 31, 2021''.
SEC. 1212. AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES FUND.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2020 for the Afghanistan Security Forces
Fund, as established by section 1513 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 110-181; 122 Stat.
428), as most recently amended by section 1223(b) of the John S. McCain
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law
115-232), $4,803,978,000.
(b) 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 2020 shall be subject
to the conditions contained in subsections (b) through (f) of such
section 1513.
(c) Use of Funds.--
(1) Type of assistance.--Subsection (b)(2) of such section
1513 is amended by inserting ``(including program and security
assistance management support)'' after ``services''.
(d) Equipment Disposition.--
(1) Acceptance of certain equipment.--Subject to paragraph
(2), the Secretary of Defense may accept equipment that is
procured using amounts authorized to be appropriated for the
Afghanistan Security Forces Fund by 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 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), the Commander of United States forces in
Afghanistan shall consider alternatives to acceptance of the
equipment by the Secretary. An explanation of each
determination, including the basis for the determination and
the alternatives considered, shall be included in the relevant
quarterly report under paragraph (5).
(4) Treatment as department of defense stocks.--Equipment
accepted under 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.--
(A) In general.--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 shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report
describing the equipment accepted during the period
covered by such report under the following:
(i) This subsection.
(ii) 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).
(iii) 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).
(B) Elements.--Each report under subparagraph (A)
shall include a list of all equipment accepted during
the period covered by the report and treated as stocks
of the Department of Defense and copies of the
determinations made under paragraph (2), as required by
paragraph (3).
(e) Security of Afghan Women.--
(1) In general.--Of the funds available to the Department
of Defense for the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund for fiscal
year 2020, it is the goal that $25,000,000, but in no event
less than $10,000,000, shall be used for--
(A) the recruitment, integration, retention,
training, and treatment of women in the Afghan National
Defense and 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 Defense and 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 Defense and
Security Forces;
(E) improvements to infrastructure that address the
requirements of women serving in the Afghan National
Defense and Security Forces, including appropriate
equipment for female security and police forces, and
transportation for policewomen to their station;
(F) support for Afghan National Police Family
Response Units; and
(G) security provisions for high-profile female
police and army officers.
(f) Assessment of Efforts to Build Capacity in the Afghan National
Defense and Security Forces.--
(1) Assessment required.--Not later than 90 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
Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and the Committee on
Armed Services of the House of Representatives an assessment
that describes the following:
(A) The integrated capacity development strategies
for--
(i) the Ministry of Defense and the
Ministry of Interior of Afghanistan; and
(ii) the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization-led Train Advise Assist Commands
and Task Forces at the national and regional
levels in Afghanistan.
(B) An articulation of the key capabilities to be
developed and improved with respect to the Ministry of
Defense, the Ministry of Interior, and the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization-led Train Advise Assist
Commands and Task Forces, and the overall plan
(including timeframes, budgets, and specific
initiatives) to achieve the intended outcomes.
(C) The specific roles of Department of Defense-
funded advisors in building the capacity of the
Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of Interior of
Afghanistan and the Afghan National Defense and
Security Forces at the national and regional levels,
and the manner in which such roles align with the
development strategy referred to in subparagraph (A).
(D) The metrics used to assess progress on the
recruitment, integration, retention, training, and
treatment of women in the Afghan National Defense and
Security Forces, and a progress report on such
recruitment, integration, retention, training, and
treatment.
(E) An explanation of the assessment, monitoring,
and evaluation mechanisms in place to assess the
relevance, effectiveness, and sustainability of each
specific initiative and progress made toward the
intended outcomes identified under subparagraph (B).
(F) Any other matter the Secretary considers
appropriate.
SEC. 1213. EXTENSION OF COMMANDERS' EMERGENCY RESPONSE PROGRAM.
Section 1201 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2012 (Public Law 112-81; 125 Stat. 1619), as most recently amended
by the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), is further amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``December 31, 2019''
and inserting ``December 31, 2020'';
(2) in subsection (b), by striking ``of fiscal years 2017
through 2019'' and inserting ``for each of fiscal years 2017
through 2020''; and
(3) in subsection (f), in the first sentence, by striking
``December 31, 2019'' and inserting ``December 31, 2020''.
SEC. 1214. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF REIMBURSEMENT OF CERTAIN
COALITION NATIONS FOR SUPPORT PROVIDED TO UNITED STATES
MILITARY OPERATIONS.
Section 1233(a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2008 (Public Law 110-181; 122 Stat. 393), as most recently
amended by section 1225 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), is further
amended to read as follows:
``(a) Authority.--From funds made available for the Department of
Defense for the period beginning on October 1, 2019, and ending on
December 31, 2020, for overseas contingency operations for operation
and maintenance, Defense-wide activities, the Secretary of Defense may
reimburse any key cooperating nation (other than Pakistan) for--
``(1) logistical and military support provided by that
nation to or in connection with United States military
operations in Afghanistan, Iraq, or Syria; and
``(2) logistical, military, and other support, including
access, provided by that nation to or in connection with United
States military operations described in paragraph (1).''.
SEC. 1215. SUPPORT FOR RECONCILIATION ACTIVITIES LED BY THE GOVERNMENT
OF AFGHANISTAN.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense may, with the concurrence
of the Secretary of State, provide covered support for reconciliation
activities to one or more designated persons or entities or Federal
agencies.
(b) Designation.--Not later than 15 days before the Secretary of
Defense designates an individual or organization as a designated person
or entity, the Secretary shall notify the congressional defense
committees of the intent of the Secretary to make such designation.
(c) Reimbursement.--
(1) Designated persons or entities.--The Secretary of
Defense may provide covered support to a designated person or
entity on a reimbursable or nonreimbursable basis.
(2) Federal agencies.--The Secretary of Defense may provide
covered support to a Federal agency on a reimbursable or
nonreimbursable basis.
(d) Location of Covered Support.--
(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), the
Secretary of Defense may only provide covered support within
Afghanistan.
(2) Exception.--Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the
Secretary of Defense may provide covered support in Pakistan if
the Secretary determines, and certifies to the congressional
defense committees, that providing covered support in Pakistan
is in the national security interest of the United States.
(e) Notification.--Not later than 15 days before the date on which
the Secretary of Defense provides covered support to a nongovernmental
designated person or entity or provides covered support in Pakistan,
the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense committees
written notice that includes the intended recipient of such covered
support and the specific covered support to be provided.
(f) Funding.--
(1) Source of funds.--Amounts for covered support may only
be derived from amounts authorized to be appropriated for the
Department of Defense for operation and maintenance.
(2) Limitation.--Not more than $15,000,000 may be used for
nonreimbursable covered support.
(g) Rule of Construction.--Covered support shall not be construed
to violate section 2339, 2339A, or 2339B of title 18, United States
Code.
(h) Reports.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, and quarterly thereafter, the
Secretary of Defense shall, in coordination with the Secretary
of State, submit to the congressional defense committees a
report on covered support during the preceding 90-day period.
(2) Elements.--Each report under this subsection shall
include, for the preceding reporting period, the following:
(A) A summary of the ongoing reconciliation
activities for which covered support was provided.
(B) A description of the covered support, by class
or type, and the designated person or entity or Federal
agency that received each class or type of covered
support.
(C) The total dollar amount of each class or type
of covered support, including budget details.
(D) The intended duration of each provision of
covered support.
(E) Any other matter the Secretary of Defense
considers appropriate.
(i) Sunset.--The authority to carry out this section shall
terminate on December 31, 2020.
(j) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Covered support.--The term ``covered support'' means
logistic support, supplies, and services (as defined in section
2350 of title 10, United States Code) and security provided
under this section.
(2) Designated person or entity.--
(A) In general.--The term ``designated person or
entity'' means an individual or organization designated
by the Secretary of Defense as necessary to facilitate
a reconciliation activity.
(B) Exclusion.--The term ``designated person or
entity'' does not include a Federal agency.
(3) Reconciliation activity.--The term ``reconciliation
activity'' means any activity intended to support, facilitate,
or enable a political settlement between the Government of
Afghanistan and the Taliban for the purpose of ending the war
in Afghanistan.
(4) Security.--The term ``security'' means any measure
determined by the Secretary of Defense to be necessary to
protect reconciliation activities from hostile acts.
SEC. 1216. SENSE OF SENATE ON SPECIAL IMMIGRANT VISA PROGRAM FOR AFGHAN
ALLIES.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the special immigrant visa program for Afghan allies is
critical to the mission in Afghanistan and the long-term
interests of the United States;
(2) maintaining a robust special immigrant visa program for
Afghan allies is necessary to support United States Government
personnel in Afghanistan who need translation, interpretation,
security, and other services;
(3) Afghan allies routinely risk their lives to assist
United States military and diplomatic personnel;
(4) honoring the commitments made to Afghan allies with
respect to such special immigrant visa program is essential to
ensuring the continued service and safety of such allies; and
(5) an additional 4,000 visas should be made available to
principal aliens who are eligible for special immigrant status
under the Afghan Allies Protection Act of 2009 (8 U.S.C. 1101
note) to prevent harm to the operations of the United States
Government in Afghanistan.
Subtitle C--Matters Relating to Syria, Iraq, and Iran
SEC. 1221. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO PROVIDE ASSISTANCE TO VETTED
SYRIAN GROUPS.
(a) Nature of Assistance.--Subsection (a) of 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), as most
recently amended by section 1231(a) of the John S. McCain National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), is
further amended--
(1) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by striking
``with a cost'' and all that follows through ``December 31,
2019'' and inserting ``, and sustainment to appropriately
vetted Syrian groups and individuals, through December 31,
2020'';
(2) in paragraph (1), by striking ``Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant'' and all that follows through the period at the
end and inserting the following: ``Islamic State of Iraq and
Syria (ISIS).''; and
(3) by striking paragraphs (2) and (3) and inserting the
following new paragraphs:
``(2) Securing territory formerly controlled by the Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria.
``(3) Protecting the United States and its friends and
allies from the threats posed by the Islamic State of Iraq and
Syria, al Qaeda, and associated forces in Syria.
``(4) Supporting the temporary detention and repatriation
of Islamic State of Iraq and Syria foreign terrorist fighters
in accordance with the laws of armed conflict and the United
Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, done at
Geneva July 28, 1951 (as made applicable by the Protocol
Relating to the Status of Refugees, done at New York January
31, 1967 (19 UST 6223)).''.
(b) Scope of Quarterly Progress Reports.--Subsection (d) of such
section, as most recently amended by section 1223(b) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131
Stat. 1653), is further amended to read as follows:
``(d) Quarterly Progress Reports.--
``(1) In general.--Beginning on January 15, 2020, and every
90 days thereafter, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination
with the Secretary of State, shall submit to the appropriate
congressional committees and leadership of the House of
Representatives and the Senate a progress report.
``(2) Matters to be included.--Each progress report under
paragraph (1) shall include, based on the most recent quarterly
information, the following:
``(A) A description of the appropriately vetted
recipients receiving assistance under subsection (a).
``(B) A description of training, equipment,
supplies, stipends, and other support provided to
appropriately vetted recipients under subsection (a)
and a statement of the amount of funds expended for
such purposes during the period covered by the report.
``(C) Any misuse or loss of provided training and
equipment and how such misuse or loss is being
mitigated.
``(D) An assessment of the recruitment, throughput,
and retention rates of appropriately vetted recipients.
``(E) An assessment of the operational
effectiveness of appropriately vetted recipients in
meeting the purposes specified in subsection (a).
``(F) A description of United States Government
stabilization objectives and activities carried out in
areas formerly controlled by the Islamic State of Iraq
and Syria, including significant projects and funding
associated with such projects.
``(G) A description of coalition contributions to
the purposes specified in subsection (a) and other
related stabilization activities.
``(H) With respect to Islamic State of Iraq and
Syria foreign terrorist fighters--
``(i) an estimate of the number of such
individuals being detained by appropriately
vetted Syrian groups and individuals;
``(ii) an estimate of the number of such
individuals that have been repatriated and the
countries to which such individuals have been
repatriated; and
``(iii) a description of United States
Government support provided to facilitate the
repatriation of such individuals.
``(I) An assessment of the extent to which
appropriately vetted Syrian groups and individuals have
enabled progress toward establishing inclusive,
representative, accountable, and civilian-led
governance and security structures in territories
liberated from the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.''.
(c) Elimination of Reprogramming Requirement.--Such section is
further amended by striking subsection (f).
(d) Inclusion of Support for Stabilization Activities.--Such
section is further amended by inserting after subsection (e) the
following new subsection (f):
``(f) Support for Stabilization Activities.--
``(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense may, with the
concurrence of the Secretary of State and in consultation with
the Administrator of the United States Agency for International
Development, provide support for the stabilization activities
of the Department of State, the United States Agency for
International Development, and any other Federal agency on a
reimburseable or nonreimburseable basis.
``(2) Types of support.--The support provided under
paragraph (1) may consist of--
``(A) logistic support, supplies, and services; or
``(B) equipment.''.
(e) Per Project and Aggregate Cost Limitations for Construction and
Repair Projects.--Subsection (l) of such section, as added by section
1223(d) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018
(Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1653), is amended to read as follows:
``(l) Limitation on Cost of Construction and Repair Projects.--
``(1) In general.--The cost of construction and repair
projects carried out under this section may not exceed, in any
fiscal year--
``(A) $4,000,000 per project; or
``(B) $12,000,000 in the aggregate.
``(2) Foreign contributions.--The limitation under
paragraph (1) shall not apply to the expenditure of foreign
contributions in excess of the per-project or aggregate
limitation set forth in that paragraph.''.
(f) Inclusion of Limitation Pending Report.--Such section is
further amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:
``(n) Limitation Pending Report.--None of the funds authorized to
be appropriated for fiscal year 2020 for the Department of Defense may
be obligated or expended for activities under this section until 30
days after the date on which the Secretary of Defense submits an
unclassified report, with a classified annex if necessary, to the
congressional defense committees setting forth the following:
``(1) A description of the efforts the United States will
undertake to train and equip appropriately vetted Syrian groups
and individuals for the purposes described in subsection (a).
``(2) A detailed description of the appropriately vetted
Syrian groups and individuals to be trained and equipped under
this section, including a description of their geographical
locations, demographic profiles, political affiliations, and
current capabilities.
``(3) A detailed description of planned capabilities,
including categories of training, equipment, financial support,
sustainment, and supplies, intended to be provided to
appropriately vetted Syrian groups and individuals under this
section, and timelines for delivery.
``(4) A description of the planned posture of United States
forces and the planned level of engagement by such forces with
appropriately vetted Syrian groups and individuals, including
the oversight of equipment provided under this section and the
activities conducted by such appropriately vetted Syrian groups
and individuals.
``(5) An explanation of the processes and mechanisms for
local commanders of such forces to exercise command and control
of the elements of the appropriately vetted Syrian groups and
individuals after such elements have been trained and equipped
under this section.
``(6) A detailed explanation of the relationship between
appropriately vetted recipients and civilian governance
authorities and a description of efforts to ensure
appropriately vetted recipients are subject to the control of
competent civilian authorities.''.
SEC. 1222. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY AND LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS TO
PROVIDE ASSISTANCE TO COUNTER THE ISLAMIC STATE OF IRAQ
AND SYRIA.
(a) Extension.--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 1233(a) of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), is further
amended by striking ``December 31, 2020'' and inserting ``December 31,
2021''.
(b) Funding.--Subsection (g) of such section, as most recently
amended by section 1233(b) of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019, is further amended--
(1) by striking ``fiscal year 2019'' and inserting ``fiscal
year 2020''; and
(2) by striking ``$850,000,000'' and inserting
``$645,000,000''.
(c) Limitation on Use of Funds.--Of the amounts authorized to be
appropriated for fiscal year 2020 by this Act for activities under such
section 1236, as amended by subsection (a), not more than $375,000,000
may be obligated or expended for such activities until the date on
which the Secretary of Defense submits to the congressional defense
committees a report setting forth the following:
(1) An identification of the specific units of the Iraqi
Security Forces to receive training and equipment or other
support in fiscal year 2020.
(2) A plan for ensuring that any vehicles or equipment
provided to the Iraqi Security Forces pursuant to such
authority are maintained in subsequent fiscal years using funds
of Iraq.
(3) An estimate, by fiscal year, of the funding anticipated
to be required for support of the Iraqi Security Forces during
the five fiscal years beginning in fiscal year 2020.
(4) A plan for normalizing assistance to the Iraqi Security
Forces under chapter 16 of title 10, United States Code,
beginning in fiscal year 2020.
(5) A detailed plan for the obligation and expenditure of
the funds requested for fiscal year 2020 for the Department of
Defense for stipends.
(6) A plan for the transition to the Government of Iraq the
responsibility for funding for stipends for any fiscal year
after fiscal year 2020.
SEC. 1223. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO SUPPORT
OPERATIONS AND ACTIVITIES OF THE OFFICE OF SECURITY
COOPERATION IN IRAQ.
(a) Authority.--Section 1215 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended--
(1) by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
``(a) Authority.--The Secretary of Defense may support United
States Government security cooperation activities in Iraq by providing
funds for operations and activities of the Office of Security
Cooperation in Iraq.'';
(2) by striking subsection (f);
(3) in subsection (g)(2), by striking subparagraph (F); and
(4) by redesignating subsection (g) as subsection (f).
(b) Types of Support.--Subsection (b) of such section is amended by
striking ``life support, transportation and personal security, and
construction and renovation of facilities'' and inserting ``life
support, transportation, and personal security''.
(c) Amount Available.--Such section is further amended--
(1) in subsection (c)--
(A) by striking ``fiscal year 2019'' and inserting
``fiscal year 2020''; and
(B) by striking ``$45,300,000'' and inserting
``$30,000,000''; and
(2) in subsection (d), by striking ``fiscal year 2019'' and
inserting ``fiscal year 2020''.
(d) Coverage of Costs of the Office of Security Cooperation in
Iraq.--Subsection (e) of such section is amended by striking
``activities of security assistance teams in Iraq in connection with
such sale'' and inserting ``activities of the Office of Security
Cooperation in Iraq in excess of the amount set forth in subsection
(c)''.
SEC. 1224. COORDINATOR OF UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT ACTIVITIES AND
MATTERS IN CONNECTION WITH DETAINEES WHO ARE MEMBERS OF
THE ISLAMIC STATE OF IRAQ AND SYRIA.
(a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the President shall, in consultation with the
Secretary of Defense, the Secretary of State, the Director of National
Intelligence, and the Attorney General, designate an existing official
within the Executive Branch to serve as senior-level coordinator to
coordinate, in conjunction with the lead and other relevant agencies,
all matters for the United States Government relating to the long-term
disposition of members of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS)
and associated forces (in this section referred to as ``ISIS
detainees''), including all matters in connection with--
(1) repatriation, transfer, prosecution, and intelligence-
gathering; and
(2) all multilateral and international engagements led by
the Department of State and other agencies that are related to
the current and future handling, detention, and prosecution of
ISIS detainees.
(b) Retention of Authority.--The appointment of a senior-level
coordinator pursuant to subsection (a) shall not deprive any agency of
any authority to independently perform functions of that agency.
(c) Annual Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, and not less frequently than once
each year thereafter through December 31, 2024, the individual
designated under subsection (a) shall submit to the appropriate
committees of Congress a detailed report regarding the
following ISIS detainees:
(A) Alexanda Kotey.
(B) El Shafee Elsheikh.
(C) Aine Lesley Davis.
(D) Umm Sayyaf.
(E) Any other high-value ISIS detainee that the
coordinator reasonably determines to be subject to
criminal prosecution in the United States.
(2) Elements.--The report under paragraph (1) shall
include, at a minimum, the following:
(A) A detailed description of the facilities where
ISIS detainees described in paragraph (1) are being
held.
(B) An analysis of all United States efforts to
prosecute ISIS detainees described in paragraph (1) and
the outcomes of such efforts. Any information, the
disclosure of which may violate Department of Justice
policy or law, relating to a prosecution or
investigation may be withheld from a report under
paragraph (1).
(C) A detailed description of any option to
expedite prosecution of any ISIS detainee described in
paragraph (1), including in a court of competent
jurisdiction outside of the United States.
(D) An analysis of factors on the ground in Syria
and Iraq that may result in the unintended release of
ISIS detainees described in paragraph (1), and an
assessment of any measures available to mitigate such
releases.
(E) A detailed description of all multilateral and
other international efforts or proposals that would
assist in the prosecution of ISIS detainees described
in paragraph (1).
(F) An analysis of all efforts between the United
States and partner countries within the Global
Coalition to Defeat ISIS or other countries to share
intelligence or evidence that may aid in the
prosecution of members of the Islamic State of Iraq and
Syria and associated forces, and any legal obstacles
that may hinder such efforts.
(G) An analysis of the manner in which the United
States Government communicates on such proposals and
efforts to the families of United States citizens
believed to be a victim of a criminal act by an ISIS
detainee.
(3) Form.--The report under paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
(d) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Relations, the Committee on the Judiciary, the Select
Committee on Intelligence, and the Committee on Appropriations
of the Senate; and
(2) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Affairs, the Committee on the Judiciary, the Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence, and the Committee on
Appropriations of the House of Representatives.
SEC. 1225. REPORT ON LESSONS LEARNED FROM EFFORTS TO LIBERATE MOSUL AND
RAQQAH FROM CONTROL OF THE ISLAMIC STATE OF IRAQ AND
SYRIA.
(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 on lessons learned from
coalition operations to liberate Mosul, Iraq, and Raqqah, Syria, from
control of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
a description of lessons learned in connection with each of the
following:
(1) Combat in densely populated urban environments.
(2) Enablement of partner forces, including unique aspects
of conducting combined operations with regular and irregular
forces.
(3) Advise, assist, and accompany efforts, including such
efforts conducted remotely.
(4) Integration of United States general purpose and
special operations forces.
(5) Integration of United States and international forces.
(6) Irregular and unconventional warfare approaches,
including the application of training and doctrine by special
operations and general purpose forces.
(7) Use of command, control, communications, computer,
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems and
techniques.
(8) Logistics.
(9) Information operations.
(10) Targeting and weaponeering, including efforts to avoid
civilian casualties and other collateral damage.
(11) Facilitation of flows of internally displaced people
and humanitarian assistance.
(12) Such other matters as the Secretary considers
appropriate and could benefit training, doctrine, and
resourcing of future operations.
(c) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted
in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
Subtitle D--Matters Relating to Europe and the Russian Federation
SEC. 1231. 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 2020 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 prohibition under subsection (a) if
the Secretary of Defense--
(1) determines that a waiver is in the national security
interest of the United States; and
(2) on the date on which the waiver is invoked, submits a
notification of the waiver and a justification of the reason
for seeking the waiver to--
(A) the Committee on Armed Services and the
Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
(B) the Committee on Armed Services and the
Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives.
SEC. 1232. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR WITHDRAWAL OF ARMED FORCES
FROM EUROPE IN THE EVENT OF UNITED STATES WITHDRAWAL FROM
THE NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if the President
provides notice of withdrawal of the United States from the North
Atlantic Treaty, done at Washington D.C. April 4, 1949, pursuant to
Article 13 of the Treaty, during the one-year period beginning on the
date of such notice, no funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act
may be obligated, expended, or reprogrammed for the withdrawal of the
United States Armed Forces from Europe.
SEC. 1233. EXTENSION OF LIMITATION ON MILITARY COOPERATION BETWEEN THE
UNITED STATES AND THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION.
Subsection (a) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2488), as most recently
amended by section 1247 of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), is further
amended in the matter preceding paragraph (1) by striking ``fiscal year
2017, 2018, or 2019'' and inserting ``fiscal year 2017, 2018, 2019, or
2020''.
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 most recently amended
by section 1246 of the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232), is further amended--
(1) in subsection (a), in the matter preceding paragraph
(1), by striking ``in coordination with the Secretary of
State'' and inserting ``with the concurrence of the Secretary
of State'';
(2) in subsection (b)--
(A) by amending paragraph (11) to read as follows:
``(11) Air defense and coastal defense radars, and systems
to support effective command and control and integration of air
defense and coastal defense capabilities.'';
(B) by redesignating paragraphs (14) and (15) as
paragraphs (15) and (16), respectively;
(C) by inserting after paragraph (13) the following
new paragraph (14):
``(14) Coastal defense and anti-ship missile systems.'';
and
(D) in paragraph (15), as so redesignated, by
striking ``paragraphs (1) through (13)'' and inserting
``paragraphs (1) through (14)'';
(3) in subsection (c), by amending paragraph (5) to read as
follows:
``(5) Lethal assistance.--Of the funds available for fiscal
year 2020 pursuant to subsection (f)(5), $100,000,000 shall be
available only for lethal assistance described in paragraphs
(2), (3), (11), (12), and (14) of subsection (b).'';
(4) in subsection (f), by adding at the end the following
new paragraph:
``(5) For fiscal year 2020, $300,000,000.''; and
(5) in subsection (h), by striking ``December 31, 2021''
and inserting ``December 31, 2022''.
SEC. 1235. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITY FOR TRAINING FOR EASTERN EUROPEAN
NATIONAL SECURITY FORCES IN THE COURSE OF MULTILATERAL
EXERCISES.
Subsection (h) of section 1251 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (10 U.S.C. 333 note) is
amended--
(1) in the first sentence, by striking ``December 31,
2020'' and inserting ``December 31, 2022''; and
(2) in the second sentence, by striking ``for for the
period beginning on October 1, 2015, and ending on December 31,
2020'' and inserting ``for the period beginning on October 1,
2015, and ending on December 31, 2022''.
SEC. 1236. LIMITATION ON TRANSFER OF F-35 AIRCRAFT TO THE REPUBLIC OF
TURKEY.
(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 may be used to do the
following:
(1) Transfer, or facilitate the transfer of, F-35 aircraft
to the territory of the Republic of Turkey.
(2) Transfer equipment, intellectual property, or technical
data necessary for or related to the maintenance or support of
the F-35 aircraft in the territory of the Republic of Turkey.
(3) Construct facilities for or otherwise associated with
the storage of F-35 aircraft in the territory of the Republic
of Turkey.
(b) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of the
Secretary of State, may waive the limitation under subsection (a) if
the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State 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 certification that the Government of Turkey--
(1) has not accepted delivery of the S-400 air and missile
defense system from the Russian Federation; and
(2) has provided reliable assurances that the Government of
Turkey will not accept delivery of the S-400 air and missile
defense system from the Russian Federation in the future.
SEC. 1237. MODIFICATIONS OF BRIEFING, NOTIFICATION, AND REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO NON-COMPLIANCE BY THE RUSSIAN
FEDERATION WITH ITS OBLIGATIONS UNDER THE INF TREATY.
(a) Briefing Requirement.--Section 1244(d) of the Carl Levin and
Howard P. ``Buck'' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2015 (Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3565; 22 U.S.C. 2593a note)--
(1) by striking ``At the time'' and inserting the
following:
``(A) In general.--At the time''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(B) Sunset.--The briefing requirement under
subparagraph (A) shall be in effect so long as the INF
Treaty remains in force.''.
(b) Notification Requirement Relating to Coordination With
Allies.--Section 1243(c) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1601) is amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) Sunset.--The notification requirement under paragraph
(1) shall be in effect so long as the INF Treaty remains in
force.''.
(c) Notification Requirement Relating to Development, Deployment,
or Test of a System Inconsistent With INF Treaty.--Section 1244(a) of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law
115-91; 131 Stat. 1673; 22 U.S.C. 2593a note) is amended by adding at
the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) Sunset.--The notification requirement under paragraph
(1) shall be in effect so long as the INF Treaty remains in
force.''.
(d) Reporting Requirement Under Ukraine Freedom Support Act of
2014.--Section 10(c) of the Ukraine Freedom Support Act of 2014 (22
U.S.C. 8929) is amended by adding at the end the following new
paragraph:
``(3) Sunset.--The reporting requirement under paragraph
(1) shall be in effect so long as the INF Treaty remains in
force.''.
SEC. 1238. EXTENSION AND MODIFICATION OF SECURITY ASSISTANCE FOR BALTIC
NATIONS FOR JOINT PROGRAM FOR INTEROPERABILITY AND
DETERRENCE AGAINST AGGRESSION.
(a) Additional Defense Articles and Services.--Subsection (c) of
section 1279D of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1702; 22 U.S.C. 2753 note) is
amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (5) as paragraph (6); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (4) the following new
paragraph (5):
``(5) Command, control, communications, computers,
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR)
equipment.''.
(b) Funding.--Subsection (f) of such section is amended--
(1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``$100,000,000'' and
inserting ``$125,000,000''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) Matching amount.--The amount of assistance provided
under subsection (a) for procurement described in subsection
(b) may not exceed the aggregate amount contributed to such
procurement by the Baltic nations.''.
(c) Extension.--Subsection (g) of such section is amended by
striking ``December 31, 2020'' and inserting ``December 31, 2022''.
SEC. 1239. REPORT ON NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION READINESS
INITIATIVE.
(a) Report.--Not later than October 1, 2020, the Secretary of
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Readiness Initiative,
which shall include assessments of the following:
(1) The number of units North Atlantic Treaty Organization
allies have pledged against the benchmark to provide an
additional 30 air attack squadrons, 30 naval combat vessels,
and 30 mechanized battalions ready to fight in not more than 30
days.
(2) The procedure by which the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization certifies, reports, and ensures that the Supreme
Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) maintains a detailed
understanding of the readiness of the forces described in
paragraph (1).
(3) The North Atlantic Treaty Organization plan to maintain
the readiness of such forces in future years.
(b) Form.--The report required by subsection (a) shall be submitted
in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
SEC. 1240. REPORTS ON CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY
ORGANIZATION.
(a) In General.--Beginning in 2020, and annually thereafter through
2025, not later than 30 days after the date on which the annual report
of the Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization for
the preceding calendar year is published, the Secretary of Defense, in
consultation with the Commander of United States European Command,
shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report that
includes the following:
(1) A link to an electronic version of such annual report
of the Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization.
(2) A summary of the key findings of such annual report.
(3) A description of the significant financial
contributions by member countries of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization that support the presence or operations of the
United States Armed Forces in Europe.
(4) An assessment of the progress of each member country of
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization toward meeting the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization capability targets for such member
country.
(5) An assessment of North Atlantic Treaty Organization
capability and capacity shortfalls that may be addressed
through investment by North Atlantic Treaty Organization member
countries that have not met the Defense Investment Pledge made
at the 2014 summit of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in
Wales.
(6) A description of the contribution of each member
country of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to the NATO
Readiness Initiative.
(7) A description of--
(A) the personnel and financial contributions of
each member country of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization to military or stability operations in
which the United States Armed Forces are a participant;
and
(B) any limitation placed by such member country on
the use of such contributions.
(8) An assessment of the compatibility and alignment of
United States and North Atlantic Treaty Organization
contingency plans, including recommendations to reduce the risk
of executing such plans.
(9) An assessment of current North Atlantic Treaty
Organization initiatives, and any recommendations for future
reforms or initiatives, to accelerate the speed of decision and
deployability of North Atlantic Treaty Organization forces.
(b) Form.--Each report under 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. 1241. FUTURE YEARS PLANS FOR EUROPEAN DETERRENCE INITIATIVE.
(a) Plan Required.--
(1) Initial plan.--
(A) In general.--Not later than December 31, 2019,
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 (EDI) for fiscal year 2020 and
not fewer than the four succeeding fiscal years.
(B) Matters to be included.--The plan required
under subparagraph (A) shall include the following:
(i) A description of the objectives of the
European Deterrence Initiative, including a
description of--
(I) the intended force structure
and posture of the assigned and
allocated forces within the area of
responsibility of the United States
European Command for the last fiscal
year of the plan; and
(II) the manner in which such force
structure and posture support the
implementation of the National Defense
Strategy.
(ii) An assessment of capabilities
requirements to achieve the objectives of the
European Deterrence Initiative.
(iii) An assessment of logistics
requirements, including personnel, equipment,
supplies, storage, and maintenance needs, to
achieve the objectives of the European
Deterrence Initiative.
(iv) An identification of required
infrastructure and military construction
investments to achieve the objectives of the
European Deterrence Initiative, including
potential infrastructure investments by host
nations.
(v) An assessment of security cooperation
investments required to achieve the objectives
of the European Deterrence Initiative.
(vi) A plan to fully resource United States
force posture and capabilities, including--
(I) a detailed assessment of the
resources necessary to address the
requirements described in clauses (i)
through (v), including specific cost
estimates for each project in the
European Deterrence Initiative to
support increased presence, exercises
and training, enhanced prepositioning,
improved infrastructure, and building
partnership capacity; and
(II) a detailed timeline to achieve
the intended force structure and
posture described in clause (i)(I).
(2) Subsequent plan.--
(A) In general.--Not later than the date on which
the Secretary submits to Congress the budget request
for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2021, the
Secretary, 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 for fiscal year 2021 and not fewer than the
four succeeding fiscal years.
(B) Matters to be included.--The plan required
under subparagraph (A) shall include--
(i) the matters described in subparagraph
(B) of paragraph (1); and
(ii) a detailed explanation of any
significant modifications in requirements or
resources, as compared to the plan submitted
under that paragraph.
(b) Form.--The plans required under subsection (a) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
SEC. 1242. MODIFICATION OF REPORTING REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO THE OPEN
SKIES TREATY.
(a) Plan for Implementation Flights.--Section 1235(a) of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law
115-91; 131 Stat. 1660) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) by striking ``the President'' and inserting
``the Secretary of Defense''; and
(B) by striking ``with respect to such fiscal
year'' and inserting ``with respect to the calendar
year in which the flight is to be conducted'';
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``during such fiscal
year'' and inserting ``during such calendar year''; and
(3) in paragraph (3), by striking ``with respect to a
fiscal year'' and inserting ``with respect to a calendar
year''.
(b) Quarterly Reports on Observation Flights by the Russian
Federation.--
(1) In general.--Paragraph (1) of subsection (c) of section
1236 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2491) is amended by
striking ``on a quarterly basis'' and inserting ``on an annual
basis''.
(2) Conforming amendment.--Such subsection is further
amended, in the subsection heading, by striking ``Quarterly''
and inserting ``Annual''.
SEC. 1243. REPORT ON NUCLEAR WEAPONS OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION AND
NUCLEAR MODERNIZATION OF THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA.
(a) In General.--Not later than February 15, 2020, the Secretary of
Defense, in coordination with the Director of National Intelligence and
the Secretary of State, shall submit to the appropriate committees of
Congress a report that includes the following:
(1) An assessment of the deployed nuclear weapons of the
Russian Federation not covered by the New START Treaty.
(2) An assessment of the nuclear weapons of the Russian
Federation in development that would not be covered by the New
START Treaty.
(3) An assessment of the strategic nuclear weapons of the
Russian Federation that are not deployed.
(4) An assessment of the efforts of the People's Republic
of China with respect to nuclear modernization.
(5) The implications of such assessments with respect to
the limitations on strategic weapons of the United States and
the Russian Federation under the New START Treaty.
(b) Form.--The report under subsection (a) shall be submitted in
unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
(c) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Appropriate committees of congress.--The term
``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(A) the Committee on Armed Services, the Select
Committee on Intelligence, and the Committee on Foreign
Relations of the Senate; and
(B) the Committee on Armed Services, the Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence, and the Committee on
Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.
(2) 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 on April 8, 2010, and
entered into force on February 5, 2011.
SEC. 1244. SENSE OF SENATE ON THE 70TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE NORTH
ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANIZATION.
Commemorating the 70th anniversary of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO), the Senate--
(1) recognizes the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as
the most successful military alliance in history, founded on
the principles of democracy, individual liberty, and the rule
of law;
(2) commends the singular contributions of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization to the security, prosperity, and
freedom of its members;
(3) upholds membership in the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization as a cornerstone of the security and national
defense of the United States;
(4) affirms the ironclad commitment of the United States to
uphold its obligations under the North Atlantic Treaty,
including under Article 5 of such treaty;
(5) honors the contributions of North Atlantic Treaty
Organization allies to the security of the United States,
including the invocation of Article 5 of the North Atlantic
Treaty after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks against
the United States;
(6) urges North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies to
uphold their obligations under Article 3 of the North Atlantic
Treaty to ``maintain and develop their individual and
collective capacity to resist armed attack'' by honoring the
Defense Investment Pledge made at the Wales Summit in 2014;
(7) notes the commitment of North Atlantic Treaty
Organization allies to contribute to strengthening their free
institutions, bringing about a better understanding of the
principles on which such institutions are founded and promoting
conditions of stability and well-being; and
(8) welcomes efforts to reform and modernize the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization to meet current and future
threats, including though accelerated modernization, improved
readiness, command structure adaptation, and increased speed of
alliance decision-making.
SEC. 1245. SENSE OF SENATE ON UNITED STATES FORCE POSTURE IN EUROPE AND
THE REPUBLIC OF POLAND.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the 2018 National Defense Strategy identifies long-term
strategic competition with the Russian Federation as a
principal priority for the Department of Defense that requires
increased and sustained investment;
(2) despite significant progress through the European
Deterrence Initiative, the current force posture of the United
States is not yet sufficient to support the National Defense
Strategy;
(3) due to the geostrategic location and capabilities of
the armed forces of the Republic of Poland, the Republic of
Poland is critical to deterring, defending against, and
defeating Russian aggression against North Atlantic Treaty
Organization allies in Central and Eastern Europe; and
(4) the United States should increase the persistent
presence of United States forces in the Republic of Poland,
including key combat enabler units such as warfighting
headquarters elements--
(A) to enhance deterrence against Russian
aggression; and
(B) to reduce the risk of executing Department of
Defense contingency plans.
SEC. 1246. SENSE OF SENATE ON UNITED STATES PARTNERSHIP WITH THE
REPUBLIC OF GEORGIA.
It is the sense of the Senate that the United States should--
(1) promote the enduring strategic partnership of the
United States with the Republic of Georgia;
(2) support robust security sector assistance for the
Republic of Georgia, including defensive lethal assistance--
(A) to strengthen the defense capabilities and
readiness of the Republic of Georgia;
(B) to improve interoperability with North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO) forces; and
(C) to bolster deterrence against aggression by the
Russian Federation;
(3) enhance security in the Black Sea region by increasing
engagement and security cooperation with Black Sea countries,
including by increasing the frequency, scale, and scope of
North Atlantic Treaty Organization and other multilateral
exercises in the Black Sea region with the participation of the
Republic of Georgia and Ukraine; and
(4) affirm support for the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization open door policy, including the eventual
membership of the Republic of Georgia in the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization.
Subtitle E--Matters Relating to the Indo-Pacific Region
SEC. 1251. LIMITATION ON USE OF FUNDS TO REDUCE THE TOTAL NUMBER OF
MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES IN THE TERRITORY OF THE
REPUBLIC OF KOREA.
None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act may be
used to reduce the total number of members of the Armed Forces in the
territory of the Republic of Korea below 28,500 until 90 days after the
date on which the Secretary of Defense certifies to the congressional
defense committees the following:
(1) Such a reduction is in the national security interest
of the United States and will not significantly undermine the
security of United States allies in the region.
(2) Such a reduction is commensurate with a reduction in
the threat posed to the security of the United States and its
allies in the region by the conventional military forces of the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
(3) The Secretary has appropriately consulted with allies
of the United States, including the Republic of Korea and
Japan, regarding such a reduction.
SEC. 1252. EXPANSION OF INDO-PACIFIC MARITIME SECURITY INITIATIVE.
Section 1263(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2016 (10 U.S.C. 333 note) is amended by adding at the end
the following new paragraphs:
``(8) The Federated States of Micronesia.
``(9) The Kingdom of Tonga.
``(10) Papua New Guinea.
``(11) The Republic of Fiji.
``(12) The Republic of the Marshall Islands.
``(13) The Republic of Palau.
``(14) The Republic of Vanuatu.
``(15) The Solomon Islands.''.
SEC. 1253. MODIFICATION OF ANNUAL REPORT ON MILITARY AND SECURITY
DEVELOPMENTS INVOLVING THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA.
Paragraph (26) of section 1202(b) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 (10 U.S.C. 113 note) is amended
to read as follows:
``(26) The relationship between Chinese overseas
investment, including the Belt and Road Initiative and the
Digital Silk Road, and Chinese security and military strategy
objectives, including--
``(A) an assessment of Chinese investments or
projects likely, or with significant potential, to be
converted into military assets of the People's Republic
of China;
``(B) an assessment of Chinese investments or
projects of greatest concern with respect to United
States national security interests;
``(C) a description of any Chinese investment or
project linked to military cooperation with the country
in which the investment or project is located, such as
cooperation on satellite navigation or arms production;
and
``(D) an assessment of any Chinese investment or
project, and any associated agreement, that--
``(i) presents significant financial risk
for the country in which the investment or
project is located; or
``(ii) may undermine the sovereignty of
such country.''.
SEC. 1254. REPORT ON RESOURCING UNITED STATES DEFENSE REQUIREMENTS FOR
THE INDO-PACIFIC REGION.
(a) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than January 31, 2020, the
Commander of United States Indo-Pacific Command shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report containing the
independent assessment of the Commander with respect to the
activities and resources required, for fiscal years 2022
through 2026, to achieve the following objectives:
(A) The implementation of the National Defense
Strategy with respect to the Indo-Pacific region.
(B) The maintenance or restoration of the
comparative military advantage of the United States
with respect to the People's Republic of China.
(C) The reduction of the risk of executing
contingency plans of the Department of Defense.
(2) Matters to be included.--The report required under
paragraph (1) shall include the following:
(A) A description of the intended force structure
and posture of assigned and allocated forces within the
area of responsibility of United States Indo-Pacific
Command for fiscal year 2026 to achieve the objectives
described in paragraph (1).
(B) An assessment of capabilities requirements to
achieve such objectives.
(C) An assessment of logistics requirements,
including personnel, equipment, supplies, storage, and
maintenance needs to achieve such objectives.
(D) An identification of required infrastructure
and military construction investments to achieve such
objectives.
(E) An assessment of security cooperation
activities or resources required to achieve such
objectives.
(F) A plan to fully resource United States force
posture and capabilities, including--
(i) a detailed assessment of the resources
necessary to address the elements described in
subparagraphs (A) through (E), including
specific cost estimates for priority
investments or projects--
(I) to increase joint force
lethality;
(II) to enhance force design and
posture;
(III) to support a robust exercise,
experimentation, and innovation
program; and
(IV) to strengthen cooperation with
allies and partners; and
(ii) a detailed timeline to achieve the
intended force structure and posture described
in subparagraph (A).
(3) Form.--The report required under paragraph (1) may be
submitted in classified form, but shall include an unclassified
summary.
(4) Availability.--On submittal of the report to the
congressional defense committees, the Commander of United
States Indo-Pacific Command shall make the report available to
the Secretary of Defense, the Director of Cost Assessment and
Program Evaluation, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
the Secretaries of the military departments, and the chiefs of
staff of each military service.
(b) Briefings Required.--
(1) Initial briefing.--Not later than March 15, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense, the Director of Cost Assessment and
Program Evaluation, and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff shall provide to the congressional defense committees a
joint briefing, and documents as appropriate, with respect to
their assessments of the report submitted under subsection (a),
including their assessments of the feasibility and advisability
of the plan required by paragraph (2)(F) of that subsection.
(2) Subsequent briefing.--Not later than March 31, 2020,
the Secretary of the Air Force, the Secretary of the Army, and
the Secretary of the Navy shall provide to the congressional
defense committees a joint briefing, and documents as
appropriate, with respect to their assessments of the report
submitted under subsection (a), including their assessments of
the feasibility and advisability of the plan required by
paragraph (2)(F) of that subsection.
SEC. 1255. REPORT ON DISTRIBUTED LAY-DOWN OF UNITED STATES FORCES IN
THE INDO-PACIFIC REGION.
(a) Review.--Acknowledging the pressing need to reduce the presence
of the United States Marine Corps on Okinawa, Japan, and to accelerate
adjustments to United States force posture in the Indo-Pacific region,
the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Government of Japan
and other foreign governments as necessary, shall conduct a review of
the planned distribution of members of the United States Armed Forces
in Okinawa, Guam, Hawaii, Australia, and elsewhere that is contemplated
in support of the joint statement of the United States-Japan Security
Consultative Committee issued April 26, 2012, in the District of
Columbia (April 27, 2012, in Tokyo, Japan) and revised on October 3,
2013, in Tokyo, hereafter referred to as the ``distributed lay-down''.
(b) Elements.--The review required by subsection (a) shall include
an updated analysis of the distributed lay-down, including--
(1) an assessment of the impact of the distributed lay-down
on the ability of the Armed Forces to respond to current and
future contingencies in the area of responsibility of United
States Indo-Pacific Command that reflects contingency plans of
the Department of the Defense;
(2) the projected total cost, including any past or
projected changes in cost;
(3) a description of the adequacy of current and expected
training resources at each location associated with the
distributed lay-down, including the ability to train against
the full spectrum of threats from near-peer or peer threats any
projected limitations due to political, environmental, or other
limiting factors;
(4) an assessment of political support for United States
force presence from host countries and local communities and
populations;
(5) an analysis of growth potential for increased force
size or training; and
(6) an updated and detailed description of any military
construction projects required to execute the distributed lay-
down.
(c) Certification.--Not later than 15 days after the completion of
the review required by subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the congressional defense committees--
(1) a certification that the Department of Defense will
continue implementation of the distributed lay-down; or
(2) a notification that the Department of Defense intends
to seek revisions to the distributed lay-down in consultation
with the Government of Japan.
(d) Report.--Not later than 120 days after the completion of the
review required by subsection (a), the Secretary of Defense shall
provide the congressional defense committees a report on the results of
the review, including--
(1) a detailed description of any recommendations for
revisions to the distributed lay-down such as alternative
locations for basing in Alaska, Hawaii, the continental United
States, Japan, and Oceania; and
(2) an assessment of the results of the review and
recommendations described in paragraph (1) by the Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
(e) Comptroller General Report.--Not later than 120 days after the
submission of the report required by subsection (d), the Comptroller
General of the United States shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report containing an analysis of the current status of the
distributed lay-down, the review described in subsection (a), and the
report described in subsection (d).
SEC. 1256. SENSE OF SENATE ON THE UNITED STATES-JAPAN ALLIANCE AND
DEFENSE COOPERATION.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the United States-Japan alliance remains the
cornerstone of peace and security for a free and open Indo-
Pacific region;
(2) although the United States Government does not take a
position on sovereignty of the Senkaku Islands, the United
States acknowledges that the islands are under the
administration of Japan and opposes any unilateral actions that
would seek to undermine their administration by Japan;
(3) the unilateral actions of a third party will not affect
United States acknowledgment of the administration of Japan
over the Senkaku Islands, and the United States remains
committed under the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security
with Japan to respond to any armed attack in the territories
under the administration of Japan;
(4) Japan continues to make contributions to regional
security and prosperity that make the United States safer and
more prosperous;
(5) the Government of Japan has played a critical
leadership role in promoting a free and open Indo-Pacific,
which is a primary objective of United States national security
policy, including through its efforts concerning trade,
investment, energy, rule of law, and good governance;
(6) the Government of Japan has been instrumental improving
cooperation between the United States, Japan, Australia, and
India as well as improving relations with countries in the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations;
(7) the Government of Japan has been a strong supporter of
United States efforts to achieve the complete and verifiable
denuclearization of North Korea, and has played a leading role
in enforcing United Nations Security Council Resolution
sanctions against North Korea;
(8) the Government of Japan has taken significant steps to
enhance military capabilities for its own defense while
increasing its contributions to collective security, including
through passage of legislation concerning collective self-
defense, the publication of the National Defense Program
Guidelines and the Mid-Term Defense Program, and record
investments in advanced defense capabilities in the maritime,
air, space, and cyber domains;
(9) while it should continue to increase its defense
spending in order to make a greater contribution to allied
defense capabilities, the Government of Japan has made among
the most significant ``burden sharing'' contributions of any
United States ally, including through direct cost sharing,
paying for the realignment of United States forces currently
stationed in Okinawa, community support, and other alliance-
related expenditures;
(10) upcoming negotiations concerning a new Special
Measures Agreement between the United States and Japan should
be conducted in a spirit consistent with prior negotiations on
the basis of common interest and mutual respect; and
(11) the United States and Japan should take actions to
enhance United States-Japan defense cooperation, including
through increased use of combined bases for allied operations,
further integration of allied command structures, consideration
of the establishment of a combined joint task force, enhanced
combined contingency planning for both conventional conflict
and so-called ``gray zone'' incidents, and opportunities for
co-development of defense equipment and technology cooperation.
SEC. 1257. SENSE OF SENATE ON ENHANCEMENT OF THE UNITED STATES-TAIWAN
DEFENSE RELATIONSHIP.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the Taiwan Relations Act (22 U.S.C. 3301 et seq.) and
the ``Six Assurances'' are both cornerstones of United States
relations with Taiwan;
(2) the United States should strengthen defense and
security cooperation with Taiwan to support the development of
capable, ready, and modern defense forces necessary for Taiwan
to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability;
(3) the United States should strongly support the
acquisition by Taiwan of defense articles and services through
foreign military sales, direct commercial sales, and industrial
cooperation, with an emphasis on anti-ship, coastal defense,
anti-armor, air defense, undersea warfare, advanced command,
control, communications, computer, intelligence, surveillance,
and reconnaissance (C4ISR), and resilient command and control
capabilities that support the asymmetric defense strategy of
Taiwan;
(4) the President and Congress should determine the nature
and quantity of such defense articles and services based solely
upon their judgment of the needs of Taiwan as required by the
Taiwan Relations Act;
(5) the United States should continue efforts to improve
the predictability of United States arms sales to Taiwan by
ensuring timely review of and response to requests of Taiwan
for defense articles and services;
(6) the Secretary of Defense should promote policies
concerning exchanges that enhance the security of Taiwan
including--
(A) opportunities with Taiwan for practical
training and military exercises that--
(i) enable Taiwan to maintain a sufficient
self-defense capability, as described in
section 3(a) of the Taiwan Relations Act (22
U.S.C. 3302(a)); and
(ii) emphasize capabilities consistent with
the asymmetric defense strategy of Taiwan;
(B) exchanges between senior defense officials and
general officers of the United States and Taiwan,
consistent with the Taiwan Travel Act (Public Law 115-
135), especially for the purpose of enhancing
cooperation on defense planning and improving the
interoperability of United States and Taiwan forces;
and
(C) opportunities for exchanges between junior
officers and senior enlisted personnel of the United
States and Taiwan;
(7) the United States and Taiwan should expand cooperation
in humanitarian assistance and disaster relief;
(8) the Secretary of Defense should consider supporting the
visit of a United States hospital ship to Taiwan as part of the
annual ``Pacific Partnership'' mission, as well as the
participation of Taiwan medical vessels in appropriate
exercises with the United States, in order to improve disaster
response planning and preparedness; and
(9) the Secretary of Defense should continue regular
transits of United States Navy vessels through the Taiwan
Strait, commend the armed forces of France for their April 6,
2019, legal transit of the Taiwan Strait, and encourage allies
and partners to follow suit in conducting such transits, in
order to demonstrate the commitment of the United States and
its allies and partners to fly, sail, and operate anywhere
international law allows.
SEC. 1258. SENSE OF SENATE ON UNITED STATES-INDIA DEFENSE RELATIONSHIP.
It is the sense of the Senate that the United States should
strengthen and enhance its major defense partnership with India and
work toward the following mutual security objectives:
(1) Expanding engagement in multilateral frameworks,
including the quadrilateral dialogue among the United States,
India, Japan, and Australia, to promote regional security and
defend shared values and common interests in the rules-based
order.
(2) Increasing the frequency and scope of exchanges between
senior civilian officials and military officers of the United
States and India to support the development and implementation
of the major defense partnership.
(3) Exploring additional steps to implement the major
defense partner designation to better facilitate
interoperability, information sharing, and appropriate
technology transfers.
(4) Pursuing strategic initiatives to help develop the
defense capabilities of India.
(5) Conducting additional combined exercises with India in
the Persian Gulf, Indian Ocean, and western Pacific regions.
(6) Furthering cooperative efforts to promote stability and
security in Afghanistan.
SEC. 1259. SENSE OF SENATE ON SECURITY COMMITMENTS TO THE GOVERNMENTS
OF JAPAN AND THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA AND TRILATERAL
COOPERATION AMONG THE UNITED STATES, JAPAN, AND THE
REPUBLIC OF KOREA.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the United States remains committed to its alliances
with Japan and the Republic of Korea, which are--
(A) the cornerstones of peace and stability in the
Indo-Pacific region; and
(B) based on the shared values of democracy, the
rule of law, free and open markets, and respect for
human rights;
(2) cooperation among the United States, Japan, and the
Republic of Korea is essential for confronting global
challenges, including--
(A) preventing the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction;
(B) combating piracy;
(C) assisting victims of conflict and disaster
worldwide;
(D) protecting maritime security; and
(E) ensuring freedom of navigation, commerce, and
overflight in the Indo-Pacific region;
(3) the United States, Japan, and the Republic of Korea
share deep concern that the nuclear and ballistic missile
programs, the conventional military capabilities, and the
chemical and biological weapons programs of the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea, together with the long history of
aggression and provocation by the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea, pose grave threats to peace and stability on the
Korean Peninsula and in the Indo-Pacific region;
(4) the United States welcomes greater security cooperation
with and between Japan and the Republic of Korea to promote
mutual interests and address shared concerns, including--
(A) the bilateral military intelligence-sharing
pact between Japan and the Republic of Korea, signed on
November 23, 2016; and
(B) the trilateral intelligence sharing agreement
among the United States, Japan, and the Republic of
Korea, signed on December 29, 2015; and
(5) recognizing that the security of the United States,
Japan, and the Republic of Korea are intertwined because they
face common threats, including from the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea, the United States welcomes and encourages
deeper trilateral defense coordination and cooperation,
including through expanded exercises, training, senior-level
exchanges, and information sharing.
SEC. 1260. SENSE OF SENATE ON ENHANCED COOPERATION WITH PACIFIC ISLAND
COUNTRIES TO ESTABLISH OPEN-SOURCE INTELLIGENCE FUSION
CENTERS IN THE INDO-PACIFIC REGION.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the Pacific Island countries in the Indo-Pacific region
are critical partners of the United States;
(2) the United States should take steps to enhance
collaboration with Pacific Island countries; and
(3) United States Indo-Pacific Command should pursue the
establishment of one or more open-source intelligence fusion
centers in the Indo-Pacific region to enhance cooperation with
Pacific Island countries, which may include participation in an
existing fusion center of a partner or ally in lieu of
establishing an entirely new fusion center.
SEC. 1261. SENSE OF SENATE ON ENHANCING DEFENSE AND SECURITY
COOPERATION WITH THE REPUBLIC OF SINGAPORE.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the United States and the Republic of Singapore have
built a strong, enduring, and forward-looking strategic
partnership based on long-standing and mutually beneficial
cooperation, including through security, defense, economic, and
people-to-people ties;
(2) robust security cooperation between the United States
and the Republic of Singapore is crucial to promoting peace and
stability in the Indo-Pacific region;
(3) the status of the Republic of Singapore as a major
security cooperation partner of the United States, as
recognized in the 2005 Strategic Framework Agreement between
the United States and the Republic of Singapore for a Closer
Partnership in Defense and Security, plays an important role in
the global network of strategic partnerships, especially in
promoting maritime security and countering terrorism;
(4) the United States highly values the Republic of
Singapore's provision of access to its military facilities,
which supports the continued security presence of the United
States in Southeast Asia and across the Indo-Pacific region;
(5) the United States should continue to welcome the
presence of the Singapore Armed Forces in the United States for
exercises and training, and should consider opportunities to
expand such activities at additional locations in the United
States, as appropriate; and
(6) as the United States and the Republic of Singapore
negotiate the renewal of the 1990 Memorandum of Understanding
Regarding the United States Use of Facilities in Singapore, the
United States should--
(A) continue to enhance defense and security
cooperation with the Republic of Singapore to promote
peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region based on
common interests and shared values;
(B) reinforce the status of the Republic of
Singapore as a major security cooperation partner of
the United States;
(C) enhance defense cooperation in the military,
policy, strategic, and technological spheres,
especially concerning maritime security and
counterterrorism, counterpiracy, humanitarian
assistance and disaster relief, cybersecurity, and
biosecurity; and
(D) explore additional steps to better facilitate
military interoperability and information sharing
through appropriate technology transfers.
Subtitle F--Reports
SEC. 1271. REPORT ON COST IMPOSITION STRATEGY.
(a) 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 describing the cost
imposition strategies of the Department of Defense with respect to the
People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation.
(b) Elements.--The report under subsection (a) shall include the
following:
(1) A description of the manner in which the future-years
defense program and current operational concepts of the
Department are designed to impose costs on the People's
Republic of China and the Russian Federation, including--
(A) political, economic, monetary, human capital,
and technology costs; and
(B) costs associated with military efficiency and
effectiveness.
(2) A description of the policies and processes of the
Department relating to the development and execution of cost
imposition strategies.
(c) Form.--The report under subsection (a) shall be submitted in
classified form, and shall include an unclassified summary.
Subtitle G--Other Matters
SEC. 1281. NATO SPECIAL OPERATIONS HEADQUARTERS.
Section 1244 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2010 (Public Law 111-84; 123 Stat. 2541), as most recently amended
by section 1280 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1080), is further amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``each of fiscal years
2013 through 2020'' and inserting ``each of fiscal years 2013
through 2025'';
(2) by striking subsection (c); and
(3) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (c).
SEC. 1282. MODIFICATIONS OF AUTHORITIES RELATING TO ACQUISITION AND
CROSS-SERVICING AGREEMENTS.
(a) Reimbursement for Cost of Logistic Support, Supplies, and
Services.--Subsection (a) of section 2342 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``in return for'' and all
that follows through the period at the end and inserting the
following: ``in return for--
``(A) the reciprocal provisions of logistic
support, supplies, and services by such government or
organization to elements of the armed forces; or
``(B) cash reimbursement for the fully burdened
cost of the logistic support, supplies, and services
provided by the United States.''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(3) A reciprocal transaction for logistic support,
supplies, and services shall be reconciled not later than one
year after the date on which the transaction occurs, at which
time the Secretary of Defense shall seek cash reimbursement for
the fully burdened cost of the logistic support, supplies, and
services provided by the United States that has not been offset
by the value of the logistic support, supplies, and services
provided by the recipient government or organization.
``(4) An agreement entered into under this section shall
require any accrued credits or liabilities resulting from an
unequal exchange of logistic support, supplies, and services to
be liquidated not less frequently than once every five
years.''.
(b) Designation and Notice of Intent to Enter Into Agreement With
Non-NATO Country.--Subsection (b) of such section is amended to read as
follows:
``(b)(1) The Secretary of Defense may not designate a country for
an agreement under this section unless--
``(A) the Secretary, after consultation with the Secretary
of State, determines that the designation of such country for
such purpose is in the interest of the national security of the
United States; and
``(B) in the case of a country that is not a member of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the Secretary submits to
the appropriate committees of Congress notice of the intended
designation not less than 30 days before the date on which such
country is designated by the Secretary under subsection (a).
``(2) In the case of a country that is not a member of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization, the Secretary of Defense may not enter
into an agreement under this section unless the Secretary submits to
the appropriate committees of Congress a notice of intent to enter into
such an agreement not less than 30 days before the date on which the
Secretary enters into the agreement.''.
(c) Oversight and Monitoring Responsibilities.--Such section is
further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (f) through (h) as
subsections (g) through (i), respectively; and
(2) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new
subsection (f):
``(f)(1) The Under Secretary of Defense for Policy shall have
primary responsibility within the Office of the Secretary of Defense
for oversight of agreements entered into and activities carried out
under the authority of this subchapter.
``(2) The Director of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency shall
have primary responsibility for--
``(A) monitoring the implementation of such agreements; and
``(B) accounting for logistic support, supplies, and
services received or provided under such authority.''.
(d) Regulations.--Subsection (g) of such section, as redesignated
by subsection (c)(1), is amended to read as follows:
``(g)(1) Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of
this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall prescribe regulations to
ensure that--
``(A) contracts entered into under this subchapter are free
from self-dealing, bribery, and conflict of interests;
``(B) adequate processes and controls are in place to
provide for the accurate accounting of logistic support,
supplies, and services received or provided under the authority
of this subchapter; and
``(C) personnel responsible for accounting for logistic
support, supplies, and services received or provided under such
authority are fully trained and aware of such responsibilities.
``(2)(A) Not later than 270 days after the issuance of the
regulations under paragraph (1), the Comptroller General of the
United States shall conduct a review of the implementation by
the Secretary of such regulations.
``(B) The review conducted under subparagraph (A) shall--
``(i) assess the effectiveness of such regulations
and the implementation of such regulations to ensure
the effective management and oversight of an agreement
under subsection (a)(1); and
``(ii) include any other matter the Comptroller
General considers relevant.''.
(e) Reports.--Subsection (h) of such section, as redesignated by
subsection (c)(1), is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``in effect'' and
inserting ``that have entered into force or were applied
provisionally'';
(2) in paragraph (2)--
(A) by striking ``date on which the Secretary'' and
all that follows through the period at the end and
inserting ``dates on which the Secretary notified
Congress--
``(A) pursuant to subsection (b)(1)(B) of the
designation of such country under subsection (a); and
``(B) pursuant to subsection (b)(2) of the intent
of the Secretary to enter into the agreement.'';
(3) by amending paragraph (3) to read as follows:
``(3) With respect to each such agreement, the dollar
amounts of--
``(A) each class or type of logistic support,
supplies, and services provided in the preceding fiscal
year; and
``(B) reciprocal provisions of logistic support,
supplies, and services, or cash reimbursements,
received in such fiscal year.'';
(4) by amending paragraph (4) to read as follows:
``(4) With respect to each such agreement, the dollar
amounts of--
``(A) each class or type of logistic support,
supplies, and services received; and
``(B) reciprocal provisions of logistic support,
supplies, and services, or cash reimbursements
provided.'';
(5) by striking paragraph (5); and
(6) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(5) With respect to any transaction for logistic support,
supplies, and services that has not been reconciled more than
one year after the date on which the transaction occurred, a
description of the transaction that includes the following:
``(A) The date on which the transaction occurred.
``(B) The country or organization to which logistic
support, supplies, and services were provided.
``(C) The value of the transaction.
``(6) An explanation of any waiver granted under section
2347(c) during the preceding fiscal year, including an
identification of the relevant contingency operation or non-
combat operation.''.
SEC. 1283. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY FOR UNITED STATES-ISRAEL ANTI-
TUNNEL COOPERATION ACTIVITIES.
(a) In General.--Subsection (a) of section 1279 of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (22 U.S.C. 8606 note) is
amended, in the first sentence, by striking ``and to establish
capabilities for countering unmanned aerial systems''.
(b) Exception to Matching Contribution Requirement.--Subsection
(b)(3) of such section is amended--
(1) by striking ``Support'' and inserting the following:
``(A) In general.--Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), support''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following:
``(B) Exception.--Subject to paragraph (4), the
Secretary may use amounts available to the Secretary in
excess of the amount contributed by the Government of
Israel to provide support under this subsection for
costs associated with any unique national requirement
identified by the United States with respect to anti-
tunnel capabilities.''.
SEC. 1284. UNITED STATES-ISRAEL COOPERATION TO COUNTER UNMANNED AERIAL
SYSTEMS.
(a) Authority to Establish Capabilities to Counter Unmanned Aerial
Systems.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense, upon request of
the Ministry of Defense of Israel and in consultation with the
Secretary of State and the Director of National Intelligence,
is authorized to carry out research, development, test, and
evaluation, on a joint basis with Israel, to establish
capabilities for countering unmanned aerial systems that
threaten the United States or Israel. Any activities carried
out pursuant to such authority shall be conducted in a manner
that appropriately protects sensitive technology and
information and the national security interests of the United
States and Israel.
(2) Report.--The activities described in paragraph (1) and
subsection (b) may not be carried out until after the Secretary
of Defense submits to the appropriate committees of Congress a
report setting forth the following:
(A) A memorandum of agreement between the United
States and Israel regarding sharing of research and
development costs for the capabilities described in
paragraph (1), and any supporting documents.
(B) A certification that the memorandum of
agreement--
(i) requires sharing of costs of projects,
including in-kind support, between the United
States and Israel;
(ii) establishes a framework to negotiate
the rights to any intellectual property
developed under the memorandum of agreement;
and
(iii) requires the United States Government
to receive semiannual reports on expenditure of
funds, if any, by the Government of Israel,
including a description of what the funds have
been used for, when funds were expended, and an
identification of entities that expended the
funds.
(b) Support in Connection With the Program.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Defense is authorized to
provide maintenance and sustainment support to Israel for the
research, development, test, and evaluation activities
authorized in subsection (a)(1). Such authority includes
authority to install equipment necessary to carry out such
research, development, test, and evaluation.
(2) Report.--Support may not be provided under paragraph
(1) until 15 days after the Secretary submits to the
appropriate committees of Congress a report setting forth a
detailed description of the support to be provided.
(3) Matching contribution.--
(A) In general.--Except as provided in subparagraph
(B), support may not be provided under this subsection
unless the Government of Israel contributes an amount
not less than the amount of support to be so provided
to the program, project, or activity for which the
support is to be so provided in the calendar year in
which the support is provided.
(B) Exception.--Subject to paragraph (4), the
Secretary may use amounts available to the Secretary in
excess of the amount contributed by the Government of
Israel to provide support under this subsection for
costs associated with any unique national requirement
identified by the United States with respect to
countering unmanned aerial systems.
(4) Annual limitation on amount.--The amount of support
provided under this subsection in any year may not exceed
$25,000,000.
(5) Use of certain amounts for rdt&e activities in the
united states.--Of the amount provided by the United States in
support under paragraph (1), not less than 50 percent of such
amount shall be used for research, development, test, and
evaluation activities in the United States in connection with
such support.
(c) Lead Agency.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate an
appropriate research and development entity of a military department as
the lead agency of the Department of Defense in carrying out this
section.
(d) Semiannual Reports.--The Secretary of Defense shall submit to
the appropriate committees of Congress on a semiannual basis a report
that contains a copy of the most recent semiannual report provided by
the Government of Israel to the Department of Defense pursuant to
subsection (a)(2)(B)(iii).
(e) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on
Foreign Relations, the Committee on Homeland Security, 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 Homeland Security, the
Committee on Appropriations, and the Permanent Select Committee
on Intelligence of the House of Representatives.
(f) Sunset.--The authority in this section to carry out activities
described in subsection (a), and to provide support described in
subsection (b), shall expire on December 31, 2024.
SEC. 1285. MODIFICATION OF INITIATIVE TO SUPPORT PROTECTION OF NATIONAL
SECURITY ACADEMIC RESEARCHERS FROM UNDUE INFLUENCE AND
OTHER SECURITY THREATS.
Section 1286(c) of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended
by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(8) A list, developed in consultation with the Bureau of
Industry and Security of the Department of Commerce, the
Director of National Intelligence, and United States academic
institutions that conduct significant Department of Defense
research or engineering activities, of academic institutions of
the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation
that--
``(A) are associated with a defense program of the
People's Republic of China or the Russian Federation,
including any university heavily engaged in military
research;
``(B) are known--
``(i) to recruit individuals for the
purpose of advancing the talent and
capabilities of such a defense program; or
``(ii) to provide misleading transcripts or
otherwise attempt to conceal the connections of
an individual or institution to such a defense
program; or
``(C) pose a serious risk of intangible transfers
of defense or engineering technology and research.''.
SEC. 1286. INDEPENDENT ASSESSMENT OF HUMAN RIGHTS SITUATION IN
HONDURAS.
(a) Assessment Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 90 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
select and enter into an agreement with an independent think
tank or a federally funded research and development center to
conduct an analysis and assessment of the compliance of the
military and security forces of Honduras with international
human rights laws and standards.
(2) Matters to be included.--The assessment under paragraph
(1) shall include the following:
(A) A description of the military-to-military
activities between the United States and Honduras,
including the manner in which Department of Defense
engagement with the military and security forces of
Honduras supports the National Defense Strategy.
(B) An analysis and assessment of the activities of
the military and security forces of Honduras with
respect to human rights activists.
(C) With respect to United States national security
interests, an analysis and assessment of the challenges
posed by corruption within the military and security
forces of Honduras.
(D) An analysis of--
(i) the security assistance provided to
Honduras by the Department of Defense during
the 7-year period preceding the date of the
enactment of this Act; and
(ii) the extent to which such assistance
has improved accountability, transparency, and
compliance to international human rights laws
and standards in the security and military
operations of the Government of Honduras.
(E) Recommendations on the development of future
security assistance to Honduras that prioritizes--
(i) compliance of the military and security
forces of Honduras with human rights laws and
standards;
(ii) citizen security; and
(iii) the advancement of United States
national security interests with respect to
countering the proliferation of illegal
narcotics flows through Honduras.
(F) Any other matters the Secretary considers
necessary and relevant to United States national
security interests.
(b) Report.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the entity selected under subsection (a) shall
submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on the
results of the assessment conducted under that subsection.
(c) Department of Defense Support.--The Secretary shall provide the
entity selected under subsection (a) with timely access to appropriate
information, data, and analyses necessary to carry out the assessment
in a thorough and independent manner.
(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. 1287. UNITED STATES CENTRAL COMMAND POSTURE REVIEW.
(a) Comprehensive Review Required.--
(1) In general.--To clarify the near-term policy and
strategy of the United States under the National Defense
Strategy with respect to United States Central Command, the
Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Secretary of
State and the Director of National Intelligence, as
appropriate, shall conduct a comprehensive review of United
States military force posture and capabilities in the United
States Central Command area of responsibility during the
posture review period.
(2) Elements.--The review conducted under paragraph (1)
shall include, for the posture review period, the following
elements:
(A) An assessment of the threats and challenges in
the United States Central Command area of
responsibility, including threats and challenges posed
to United States interests by near-peer competitors.
(B) An explanation of the policy and strategic
frameworks for addressing the threats and challenges
identified under subparagraph (A).
(C) An identification of current and future United
States military force posture and capabilities
necessary to counter threats, deter conflict, and
defend United States national security interests in the
United States Central Command area of responsibility.
(D) An assessment of the basing, cooperative
security locations, and other infrastructure necessary
to support steady state operations in support of the
theater campaign plan and potential contingencies that
may arise in or affect the United States Central
Command area of responsibility, including any potential
efficiencies and risk mitigation measures to be taken.
(E) A description of methods to mitigate risk that
may result from adjustments to United States military
force posture and capabilities deployed in the United
States Central Command area of responsibility.
(F) An explanation of the manner in which a
modernized global operating model or dynamic force
employment approach may yield efficiencies and increase
strategic flexibility while achieving United States
military objectives in the United States Central
Command area of responsibility.
(G) An articulation of the United States
nonmilitary efforts and activities necessary to enable
the achievement of United States national security
interests in the United States Central Command area of
responsibility.
(H) Any other matter the Secretary considers
relevant.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 270 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the
results of the review conducted under subsection (a).
(2) Form.--The report under paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
(c) Posture Review Period Defined.--In this section, the term
``posture review period'' means the period beginning on the date that
is five years after the date of the enactment of this Act and ending on
the date that is 15 years after such date of enactment.
SEC. 1288. REPORTS ON EXPENSES INCURRED FOR IN-FLIGHT REFUELING OF
SAUDI COALITION AIRCRAFT CONDUCTING MISSIONS RELATING TO
CIVIL WAR IN YEMEN.
(a) Reports Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 30 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, and every 30 days thereafter, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit a report to the appropriate
committees of Congress detailing the expenses incurred by the
United States in providing in-flight refueling services for
Saudi or Saudi-led coalition non-United States aircraft
conducting missions as part of the civil war in Yemen during
the period of March 1, 2015, through November 11, 2018, and the
extent to which such expenses have been reimbursed by members
of the Saudi-led coalition.
(2) Elements.--Each report required under paragraph (1)
shall include the following:
(A) The total expenses incurred by the United
States in providing in-flight refueling services,
including fuel, flight hours, and other applicable
expenses, to Saudi or Saudi-led coalition, non-United
States aircraft conducting missions as part of the
civil war in Yemen.
(B) The amount of the expenses described in
subparagraph (A) that has been reimbursed by each
member of the Saudi-led coalition.
(C) Any action taken by the United States to recoup
the remaining expenses described in subparagraph (A),
including any commitments by members of the Saudi-led
coalition to reimburse the United States for such
expenses.
(3) Sunset.--The reporting requirement under paragraph (1)
shall cease to be effective on the date on which the Secretary
certifies to the appropriate committees of Congress that all
expenses incurred by the United States in providing in-flight
refueling services for Saudi or Saudi-led coalition non-United
States aircraft conducting missions as part of the civil war in
Yemen during the period of March 1, 2015, through November 11,
2018, have been reimbursed.
(b) Appropriate Committees of Congress Defined.--In this section,
the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate;
(2) the Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives;
(3) the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate; and
(4) the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of
Representatives.
SEC. 1289. SENSE OF SENATE ON SECURITY CONCERNS WITH RESPECT TO LEASING
ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE PORT OF HAIFA IN ISRAEL.
It is the sense of the Senate that the United States--
(1) has an interest in the future forward presence of
United States naval vessels at the Port of Haifa in Israel but
has serious security concerns with respect to the leasing
arrangements of the Port of Haifa as of the date of the
enactment of this Act; and
(2) should urge the Government of Israel to consider the
security implications of foreign investment in Israel.
TITLE XIII--COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION
SEC. 1301. FUNDING ALLOCATIONS FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COOPERATIVE
THREAT REDUCTION PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--Of the $338,700,000 authorized to be appropriated
to the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2020 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, $492,000.
(2) For chemical weapons destruction, $12,856,000.
(3) For global nuclear security, $33,919,000.
(4) For biological threat reduction, $183,642,000.
(5) For proliferation prevention, $79,869,000.
(6) For activities designated as Other Assessments/
Administrative Costs, $27,922,000.
(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 2020, 2021, and 2022.
TITLE XIV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
Subtitle A--Military Programs
SEC. 1401. WORKING CAPITAL FUNDS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020
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 2020
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 2020 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 2020 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 2020
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.
Subtitle B--National Defense Stockpile
SEC. 1411. MODIFICATION OF PROHIBITION ON ACQUISITION OF SENSITIVE
MATERIALS FROM NON-ALLIED FOREIGN NATIONS.
(a) Expansion of Materials Covered by Prohibition on Sale From
National Defense Stockpile.--Subsection (a)(2) of section 2533c of
title 10, United States Code, is amended, in the matter preceding
subparagraph (A), by striking ``covered material'' and inserting
``material''.
(b) Inclusion of Tantalum in Definition of Covered Materials.--
Subsection (d)(1) of such section is amended--
(1) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``; and'' and
inserting a semicolon;
(2) in subparagraph (D), by striking the period and
inserting ``; and''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new subparagraph:
``(E) tantalum.''.
Subtitle C--Armed Forces Retirement Home
SEC. 1421. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT
HOME.
There is hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020
from the Armed Forces Retirement Home Trust Fund the sum of $64,300,000
for the operation of the Armed Forces Retirement Home.
SEC. 1422. EXPANSION OF ELIGIBILITY FOR RESIDENCE AT THE ARMED FORCES
RETIREMENT HOME.
(a) Expansion of Eligibility to Certain Members With Non-regular
Service.--Section 1512(a) of the Armed Forces Retirement Home Act of
1991 (24 U.S.C. 412(a)) is amended--
(1) in the first sentence, by striking ``active'';
(2) in paragraph (1), by striking ``are 60 years of age or
over and'' and
(3) by adding the following new paragraph:
``(5) Persons who are eligible for retired pay under
chapter 1223 of title 10, United States Code, and--
``(A) are eligible for care under section 1710 of
title 38, United States Code;
``(B) are enrolled in coverage under chapter 55 of
title 10, United States Code; or
``(C) are enrolled in a qualified health plan
acceptable to the Chief Operating Officer.''.
(b) Parity of Monthly Fees.--Paragraph (2) of section 1514(c) of
the Armed Forces Retirement Home Act of 1991 (24 U.S.C. 414(c)) is
amended to read as follows:
``(2)(A) The fee shall be fixed as a percentage of the monthly
income and monthly payments (including Federal payments) received by a
resident. The percentage shall be the same for each facility of the
Retirement Home. The Secretary of Defense may make any adjustment in
the percentage that the Secretary determines appropriate.
``(B) The amount of the monthly income and monthly payments
calculated under subparagraph (A) for a resident accepted under section
1512(a)(5) may not be less than the current monthly retirement pay for
equivalent active duty service as determined by the Chief Operating
Officer, except as the Chief Operating Officer may otherwise provide
due to compelling personal circumstances of the resident.''.
(c) Pay Deductions.--Section 1007(i) of title 37, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)--
(A) by inserting ``or compensation, as
applicable,'' after ``pay''; and
(B) by striking ``on active duty'';
(2) in paragraph (3), by striking ``Board'' and inserting
``Chief Operating Officer''; and
(3) by striking paragraph (4).
(d) Admission Fees for Residents Based on Non-regular Service.--
Section 1514 of the Armed Forces Retirement Home Act of 1991, as
amended by subsection (b), is further amended--
(1) by redesignating subsections (b) and (c) as subsections
(c) and (d), respectively;
(2) by inserting after subsection (a) the following new
subsection (b):
``(b) Admission Fees for Certain Residents.--The Administrator of
each facility of the Retirement Home may also collect a fee upon
admission from a resident accepted under section 412(a)(5) equal to the
deductions then in effect under section 1007(i)(1) of title 37, United
States Code, for each year of non-regular service of the resident
before the date of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2020.''; and
(3) in subsection (c), as redesignated by paragraph (1), by
striking ``subsection (a)'' and inserting ``subsections (a) and
(b)''.
Subtitle D--Other Matters
SEC. 1431. 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, $127,000,000 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).
TITLE XV--AUTHORIZATION OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS FOR OVERSEAS
CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
Subtitle A--Authorization of Additional Appropriations
SEC. 1501. PURPOSE.
The purpose of this subtitle is to authorize appropriations for the
Department of Defense for fiscal year 2020 to provide additional funds
for overseas contingency operations being carried out by the Armed
Forces.
SEC. 1502. OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020
for the Department of Defense for overseas contingency operations in
such amounts as may be designated as provided in section
251(b)(2)(A)(ii) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control
Act of 1985 (2 U.S.C. 901(b)(2)(A)(ii)).
SEC. 1503. PROCUREMENT.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020
for procurement accounts for the Army, the Navy and the Marine Corps,
the Air Force, and Defense-wide activities, as specified in the funding
table in section 4102.
SEC. 1504. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, AND EVALUATION.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020
for the use of the Department of Defense for research, development,
test, and evaluation, as specified in the funding table in section
4202.
SEC. 1505. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020
for the use of the Armed Forces and other activities and agencies of
the Department of Defense for expenses, not otherwise provided for, for
operation and maintenance, as specified in the funding table in section
4302.
SEC. 1506. MILITARY PERSONNEL.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020
for the use of the Armed Forces and other activities and agencies of
the Department of Defense for expenses, not otherwise provided for, for
military personnel, as specified in the funding table in section 4402.
SEC. 1507. WORKING CAPITAL FUNDS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020
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. 1508. DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER-DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEFENSE-WIDE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2020 for expenses, not otherwise provided
for, for Drug Interdiction and Counter-Drug Activities, Defense-wide,
as specified in the funding table in section 4502.
SEC. 1509. DEFENSE INSPECTOR GENERAL.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2020 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. 1510. DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for the Department
of Defense for fiscal year 2020 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. 1521. TREATMENT AS ADDITIONAL AUTHORIZATIONS.
The amounts authorized to be appropriated by this title are in
addition to amounts otherwise authorized to be appropriated by this
Act.
SEC. 1522. SPECIAL TRANSFER AUTHORITY.
(a) Authority To Transfer Authorizations.--
(1) Authority.--Upon determination by the Secretary of
Defense that such action is necessary in the national interest,
the Secretary may transfer amounts of authorizations made
available to the Department of Defense in this title for fiscal
year 2020 between any such authorizations for that fiscal year
(or any subdivisions thereof). Amounts of authorizations so
transferred shall be merged with and be available for the same
purposes as the authorization to which transferred.
(2) Limitation.--The total amount of authorizations that
the Secretary may transfer under the authority of this
subsection may not exceed $2,500,000,000.
(b) Terms and Conditions.--Transfers under this section shall be
subject to the same terms and conditions as transfers under section
1001.
(c) Additional Authority.--The transfer authority provided by this
section is in addition to the transfer authority provided under section
1001.
TITLE XVI--STRATEGIC PROGRAMS, CYBER, AND INTELLIGENCE MATTERS
Subtitle A--Space Activities
PART I--UNITED STATES SPACE FORCE
SEC. 1601. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR SPACE POLICY.
Section 138(b) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(5) One of the Assistant Secretaries is the Assistant Secretary
of Defense for Space Policy. The principal duty of the Assistant
Secretary shall be the overall supervision of policy of the Department
of Defense for space warfighting.''.
SEC. 1602. PRINCIPAL ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE FOR
SPACE ACQUISITION AND INTEGRATION.
(a) Redesignation of Principal Assistant for Space as Principal
Assistant for Space Acquisition and Integration.--
(1) In general.--The Principal Assistant to the Secretary
of the Air Force for Space is hereby redesignated as the
Principal Assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force for Space
Acquisition and Integration.
(2) References.--Any reference to the Principal Assistant
to the Secretary of the Air Force for Space in any law,
regulation, map, document, record, or other paper of the United
States shall be deemed to be a reference to the Principal
Assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force for Space
Acquisition and Integration.
(b) Codification of Position and Responsibilities.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 903 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended--
(A) by redesignating section 9018 as section 9018a;
and
(B) by inserting after section 9017 the following
new section 9018:
``Sec. 9018. Principal Assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force for
Space Acquisition and Integration
``(a)(1) There is within the Office of the Secretary of the Air
Force a Principal Assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force for Space
Acquisition and Integration, who shall be appointed from civilian life
by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.
``(2) The individual serving as Principal Assistant shall have the
protocol equivalent in the Department of Defense of an officer in the
armed forces serving in a general or admiral grade.
``(b) Subject to the authority, direction, and control of the
Secretary of the Air Force, the Principal Assistant to the Secretary of
the Air Force for Space Acquisition and Integration shall do as
follows:
``(1) Be responsible for all acquisition and integration of
the Air Force for space systems and programs, including in
support of the Commander of the United States Space Force under
section 9064 of this title.
``(2) Serve as the senior acquisition executive under
section 1704 of this title for the Air Force for acquisition
for space systems and programs, including for all major defense
acquisition programs under chapter 144 of this title for space.
``(3) Oversee and direct each of the following:
``(A) The Space Rapid Capabilities Office under
section 2273a of this title.
``(B) The Space and Missile Systems Center.
``(C) The Space Development Agency.
``(4) Oversee and direct acquisition projects for all space
systems and programs of the Air Force, including projects for
space systems and programs transferred to the Principal
Assistant pursuant to section 1602(b)(4) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020.
``(5) Act as the chair of the Space Force Acquisition
Council under section 1602(c) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020.
``(c) In addition to the responsibilities provided for in
subsection (b), the Principal Assistant shall have such other
responsibilities and perform such other duties as the Secretary may
prescribe.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 903 of such title is amended by striking
the item relating to section 9018 and inserting the following
new items:
``9018. Principal Assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force for Space
Acquisition and Integration.
``9018a. Administrative Assistant.''.
(3) Executive schedule level v.--Section 5416 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new item:
``Principal Assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force for
Space Acquisition and Integration.''.
(4) Transfer of acquisition projects for space systems and
programs.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall transfer to the
Principal Assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force for Space
Acquisition and Integration under section 9018 of title 10,
United States Code (as added by this subsection),
responsibility for oversight, direction, and integration of any
acquisition projects for space systems and programs of the Air
Force that are under the oversight or direction of the
Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition as of the
date of the enactment of this Act.
(c) Space Force Acquisition Council.--
(1) In general.--There is in the Department of the Air
Force a council to be known as the ``Space Force Acquisition
Council'' (in this subsection referred to as the ``Council'').
(2) Membership.--The members of the Council are as follows:
(A) The Under Secretary of the Air Force.
(B) The Principal Assistant to the Secretary of the
Air Force for Space Acquisition and Integration, who
shall act as chair of the Council.
(C) The Assistant Secretary of Defense for Space
Policy.
(D) The Director of the National Reconnaissance
Office.
(E) The Commander of the United States Space
Command.
(F) The Commander of the United States Space Force.
(3) Functions.--The Council shall oversee, direct, and
manage acquisition and integration of the Air Force for space
systems and programs in order to ensure integration across the
national security space enterprise.
(4) Meetings.--The Council shall meet not less frequently
than monthly.
(5) Reports.--Not later than 30 days after the end of each
calendar year quarter through the first calendar year quarter
of 2025, the Council shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on the activities of the Council during the
calendar year quarter preceding the calendar year quarter in
which such report is submitted.
(d) Briefings.--On or about March 31, 2020, and during every
calendar year quarter thereafter through March 31, 2022, the Secretary
of the Air Force shall provide to the congressional defense committees
a briefing on the current status of efforts to implement this section
and the amendments made by this section. Each briefing may include such
recommendations for legislative and administrative action as the
Secretary considers appropriate to facilitate and enhance such efforts.
SEC. 1603. MILITARY SPACE FORCES WITHIN THE AIR FORCE.
(a) In General.--Section 9062(c) of title 10, United States Code,
is amended--
(1) by striking the first sentence and inserting the
following:
``(1) The Air Force includes the following:
``(A) Aviation forces both combat and service not otherwise
assigned.
``(B) Space forces.''; and
(2) by striking ``It shall be organized'' and inserting the
following:
``(2) The Air Force shall be organized''.
(b) Territorial Organizations.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (b) of section 9074 of title
10, United States Code, is amended by inserting ``, including
space,'' after ``other places''.
(2) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``Sec. 9074. Commands: territorial and other organization''.
(3) Table of sections amendment.--The table of sections at
the beginning of chapter 907 of such title is amended by
striking the item relating to section 9074 and inserting the
following new item:
``9074. Commands: territorial and other organization.''.
SEC. 1604. REDESIGNATION OF AIR FORCE SPACE COMMAND AS UNITED STATES
SPACE FORCE.
(a) Redesignation.--The Air Force Space Command is hereby
redesignated as the United States Space Force (USSF).
(b) Commander and Authorities.--
(1) In general.--Section 2279c of title 10, United States
Code, is--
(A) transferred to chapter 907 of such title;
(B) inserted after section 9062; and
(C) as so transferred and inserted, amended to read
as follows:
``Sec. 9063. United States Space Force
``(a) United States Space Force.--There is in the Air Force the
United States Space Force.
``(b) Commander.--(1) The head of the United States Space Force
shall be the Commander of the United States Space Force, who shall be
appointed in accordance with section 601 of this title. The officer
serving as Commander, while so serving, has the grade of general or
admiral without vacating the permanent grade of the officer.
``(2) The Commander shall be appointed to serve a term of four
years.
``(c) Temporary Concurrent Service as Commander of USSF and
Commander of United States Space Command.--During the one-year period
beginning on the date of the enactment of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020, the Secretary of Defense may
authorize an officer serving as the Commander of the United States
Space Force to serve concurrently as the Commander of the United States
Space Command under section 169 of this title, without further
appointment as otherwise provided for in subsection (c) of such
section.
``(d) Vice Commander.--The deputy head of the United States Space
Force shall be the Vice Commander of the United States Space Force, who
shall be appointed in accordance with section 601 of this title. The
officer serving as Vice Commander, while so serving, has the grade of
general or admiral without vacating the permanent grade of the officer.
``(e) Duties.--(1) Subject to the authority, direction, and control
of the Secretary of the Air Force, the Commander of the United States
Space Force shall do the following:
``(A) Exercise authority, direction, and control of all
space operations-peculiar administrative matters relating to
the organization, training, and equipping of the space forces
of the Air Force.
``(B) Exercise the authorities and responsibilities
assigned to the Commander as Commander of the Air Force Space
Command before December 12, 2017.
``(C) Carry out such other duties as the Secretary may
specify.
``(2) In carrying out duties under paragraph (1), the Commander of
the United States Space Force shall report as follows:
``(A) During the one-year period beginning on the date of
the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2020, to the Secretary of the Air Force through the
Chief of Staff of the Air Force.
``(B) After the period described in subparagraph (A),
directly to the Secretary of the Air Force.
``(3)(A) During the one-year period beginning on the date of the
enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2020, upon the
request of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Commander of
the United States Space Force may participate in any meeting of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff in consideration by the Joint Chiefs of Staff of
an issue in connection with a duty or responsibility of the Commander.
``(B) Commencing as of the end of the period described in
subparagraph (A), the Commander of the United States Space Force shall
be a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
``(f) Elements.--(1) In addition to the elements of the Air Force
Space Command as of the date of the enactment of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020, the United States Space Force
shall include other military and civilian personnel of the Air Force
(including appropriate elements of the Air National Guard and the Air
Force Reserve), and other infrastructure, assets, and resources of the
Air Force, assigned to the Space Force by the Secretary of the Air
Force.
``(2) The Secretary shall provide for the Space Force a cadre of
military and civilian personnel within the Air Force who shall assist
the Space Force in establishing and maintaining an ethos and culture
for space warfighting.''.
(2) Service of incumbent commander of air force space
command as commander of united states space force.--The
individual serving as Commander of the Air Force Space Command
as of the date of the enactment of this Act may serve as the
Commander of the United States Space Force under subsection (b)
of section 9063 of title 10, United States Code (as added by
paragraph (1)), after that date without further appointment as
otherwise provided for by that subsection.
(3) Secretary of defense report on concurrency of
command.--
(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 setting forth an assessment of the
advisability of permitting the Commander of the United
States Space Force to serve concurrently as Commander
of the United States Space Command as authorized by
subsection (c) of section 9063 of title 10, United
States Code (as so added).
(B) Comptroller general briefing.--Not later than
30 days after the submittal of the report required by
subparagraph (A), the Comptroller General of the United
States shall provide the congressional defense
committees a briefing on the assessment of the
Comptroller General of the matters contained in the
report.
(4) Secretary of the air force briefings on ussf.--On or
about March 31, 2020, and during every calendar year quarter
thereafter through March 31, 2022, the Secretary of the Air
Force shall provide the congressional defense committees a
briefing on the following:
(A) The current status of the missions and manpower
of the United States Space Force under section 9063 of
title 10, United States Code (as so added), including
the current status of the assumption by the United
States Space Force of the elements to constitute the
United States Space Force, including the elements of
the Air Force Space Command and the elements assigned
pursuant to subsection (f)(1) of such section.
(B) The current status of activities of the cadre
of personnel required by subsection (f)(2) of such
section 9063 (as so added), including an assessment of
the progress of the cadre in establishing and
maintaining the ethos and culture described in that
subsection.
(5) No authorization of additional military billets or
civilian personnel.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall carry
out this subsection and the amendments made by this subsection
within military and civilian personnel of the Air Force
otherwise authorized by this Act. Nothing in this subsection or
the amendments made by this subsection shall be construed to
authorize additional military billets or the employment of
additional civilian personnel for the purposes of, or in
connection with, the establishment of the United States Space
Force.
(c) Conforming Amendment to US Space Command Commander Authority.--
Section 169(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking
paragraph (2) and inserting the following new paragraph (2):
``(2) If authorized by the Secretary of Defense pursuant to section
9063(c) of this title, the officer serving as Commander of the United
States Space Force also serves concurrently as Commander of the United
States Space Command, but only during the one-year period beginning on
the date of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2020.''.
(d) Joint Chiefs of Staff Matters.--Effective on the date that is
one year after the date of the enactment of this Act, section 151(a) of
title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new paragraph:
``(8) The Commander of the United States Space Force.''.
(e) Clerical Amendments.--
(1) Chapter 135.--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 2279c.
(2) Chapter 907.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 907 of such title is amended by inserting after the
item relating to section 9062 the following new item:
``9063. United States Space Force.''.
(f) References.--Any reference to the Air Force Space Command in
any law, regulation, map, document, record, or other paper of the
United States shall be deemed to be a reference to the United States
Space Force.
SEC. 1605. ASSIGNMENT OF PERSONNEL TO THE NATIONAL RECONNAISSANCE
OFFICE FOR MISSION NEEDS.
(a) USSF as Primary Source of Personnel.--Effective as of the date
of the enactment of this Act, military and civilian personnel of the
United States Space Force under section 9063 of title 10, United States
Code (as added by section 1604(b) of this Act), shall be the primary
source of military and civilian personnel of the Department of the Air
Force who may be assigned to the National Reconnaissance Office.
(b) Assignment by Commander, USSF.--Subject to the authority,
direction, and control of the Secretary of the Air Force, the Commander
of the United States Space Force shall be responsible for the
assignment of military and civilian personnel of the United States
Space Force to the National Reconnaissance Office.
SEC. 1606. REPORT ON ESTABLISHMENT OF POSITION OF UNDER SECRETARY OF
THE AIR FORCE FOR SPACE.
(a) In General.--Not later than 180 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 on the advisability of
establishing within the Department of the Air Force a position of Under
Secretary of the Air Force for Space with the responsibility of
providing civilian oversight to the United States Space Force (as
provided for by section 1604 of this Act).
(b) Considerations.--In preparing the report required by subsection
(a), the Secretary shall take into consideration the tasks and
operations of the staff of the Air Force in support of the space
warfighting mission of the Air Force and such other matters as the
Secretary considers appropriate.
SEC. 1607. REPORT ON ENHANCED INTEGRATION OF CAPABILITIES OF THE
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY, THE NATIONAL GEOSPATIAL-
INTELLIGENCE AGENCY, AND THE UNITED STATES SPACE COMMAND
FOR JOINT OPERATIONS.
Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this
Act, the Secretary of Defense shall, in coordination with the Director
of National Intelligence, submit to the congressional defense
committees a report setting forth the results of a review, conducted
for purposes of the report, on processes designed to achieve more
effective integration of capabilities among the National Security
Agency, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and the United
States Space Command for joint operations in a manner that does not
result in the impairment of the authorities or responsibilities of the
Director.
SEC. 1608. LIMITATION ON AVAILABILITY OF FUNDS.
None of the amounts authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year
2020 by this Act and available for the Air Force for programs,
projects, or activities for space, including acquisition programs,
projects, or activities, may be obligated or expended until the date on
which the Secretary of the Air Force completes briefings of the
congressional defense committees on the plans of the Air Force to
implement this part and the amendments made by this part, including the
following:
(1) The establishment of the office of the Principal
Assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force for Space
Acquisition and Integration under section 9018 of title 10,
United States Code (as added by section 1602 of this Act).
(2) The establishment of the United States Space Force
required by section 9063 of title 10, United States Code (as
added by section 1604 of this Act).
PART II--OTHER SPACE MATTERS
SEC. 1611. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT TO ESTABLISH SPACE COMMAND AS A
SUBORDINATE UNIFIED COMMAND OF THE UNITED STATES
STRATEGIC COMMAND.
(a) In General.--Section 169 of title 10, United States Code, is
repealed.
(b) Technical and Conforming Amendment.--The table of sections for
chapter 6 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by striking the
item relating to section 169.
SEC. 1612. PROGRAM TO ENHANCE AND IMPROVE LAUNCH SUPPORT AND
INFRASTRUCTURE.
(a) In General.--In support of the policy described in section
2273(a) of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary of Defense may
carry out a program to enhance infrastructure and improve support
activities for the processing and launch of Department of Defense
small-class and medium-class payloads.
(b) Program.--The program under subsection (a) shall include
improvements to operations at launch ranges and Federal Aviation
Administration-licensed spaceports that are consistent with, and
necessary to permit, the use of such launch ranges and spaceports by
the Department.
(c) Consultation.--In carrying out the program under subsection
(a), the Secretary may consult with current and anticipated users of
launch ranges and Federal Aviation Administration-licensed spaceports,
including the Space Rapid Capabilities Office.
(d) Cooperation.--In carrying out the program under subsection (a),
the Secretary may enter into a contract or agreement under section 2276
of title 10, United States Code.
(e) Report.--Not later than 270 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report describing a plan for the program under
subsection (a).
SEC. 1613. MODIFICATION OF ENHANCEMENT OF POSITIONING, NAVIGATION, AND
TIMING CAPACITY.
(a) Capability for Trusted Signals.--
(1) Subsection heading.--Subsection (a) of section 1609 of
the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is amended, in the
subsection heading, by striking ``Trusted Signals'' and
inserting ``Alternative Global Navigation Satellite System
Signals''.
(2) Requirement.--Paragraph (1) of such subsection is
amended to read as follows:
``(1) Requirement.--The Secretary of the Air Force shall
ensure that military Global Positioning System (GPS) user
equipment terminals have the capability, as appropriate to user
needs and constraints, to incorporate signals from the Galileo
satellites of the European Union and the QZSS satellites of
Japan, beginning with the implementation of open-system
architecture solutions, such as the Resilient-Embedded GPS/
Inertial Navigation System (R-EGI), to accompany other
alternative and complementary navigation sources for robust
positioning, navigation, and timing.''.
(3) Waiver.--Paragraph (2) of such subsection is amended--
(A) in subparagraph (A), by striking ``could not
integrate such capability beginning with increment 2 of
the acquisition of such terminals'' and inserting
``should not integrate such capability into the
Resilient-Embedded GPS/Inertial Navigation System
architecture''; and
(B) in subparagraph (B), by inserting ``that
considers the addition of multi-Global Navigation
Satellite System (GNSS) signals to provide substantive
military utility'' after ``such terminals''.
(b) Capability for Other Signals.--Subsection (b) of such section
is amended, in the matter preceding paragraph (1)--
(1) by inserting ``other allied and'' before ``non-allied
positioning, navigation, and timing signals''; and
(2) by striking ``increment 2 of the acquisition of such
terminals'' and inserting ``the Resilient-Embedded GPS/Inertial
Navigation System architecture''.
SEC. 1614. MODIFICATION OF TERM OF COMMANDER OF AIR FORCE SPACE
COMMAND.
Section 2279c(a)(2) of title 10, United States Code, is amended, in
the first sentence, by striking ``six years'' and inserting ``four
years''.
SEC. 1615. ANNUAL REPORT ON SPACE COMMAND AND CONTROL PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--For each of fiscal years 2021 through 2025,
concurrent with the submittal to Congress of the budget of the
Department of Defense with the budget of the President for the
subsequent fiscal year under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States
Code, the Secretary of the Air Force shall submit to the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, the congressional
defense committees, and the Comptroller General of the United States,
an annual report on the Space Command and Control program.
(b) Matters to Be Included.--Each report required by subsection (a)
shall include the following:
(1) A description of any modification to the metrics
established by the Secretary in the acquisition strategy for
the program.
(2) The short-term objectives for the subsequent fiscal
year.
(3) For the preceding fiscal year, a description of--
(A) the ongoing, achieved, and deferred objectives;
(B) the challenges encountered and the lessons
learned;
(C) the modifications made or planned so as to
incorporate such lessons learned into subsequent
efforts to address challenges; and
(D) the cost, schedule, and performance effects of
such modifications.
(c) Review of Reports and Briefing by Comptroller General.--With
respect to each report submitted under this section, the Comptroller
General shall review and provide to the congressional defense
committees a briefing on a date mutually agreed on by the Comptroller
General and the congressional defense committees.
SEC. 1616. REQUIREMENTS FOR PHASE 2 OF ACQUISITION STRATEGY FOR
NATIONAL SECURITY SPACE LAUNCH PROGRAM.
In carrying out phase 2 of the acquisition strategy for the
national security space launch program, the Secretary of the Air
Force--
(1) may not--
(A) modify the acquisition schedule or mission
performance requirements; or
(B) award missions to more than two launch service
providers; and
(2) shall ensure that launch services are procured only
from launch service providers that use launch vehicles meeting
each Government requirement with respect to required payloads
to reference orbits.
Subtitle B--Defense Intelligence and Intelligence-related Activities
SEC. 1621. REDESIGNATION OF UNDER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR INTELLIGENCE
AS UNDER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR INTELLIGENCE AND
SECURITY.
(a) Redesignation of Under Secretary.--
(1) In general.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence is hereby redesignated as the Under Secretary of
Defense for Intelligence and Security.
(2) Service of incumbent in position.--The individual
serving as Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence as of
the date of the enactment of this Act may serve as Under
Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security commencing
as of that date without further appointment under section 137
of title 10, United States Code (as amended by subsection
(c)(1)(A)(ii)).
(3) Reference.--Any reference in any law, regulation, map,
document, paper, or other record of the United States to the
Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence shall be deemed to
be a reference to the Under Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence and Security.
(b) Redesignation of Related Deputy Under Secretary.--
(1) In general.--The Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence is hereby redesignated as the Deputy Under
Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security.
(2) Service of incumbent in position.--The individual
serving as Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence
as of the date of the enactment of this Act may serve as Deputy
Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security
commencing as of that date without further appointment under
section 137a of title 10, United States Code (as amended by
subsection (c)(1)(B)).
(3) Reference.--Any reference in any law, regulation, map,
document, paper, or other record of the United States to the
Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence shall be
deemed to be a reference to the Deputy Under Secretary of
Defense for Intelligence and Security.
(c) Conforming Amendments.--
(1) Title 10.--Title 10, United States Code, is amended as
follows:
(A) In each provision as follows, by striking
``Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence'' and
inserting ``Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence
and Security'':
(i) Section 131(b)(3)(F).
(ii) Section 137, each place it appears.
(iii) Section 139a(d)(6).
(iv) Section 139b(c)(2)(E).
(v) Section 181(d)(1)(B).
(vi) Section 393(b)(2)(C).
(vii) Section 426, each place it appears.
(viii) Section 430(a).
(B) In section 137a(c)(6), by striking ``Deputy
Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence'' and
inserting ``Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for
Intelligence and Security''.
(C) The heading of section 137 is amended to read
as follows:
``Sec. 137. Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security''.
(D) The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 4 is amended by striking the item relating to
section 137 and inserting the following new item:
``137. Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security.''.
(2) Title 5.--Title 5, United States Code, is amended as
follows:
(A) In section 5314, by striking ``Under Secretary
of Defense for Intelligence'' and inserting ``Under
Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security''.
(B) In section 5315, by striking ``Deputy Under
Secretary of Defense for Intelligence'' and inserting
``Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence
and Security''.
SEC. 1622. REPEAL OF CERTAIN REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO INTEGRATION OF
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND
RECONNAISSANCE CAPABILITIES.
(a) Repeal.--Section 426 of title 10, United States Code, is hereby
repealed.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
chapter 21 of such title is amended by striking the item relating to
section 426.
SEC. 1623. IMPROVING THE ONBOARDING METHODOLOGY FOR CERTAIN
INTELLIGENCE PERSONNEL.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense and the Director of
National Intelligence shall, consistent with Department of Defense
Instruction 1400.25, as in effect on the day before the date of the
enactment of this Act--
(1) not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a
report that outlines a common methodology for measuring
onboarding in covered elements of the intelligence community,
including human resources and security processes;
(2) not later than one year after the date of the enactment
of this Act, issue metrics for assessing key phases in the
onboarding described in paragraph (1) for which results will be
reported by the date that is 90 days after the date of such
issuance;
(3) not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a
report on collaboration among covered elements of the
intelligence community on their onboarding processes;
(4) not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a
report on employment of automated mechanisms in covered
elements of the intelligence community, including for tracking
personnel as they pass through each phase of the onboarding
process; and
(5) not later than December 31, 2020, distribute surveys to
human resources offices and applicants about their experiences
with the onboarding process in covered elements of the
intelligence community.
(b) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) The term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(A) the Select Committee on Intelligence and the
Committee on Armed Services of the Senate; and
(B) the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
and the Committee on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives.
(2) The term ``covered elements of the intelligence
community'' means the elements of the intelligence community
that are within the following:
(A) The Department of Energy.
(B) The Department of Homeland Security.
(C) The Department of Justice.
(D) The Department of State.
(E) The Department of the Treasury.
SEC. 1624. DEFENSE COUNTERINTELLIGENCE AND SECURITY AGENCY ACTIVITIES
ON FACILITATING ACCESS TO LOCAL CRIMINAL RECORDS
HISTORICAL DATA.
(a) Activity Authorized.--The Director of the Defense
Counterintelligence and Security Agency may carry out a set of
activities relating to facilitating access by the Agency to local
criminal records historical data.
(b) Activities Characterized.--The activities carried out under
subsection (a) shall include only the following:
(1) Training and education.
(2) Outreach to State, local, and tribal authorities.
(3) Direct assistance.
(c) Reports.--
(1) Initial report.--Not later than 90 days after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Director shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report that details a
concept of operation for the set of activities authorized by
subsection (a).
(2) Annual reports.--Not later than one year after the date
on which the Director submits a report pursuant to paragraph
(1) and not less frequently than once each year thereafter, the
Director shall submit to the congressional defense committees a
detailed report on the activities carried out by the Director
under this section.
Subtitle C--Cyberspace-related Matters
SEC. 1631. REORIENTATION OF BIG DATA PLATFORM PROGRAM.
(a) Reorientation of Program.--
(1) In general.--Not later than January 1, 2021, the
Secretary of Defense shall--
(A) reorient the Big Data Platform program as
specified in this section; and
(B) align the reorientation effort under an
existing line of effort of the Cyber Strategy of the
Department of Defense.
(2) Oversight of implementation.--The Secretary shall act
through the Principal Cyber Advisor and the supporting Cross
Functional Team in the oversight of the implementation of
paragraph (1).
(b) Common Baseline and Security Classification Scheme.--
(1) In general.--Not later than January 1, 2021, the
Secretary shall establish a common baseline and security
classification scheme for the collection, storage, processing,
querying, analysis, and accessibility of a common and
comprehensive set of metadata from sensors, applications,
appliances, products, and systems deployed across the
Department of Defense Information Network (DODIN) to enable the
discovery, tracking, and remediation of cybersecurity threats.
(2) Requirements.--In carrying out paragraph (1), the
Secretary shall--
(A) take such actions as the Secretary considers
necessary to standardize deployed infrastructure,
including the Department of Defense's perimeter
capabilities at the Internet Access Points and the
Joint Regional Security Stacks, and the routing of data
laterally and vertically from Department of Defense
Information Network segments and tiers, to enable
standard and comprehensive metadata collection;
(B) take such actions as the Secretary considers
necessary to standardize deployed cybersecurity
applications, products, and sensors and the routing of
data laterally and vertically from Department of
Defense Information Network segments and tiers, to
enable standard and comprehensive metadata collection;
(C) develop an enterprise-wide architecture and
strategy for--
(i) where to place sensors or extract data
from network information technology,
operational technology, and cybersecurity
appliances, applications, products, and systems
for cybersecurity purposes;
(ii) which metadata data records should be
universally sent to Big Data Platform instances
and which metadata data records, if any, should
be locally retained; and
(iii) expeditiously and efficiently
transmitting metadata records to the Big Data
Platform instances, including the acquisition
and installation of further data bandwidth;
(D) determine the appropriate number, organization,
and functions of separate Big Data Platform instances,
and whether the Big Data Platform instances that are
currently managed by Department of Defense components,
including the military services, should instead be
jointly and regionally organized;
(E) determine the appropriate roles of the Defense
Information Systems Agency's Acropolis and United
States Cyber Command's Scarif Big Data Platforms as
enterprise-wide real-time cybersecurity situational
awareness capabilities, as complements or replacements
for component-level Big Data Platform instances;
(F) ensure that all Big Data Platform instances are
engineered and approved to enable standard access and
query capabilities by the Unified Platform, the network
defense service providers, and the Cyber Mission
Forces, with centrally managed authentication and
authorization services;
(G) prohibit barriers to information sharing,
distributed query, data analysis, and collaboration
across Big Data Platform instances, such as
incompatible interfaces, interconnection service
agreements, and the imposition of accreditation
boundaries;
(H) transition all Big Data Platform instances to a
cloud computing environment in alignment with the cloud
strategy of the Chief Information Officer of the
Department of Defense;
(I) consider whether packet capture databases
should continue to be maintained separately from the
Big Data Platform instances, managed at the secret
level of classification, and treated as malware-
infected when the packet data are copies of packets
extant in the Department of Defense Information
Network;
(J) in the case that the Secretary decides to
sustain the status quo on packet capture databases,
ensure that analysts operating on or from the Unified
Platform, the Big Data Platform instances, the network
defense services providers, and the Cyber Mission Force
units can directly access packets and query the
database; and
(K) consider whether the Joint Artificial
Intelligence Center's cybersecurity artificial
intelligence national mission initiative should include
an application for the metadata residing in the Big
Data Platform instances.
(c) Limit on Data and Data Indexing Schema.--The Secretary shall
ensure that the Unified Platform program utilizes the data and the data
indexing schema that is native to the Big Data Platform rather than
creating a duplicate index or data tagger.
(d) Analytics and Application Sourcing and Collaboration.--The
Secretary shall ensure that the Services and office of the Big Data
Platform program--
(1) seek advanced analytics and applications from
Government and commercial sources that can be executed on the
deployed Big Data Platform architecture; and
(2) collaborate with vendors offering commercial analytics
and applications, including support to refactoring commercial
capabilities to the Government platform where industry can
still own the intellectual property embedded in the analytics
and applications.
(e) Briefing Required.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act and not less frequently than once every 180
days thereafter until the activities required by subsection (a)(1) are
completed, the Secretary shall provide the congressional defense
committees a briefing on the activities of the Secretary in carrying
out subsection (b).
SEC. 1632. ZERO-BASED REVIEW OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CYBER AND
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY PERSONNEL.
(a) Review Required.--Not later than January 1, 2021, each head of
a covered department, component, or agency shall--
(1) complete a zero-based review of the cyber and
information technology personnel of the head's covered
department, component, or agency; and
(2) provide the Principal Cyber Advisor, the Chief
Information Officer of the Department of Defense, and the Under
Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness the findings
of the head with respect to the head's covered department,
component, or agency.
(b) Covered Departments, Components, and Agencies.--For purposes of
this section, a covered department, component, or agency is--
(1) an independent Department of Defense component or
agency;
(2) the Office of the Secretary of Defense;
(3) a component of the Joint Staff;
(4) a military department or an armed force; or
(5) a reserve component of the Armed Forces.
(c) Scope of Review.--As part of a review conducted pursuant to
subsection (a)(1), the head of a covered department, component, or
agency shall, with respect to the covered department, component, or
agency of the head--
(1) assess military, civilian, and contractor positions and
personnel performing cyber and information technology missions;
(2) determine the roles and functions assigned by reviewing
existing position descriptions and conducting interviews to
quantify the current workload performed by military, civilian,
and contractor workforce;
(3) compare the Department's manning with the manning of
comparable industry organizations;
(4) include evaluation of the utility of cyber- and
information technology-focused missions, positions, and
personnel within such components--
(A) to assess the effectiveness and efficiency of
current activities;
(B) to assess the necessity of increasing,
reducing, or eliminating resources; and
(C) to guide prioritization of investment and
funding;
(5) develop recommendations and objectives for
organizational, manning, and equipping change, taking into
account anticipated developments in information technologies,
workload projections, automation and process enhancements, and
Department requirements;
(6) develop a gap analysis, contrasting the current
organization and the objectives developed pursuant to paragraph
(5); and
(7) develop roadmaps of prioritized activities and a
timeline for implementing the activities to close the gaps
identified pursuant to paragraph (6).
(d) Elements.--In carrying out a review pursuant to subsection
(a)(1), the head of a covered department, component, or agency shall
consider the following:
(1) Whether position descriptions and coding designators
for given cybersecurity and information technology roles are
accurate indicators of the work being performed.
(2) Whether the function of any cybersecurity or
information technology position or personnel can be replaced by
acquisition of cybersecurity or information technology products
or automation.
(3) Whether a given component or subcomponent is over- or
under-resourced in terms of personnel, using industry standards
as a benchmark where applicable.
(4) Whether cybersecurity service provider positions and
personnel fit coherently into the enterprise-wide cybersecurity
architecture and with the Department's cyber protection teams.
(5) Whether the function of any cybersecurity or
information technology position or personnel could be conducted
more efficiently or effectively by enterprise-level cyber or
information technology personnel.
(e) Furnishing Data and Analysis.--
(1) Data and analysis.--In carrying out subsection (a)(2),
each head of a covered department, component, or agency, shall
furnish to the Principal Cyber Advisor, the Chief Information
Officer, and the Under Secretary a description of the analysis
that led to the findings submitted under such subsection and
the data used in such analysis.
(2) Certification.--The Principal Cyber Advisor, the Chief
Information Officer, and the Under Secretary of Defense shall
jointly review each submittal under subsection (a)(2) and
certify whether the findings and analysis are in compliance
with the requirements of this section.
(f) Recommendations.--After receiving findings submitted by a head
of a covered department, component, or agency pursuant to paragraph (2)
of subsection (a) with respect to a review conducted by the head
pursuant to paragraph (1) of such subsection, the Principal Cyber
Advisor, the Chief Information Officer, and the Under Secretary shall
jointly provide to such head such recommendations as the Principal
Cyber Advisor, the Chief Information Officer, and the Under Secretary
may have for changes in manning or acquisition that proceed from such
review.
(g) Implementation.--The Principal Cyber Advisor, the Chief
Information Officer, and the Under Secretary shall jointly oversee and
assist in the implementation of the roadmaps developed pursuant to
subsection (c)(7) and the recommendations developed pursuant to
subsection (f).
(h) In-progress Reviews.--Not later than six months after the date
of the enactment of this Act and not less frequently than once every
six months thereafter until the Principal Cyber Advisor, the Chief
Information Officer, and the Under Secretary give the briefing required
by subsection (i), the Principal Cyber Advisor, the Chief Information
Officer, and the Under Secretary shall jointly--
(1) conduct in-progress reviews of the status of the
reviews required by subsection (a)(1); and
(2) provide the congressional defense committees with a
briefing on such in-progress reviews.
(i) Final Briefing.--After all of the reviews have been completed
under paragraph (1) of subsection (a), after receiving all of the
findings pursuant to paragraph (2) of such subsection, and not later
than June 1, 2021, the Principal Cyber Advisor, the Chief Information
Officer, and the Under Secretary shall jointly provide to the
congressional defense committees a briefing on the findings of the
Principal Cyber Advisor, the Chief Information Officer, and the Under
Secretary with respect to such reviews, including such recommendations
as the Principal Cyber Advisor, the Chief Information Officer, and the
Under Secretary may have for changes to the budget of the Department as
a result of such reviews.
(j) Definition of Zero-based Review.--In this section, the term
``zero-based review'' means a review in which assessment is conducted
with each item, position, or person costed anew, rather than in
relation to its size or status in any previous budget.
SEC. 1633. STUDY ON IMPROVING CYBER CAREER PATHS IN THE NAVY.
(a) Study Required.--Not later than October 1, 2020, the Secretary
of the Navy and the Chief of Naval Operations shall jointly--
(1) complete a study on methods to improve military and
civilian cyber career paths within the Navy; and
(2) submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on the findings of the Secretary and Chief with respect to the
study completed pursuant to paragraph (1) and submit such
report with all of the data used in such study.
(b) Elements.--The report submitted pursuant to subsection (a)(2)
shall include the following:
(1) A plan for implementing career paths for civilian and
military personnel tailored to develop expertise in cyber skill
sets, including skills sets appropriate for offensive and
defensive military cyber operations.
(2) Suggested changes to the processes that govern the
identification of talent and career progression of the civilian
and military workforce.
(3) A methodology for a cyber workforce assignment policy
that deliberately builds depth and breadth of knowledge
regarding the conduct of cyber operations throughout an entire
career.
(4) Possible enhancements to identifying, recruiting,
training, and retaining the cyber workforce, both civilian and
military, especially for Interactive On-Net operators and tool
developers.
(5) Recommendations for legislative and administrative
actions to address the findings and recommendations of the
Secretary and the Chief with respect to the study completed
pursuant to subsection (a)(1).
(c) Consultation.--In conducting the study required by subsection
(a)(1), the Secretary and the Chief shall consult with the following:
(1) The Principal Cyber Advisor of the Department of
Defense.
(2) The Secretary of the Air Force.
(3) The Air Force Chief of Staff.
(4) The Secretary of the Army.
(5) The Army Chief of Staff.
(6) The Commandant of the Marine Corps.
(7) The Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and
Readiness.
(8) The Chief Information Officer of the Department of
Defense.
(9) The Commander of the United States Cyber Command.
SEC. 1634. FRAMEWORK TO ENHANCE CYBERSECURITY OF THE UNITED STATES
DEFENSE INDUSTRIAL BASE.
(a) Framework Required.--Not later than February 1, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall develop a consistent, comprehensive
framework to enhance cybersecurity for the United States defense
industrial base.
(b) Elements.--The framework developed pursuant to subsection (a)
shall include the following:
(1) Identification of unified cybersecurity standards,
regulations, metrics, ratings, third-party certifications, or
requirements to be imposed on the defense industrial base for
the purpose of assessing the cybersecurity of individual
contractors.
(2) The roles and responsibilities of various activities
within the Department of Defense, across the entire acquisition
process, beginning with market research, including
responsibility determination, solicitation, and award, and
continuing with contractor management and oversight on matters
relating to cybersecurity.
(3) The responsibilities of the prime contractors, and all
subcontractors in the supply chain, for implementing the
required cybersecurity standards, regulations, metrics,
ratings, third-party certifications, and requirements
identified under paragraph (1).
(4) A plan to provide implementation guidance, education,
manuals, and, as necessary, direct technical support or
assistance to such contractors on matters relating to
cybersecurity.
(5) Methods and programs for defining and managing
controlled unclassified information, and for limiting the
presence of unnecessary sensitive information on contractor
networks.
(6) Quantitative metrics for assessing the effectiveness of
the overall framework over time, with respect to the
exfiltration of controlled unclassified information from the
defense industrial base.
(c) Matters for Consideration.--In developing the framework
required by subsection (a), the Secretary shall consider the following:
(1) Designating an official to be responsible for the
cybersecurity of the defense industrial base.
(2) Evaluating methods, standards, metrics, and third-party
certifications for assessing the cybersecurity of individual
contractors.
(3) Ensuring a consistent approach across the Department to
matters relating to the cybersecurity of the defense industrial
base.
(4) Tailoring cybersecurity requirements for small- and
medium-sized contractors based on a risk-based approach.
(5) Ensuring the Department's traceability and visibility
of cybersecurity compliance of suppliers to all levels of the
supply chain.
(6) Evaluating incentives and penalties for cybersecurity
performance of suppliers.
(7) Integrating cybersecurity and traditional
counterintelligence measures, requirements, and programs.
(8) Establishing a secure software development environment
(DevSecOps) in a cloud environment inside the perimeter of the
Department for contractors to do their development work.
(9) Establishing a secure cloud environment where
contractors could access the data of the Department needed for
their contract work.
(10) Establishing a Cybersecurity Maturity Model
Certification for defense industrial base companies, scoring
companies on a rating scale, and requiring certain ratings for
contract awards.
(11) Providing additional assistance to small companies in
the form of training, mentoring, approved security product
lists, and approved lists of security-as-a-service providers.
(12) Technological means, operational concepts, reference
architectures, offensive counterintelligence operation
concepts, and plans for operationalization to complicate
adversary espionage, including honeypotting and data
obfuscation.
(13) Implementing enhanced security vulnerability
assessments for contractors working on critical acquisition
programs, technologies, manufacturing capabilities, and
research areas.
(14) Identifying ways to better leverage technology and
employ machine learning or artificial intelligence
capabilities, such as Internet Protocol monitoring and data
integrity capabilities to be applied to contractor information
systems that host, receive, or transmit controlled unclassified
information.
(15) Developing tools to easily segregate program data to
only allow subcontractors access to their specific information.
(16) Appropriate communications of threat assessments of
the defense industrial base to the acquisition workforce at all
classification levels.
(17) Appropriate communications with industry on the impact
of cybersecurity considerations in contracting and procurement
decisions.
(d) Consultation.--In developing the framework required by
subsection (a), the Secretary shall consult with the following:
(1) Industry groups representing the defense industrial
base.
(2) Contractors in the defense industrial base.
(3) The Director of the National Institute of Standards and
Technology.
(4) The Secretary of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
(5) The Director of National Intelligence.
(e) Briefing.--
(1) In general.--Not later than March 11, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall provide the congressional defense
committees with a briefing on the framework developed pursuant
to subsection (a).
(2) Contents.--The briefing required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) An overview of the framework developed in
subsection (a).
(B) Identification of such pilot programs as the
Secretary considers may be required to improve the
cybersecurity of the defense industrial base.
(C) Implementation timelines and identification of
costs.
(D) Such recommendations as the Secretary may have
for legislative action to improve the cybersecurity of
the defense industrial base.
(f) Quarterly Briefings.--
(1) In general.--Not less frequently than once each quarter
until February 1, 2022, the Secretary of Defense shall brief
the congressional defense committees on the status of
development and implementation of the framework required by
subsection (a).
(2) Coordination with other briefings.--Each briefing under
paragraph (1) shall be conducted in conjunction with a
quarterly briefing under section 484(a) of title 10, United
States Code.
(3) Elements.--Each briefing under paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) The current status of the development and
implementation of the framework required by subsection
(a).
(B) A description of the efforts undertaken by the
Secretary to evaluate the matters for consideration set
forth in subsection (c).
(C) The current status of any pilot programs the
Secretary is carrying out to develop the framework.
SEC. 1635. ROLE OF CHIEF INFORMATION OFFICER IN IMPROVING ENTERPRISE-
WIDE CYBERSECURITY.
(a) In General.--In carrying out the responsibilities established
in section 142 of title 10, United States Code, the Chief Information
Officer of the Department of Defense shall, to the maximum extent
practicable, ensure that the cybersecurity programs and capabilities of
the Department--
(1) fit into an enterprise-wide cybersecurity architecture;
(2) are maximally interoperable with each other, including
those deployed by the components of the Department;
(3) enhance enterprise-level visibility and responsiveness
to threats; and
(4) are developed, procured, instituted, and managed in a
cost-efficient manner, exploiting economies of scale and
enterprise-wide services and discouraging unnecessary
customization and piecemeal acquisition.
(b) Requirements.--In carrying out subsection (a), the Chief
Information Officer shall--
(1) manage and modernize the cybersecurity architecture of
the Department, including--
(A) ensuring the cybersecurity architecture of the
Department maximizes cybersecurity capability, network,
and endpoint activity data-sharing across Department
components;
(B) ensuring the cybersecurity architecture of the
Department supports improved automaticity of
cybersecurity detection and response; and
(C) modernizing and configuring the Department's
standardized deployed perimeter, network-level, and
endpoint capabilities to improve interoperability, meet
pressing capability needs, and negate common adversary
tactics, techniques, and procedures;
(2) establish mechanisms to enable and mandate, as
necessary, cybersecurity capability, and network and endpoint
activity data-sharing across Department components;
(3) make mission data, through data tagging, automatic
transmission, and other means, accessible and discoverable by
Department components other than owners of those mission data;
(4) incorporate emerging cybersecurity technologies from
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Strategic
Capabilities Office, the Defense Innovation Unit, the
laboratories of the military departments, and the commercial
sector into the cybersecurity architecture of the Department;
and
(5) ensure that the Department possesses the necessary
computing infrastructure, through technology refresh,
installation or acquisition of bandwidth, and the use of cloud
computing power, to host and enable necessary cybersecurity
capabilities.
SEC. 1636. QUARTERLY ASSESSMENTS OF THE READINESS OF CYBER FORCES.
(a) In General.--Section 484(b) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraph (4) as paragraph (5); and
(2) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following new
paragraph (4):
``(4) An assessment of the readiness of the Cyber Mission
Forces that--
``(A) addresses all of the abilities of the
Department to conduct cyberspace operations based on
capability and capacity of personnel, equipment,
training, and equipment condition--
``(i) using both quantitative and
qualitative metrics; and
``(ii) in a way that is common to all
military departments; and
``(B) is consistent with readiness reporting
pursuant to section 482 of this title.''.
(b) Metrics.--
(1) Establishment required.--The Secretary of Defense shall
establish metrics for the assessment of the readiness of the
Cyber Mission Forces of the Department of Defense.
(2) Briefing required.--Not later than 90 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary will provide a
briefing to the congressional defense committees on the metrics
established pursuant to paragraph (1).
(c) Modification of Readiness Reporting System.--Not later than 180
days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall
take such actions as the Secretary considers appropriate to ensure that
the comprehensive readiness reporting system established pursuant to
section 117(a) of title 10, United States Code, covers matters relating
to the readiness of the Cyber Mission Forces--
(1) using the metrics established pursuant to subsection
(b)(1); and
(2) in a manner that is consistent with sections 117 and
482 of such title.
(d) First Quarterly Briefing Assessing Cyber Readiness.--The
amendments made by subsection (a) shall take effect on the date that is
180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 1637. CONTROL AND ANALYSIS OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE DATA STOLEN
THROUGH CYBERSPACE.
(a) Requirements.--When the Secretary of Defense determines that
significant Department of Defense information may have been stolen
through cyberspace and evidence of theft of the data in question--
(1) is in the possession of a component of the Department,
the Secretary shall--
(A) either transfer or replicate and transfer such
Department data in a prompt and secure manner to a
secure repository with access by Department personnel
appropriately limited on a need-to-know basis;
(B) ensure the Department applies such automated
analytic tools and capabilities to the repository of
potentially compromised data as are necessary to
rapidly understand the scope and effect of the
potential compromise;
(C) for high priority Department systems, develop
analytic products that characterize the scope of data
compromised;
(D) ensure that all mission-affected entities in
the Department are made aware of the theft or possible
theft and, as damage assessment and mitigation
proceeds, are kept apprised of the extent of the data
stolen; and
(E) ensure that the Department counterintelligence
organizations are--
(i) fully integrated with any damage
assessment team assigned to the breach;
(ii) fully informed of the data that have
or potentially have been stolen and the effect
of such theft; and
(iii) provided resources and tasked, in
conjunction with subject matter experts and
responsible authorities, to immediately develop
and execute countermeasures in response to a
breach involving espionage and data theft; or
(2) is in the possession of or under controls or
restrictions imposed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or
a national counterintelligence or intelligence organization,
the Secretary shall determine, jointly with the Director of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation or the Director of National
Intelligence, as appropriate, the most expeditious process,
means, and conditions for carrying out the activities otherwise
required by paragraph (1).
(b) Recommendations.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees such recommendations as the Secretary may have for
legislative or administrative action to address such barriers as may be
inhibiting the implementation of this section.
SEC. 1638. ACCREDITATION STANDARDS AND PROCESSES FOR CYBERSECURITY AND
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY PRODUCTS AND SERVICES.
(a) Assessment.--The Chief Information Officer of the Department of
Defense shall conduct an enterprise assessment of accreditation of
standards and processes for cybersecurity and information technology
products and services.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than April 1, 2020, the Chief
Information Officer shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on the assessment conducted under
subsection (a).
(2) Contents.--The report submitted under paragraph (1)
shall include the following:
(A) The findings of the Chief Information Officer
with respect to the assessment conducted under
subsection (a).
(B) A description of the modifications proposed or
enacted to accreditation standards and processes
arising out of the assessment.
(C) A description of how the Department will
increasingly automate accreditation processes, pursue
agile development, incorporate machine learning, and
foster reciprocity across authorizing officials.
SEC. 1639. EXTENSION OF AUTHORITIES FOR CYBERSPACE SOLARIUM COMMISSION.
Section 1652(k) of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232) is
amended--
(1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``September 1, 2019'' and
inserting ``February 1, 2020''; and
(2) in paragraph (2), by striking ``and intelligence
committees'' and inserting ``committees, the congressional
intelligence committees, the Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs of the Senate, and the Committee on
Homeland Security of the House of Representatives''.
SEC. 1640. MODIFICATION OF ELEMENTS OF ASSESSMENT REQUIRED FOR
TERMINATION OF DUAL-HAT ARRANGEMENT FOR COMMANDER OF THE
UNITED STATES CYBER COMMAND.
Section 1642(b)(2)(C) of the National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2017 (130 Stat. 2601; Public Law 114-328) is amended--
(1) in clause (ii), by inserting ``and national
intelligence operations'' after ``operations'';
(2) by amending clause (iii) to read as follows:
``(iii) The tools, weapons, and accesses
used in and available for military cyber
operations are sufficient for achieving
required effects and United States Cyber
Command is capable of acquiring or developing
these tools, weapons, and accesses.''; and
(3) by amending clause (vi) to read as follows:
``(vi) The cyber mission force has achieved
full operational capability and has
demonstrated the capacity to execute the cyber
missions of the Department, including--
``(I) execution of national-level
missions through cyberspace, including
deterrence and disruption of adversary
cyber activity;
``(II) defense of the Department of
Defense Information Network; and
``(III) support for other combatant
commands, including targeting of
adversary military assets.''.
SEC. 1641. USE OF NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY CYBERSECURITY EXPERTISE TO
SUPPORT ACQUISITION OF COMMERCIAL CYBERSECURITY PRODUCTS.
(a) Advisory Mission.--The National Security Agency shall, as a
mission in its role in securing the information systems of the
Department of Defense, advise and assist the Department of Defense in
its acquisition and adaptation of cybersecurity products and services
from industry, especially the commercial cybersecurity sector.
(b) Program to Improve Acquisition of Cybersecurity Products and
Services.--
(1) Establishment.--Consistent with paragraph (1), the
Director of the National Security Agency shall establish a
permanent program consisting of market research, testing, and
expertise transmission, or augments to existing programs, to
improve the acquisition by the Department of cybersecurity
products and services.
(2) Requirements.--Under the program established pursuant
to paragraph (1), the Director shall, independently and at the
request of components of the Department--
(A) test and evaluate commercially-available
cybersecurity products and services using--
(i) generally known cyber operations
techniques; and
(ii) tools and cyber operations techniques
and advanced tools and techniques available to
the National Security Agency;
(B) develop and establish standard procedures,
techniques, and threat-informed metrics to perform the
testing and evaluation required by subparagraph (A);
and
(C) advise the Secretary of Defense on the merits
and disadvantages of evaluated cybersecurity products,
including with respect to--
(i) any synergies between products;
(ii) value;
(iii) matters relating to operation and
maintenance; and
(iv) matters relating to customization
requirements.
(3) Limitations.--The program established under paragraph
(1) shall not--
(A) by used to accredit cybersecurity products and
services for use by the Department;
(B) create approved products lists; or
(C) be used for acquisition contracts for the
procurement and fielding of cybersecurity products on
behalf of the Department.
SEC. 1642. STUDY ON FUTURE CYBER WARFIGHTING CAPABILITIES OF DEPARTMENT
OF DEFENSE.
(a) Study Required.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall direct the
Defense Science Board to carry out a study on the future cyber
warfighting capabilities of the Department of Defense.
(b) Participation.--Participants in the study shall include the
following:
(1) Such members of the Board, including members of the
Task Force on Cyber Deterrence of the Board, as the Chairman of
the Board considers appropriate for the study.
(2) Such additional temporary members or contracted support
as the Secretary--
(A) selects from those recommended by the Chairman
for purposes of the study; and
(B) considers to have significant technical,
policy, or military expertise.
(c) Elements.--The study conducted pursuant to subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) A technical evaluation of the Joint Cyber Warfighting
Architecture of the Department, especially the Unified
Platform, Joint Cyber Command and Control, and Persistent Cyber
Training Environment, including with respect to the following:
(A) The suitability of the requirements and, as
relevant, the delivered capability of such architecture
to modern cyber warfighting.
(B) Such requirements or capabilities as may be
absent or underemphasized in such architecture.
(C) The speed of development and acquisition as
compared to mission need.
(D) Identification of potential duplication of
efforts among the programs and concepts evaluated.
(E) The coherence of such architecture with the
National Mission Teams and Combat Mission Teams of the
Cyber Mission Force, as constituted and organized on
the day before the date of the enactment of this Act.
(F) The coherence of such architecture with the
Cyber Protection Teams of the Cyber Mission Force and
the cybersecurity service providers of the Department,
as constituted and organized on the day before the date
of the enactment of this Act.
(G) The coherence of such architecture with the
concepts of persistent engagement and defending forward
as incorporated in the 2018 Department of Defense Cyber
Strategy, including with respect to operational
concepts such as consistent spy-on-spy deterrence,
securing adversary operating pictures, and preemptively
feeding indicators and warning to defensive operators.
(2) A technical evaluation of the tool development and
acquisition programs of the Department, including with respect
to the following:
(A) The suitability of planned tool suite and cyber
armory constructs of the United States Cyber Command to
modern cyber warfighting.
(B) The speed of development and acquisition as
compared to mission need.
(C) The resourcing and effectiveness of the
internal tool development of the United States Cyber
Command as compared to the tool development of the
National Security Agency.
(D) The resourcing and effectiveness of the
internal tool development of the United States Cyber
Command as compared to its acquisition.
(E) The coherence of such programs with the
concepts of persistent engagement and defending forward
as incorporated in the 2018 Department of Defense Cyber
Strategy, including with respect to operational
concepts such as consistent spy-on-spy deterrence,
securing adversary operating pictures, and preemptively
feeding indicators and warning to defensive operators.
(3) An evaluation of the operational planning and targeting
of the United States Cyber Command, including support for
regional combatant commands, and suitability for modern cyber
warfighting.
(4) Development of such recommendations as the Board may
have for legislative or administrative action relating to the
future cyber warfighting capabilities of the Department.
(d) Access to Information.--The Secretary shall provide the Board
with timely access to appropriate information, data, resources, and
analysis so that the Board may conduct a thorough and independent
analysis as required under this section.
(e) Report.--
(1) Transmittal to secretary.--Not later than November 1,
2021, the Board shall transmit to the Secretary a final report
on the study conducted pursuant to subsection (a).
(2) Transmittal to congress.--Not later than 30 days after
the date on which the Secretary receives the final report under
paragraph (1), the Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees such report and such comments as the
Secretary considers appropriate.
SEC. 1643. AUTHORITY TO USE OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FUNDS FOR CYBER
OPERATIONS-PECULIAR CAPABILITY DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS.
(a) In General.--Subchapter I of chapter 134 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2243 the following
new section:
``Sec. 2243a. Authority to use operation and maintenance funds for
cyber operations-peculiar capability development projects
``(a) In General.--Subject to subsection (c), the covered officials
may each use amounts authorized to be appropriated or otherwise made
available for the Department of Defense for operation and maintenance,
to carry out cyber operations-peculiar capability development projects.
``(b) Covered Officials.--For purposes of this section, the covered
officials are as follows:
``(1) The Secretary of the Army.
``(2) The Secretary of the Navy.
``(3) The Secretary of the Air Force.
``(4) The Commandant of the Marine Corps.
``(c) Limitation.--In a fiscal year, the aggregate amount that may
be used by a single covered official under subsection (a) may not
exceed $3,000,000.
``(d) Relationship to Other Laws.--The authority in subsection (a)
may be used without regard to any provision of law establishing a limit
on the unit cost of an investment item that may be purchased with funds
made available for operation and maintenance.''.
(b) Table of Sections Amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item
relating to section 2243 the following new item:
``2243a. Authority to use operation and maintenance funds for cyber
operations-peculiar capability development
projects.''.
(c) Reports.--
(1) In general.--In each of fiscal years 2021, 2022, and
2023, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report on the use of the
authority provided under section 2243a(a) of title 10, United
States Code, as added by subsection (a), during the previous
fiscal year.
(2) Timing.--Each report submitted pursuant to paragraph
(1) shall be submitted concurrently with the annual budget
request of the President submitted pursuant to section 1105 of
title 31, United States Code.
SEC. 1644. EXPANSION OF AUTHORITY FOR ACCESS AND INFORMATION RELATING
TO CYBERATTACKS ON DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE OPERATIONALLY
CRITICAL CONTRACTORS.
Section 391(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (3)--
(A) by amending subparagraph (A) to read as
follows:
``(A) include mechanisms for Department personnel--
``(i) if requested by an operationally
critical contractor, to assist the contractor
in detecting and mitigating penetrations; or
``(ii) at the request of the Department, to
obtain access to equipment or information of an
operationally critical contractor necessary to
conduct a forensic analysis, in addition to any
analysis conducted by the contractor; and'';
and
(B) in subparagraph (B)--
(i) by striking ``to determine whether
information'' and inserting the following: ``to
determine whether--
``(i) information'';
(ii) in clause (i), as so designated--
(I) by inserting ``or compromised
on'' after ``exfiltrated from''; and
(II) by striking the period at the
end and inserting ``or compromised;
or''; and
(iii) by adding at the end the following
new clause:
``(ii) the ability of the contractor to
provide operationally critical support has been
affected and, if so, how and to what extent it
has been affected.'';
(2) in paragraph (4), by inserting ``, so as to minimize
delays in or any curtailing of the Department's cyber response
and defensive actions'' after ``specific person''; and
(3) in paragraph (5)(C), by inserting `` or
counterintelligence activities'' after ``investigations''.
SEC. 1645. BRIEFING ON MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING RELATING TO JOINT
OPERATIONAL PLANNING AND CONTROL OF CYBER ATTACKS OF
NATIONAL SCALE.
(a) Briefing Required.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the Secretary
of Defense shall provide the appropriate committees of Congress a
briefing on the Joint Department of Defense and Department of Homeland
Security Memorandum of Understanding signed by the Secretary of Defense
on October 6, 2018.
(b) Elements.--The briefing required by subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) The number of planners assigned by the Department of
Defense to line of effort three and line of effort four and the
areas of expertise of those planners.
(2) Whether the planners described in paragraph (1) are
physically co-located with their counterparts in the Department
of Homeland Security and are assigned full-time or part-time to
line of effort three and line of effort four.
(3) Whether the planners described in paragraph (1) are
developing operational plans and playbooks that will be
implemented in response to actual cyber attacks of national
scale or whether the planning activities are limited to
planning and exercise scenarios.
(4) Whether the official in charge of the planners assigned
to line of effort three and line of effort four has or will
have operational control of a Federal response to a cyber
attack of national scale.
(5) Whether the National Cyber Strategy, published in
September 2018, provides for a standing joint multi-agency
organization and staff to plan and direct operational responses
to cyber attacks of national scale.
(6) The charter and implementation plan of the Joint
Department of Defense and Department of Homeland Security Cyber
Protection and Defense Steering Group required by the
memorandum of understanding described in subsection (a).
(c) Definition of Appropriate Committees of Congress.--In this
section, the term ``appropriate committees of Congress'' means--
(1) the congressional defense committees;
(2) the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs of the Senate; and
(3) the Committee on Homeland Security of the House of
Representatives.
SEC. 1646. STUDY TO DETERMINE THE OPTIMAL STRATEGY FOR STRUCTURING AND
MANNING ELEMENTS OF THE JOINT FORCE HEADQUARTERS-CYBER
ORGANIZATIONS, JOINT MISSION OPERATIONS CENTERS, AND
CYBER OPERATIONS-INTEGRATED PLANNING ELEMENTS.
(a) Study.--
(1) In general.--The Principal Cyber Advisor of the
Department of Defense shall conduct a study to determine the
optimal strategy for structuring and manning elements of the
following:
(A) Joint Force Headquarters-Cyber organizations.
(B) Joint Mission Operations Centers.
(C) Cyber Operations-Integrated Planning Elements.
(2) Elements.--The study conducted under subsection (a)
shall include assessment of the following:
(A) Operational effects on the military services if
the entities listed in subparagraphs (A) through (C) of
paragraph (1) are restructured from organizations that
are service component organizations to joint
organizations.
(B) Organizational effects on the military services
if the billets associated with the entities listed in
subparagraphs (A) through (C) of paragraph (1) are
transferred to United States Cyber Command and
designated as joint billets for joint qualification
purposes.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Principal Cyber Advisor shall
submit to the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate and the
Committee on Armed Services of the House of Representatives a
report on the study conducted under subsection (a).
(2) Contents.--The report submitted under paragraph (1)
shall contain the following:
(A) The findings of the Principal Cyber Advisor
with respect to the study conducted under subsection
(a).
(B) Details of the operational and organizational
effects assessed under subsection (a)(2).
(C) A plan to carry out the transfer described in
subsection (a)(2)(B) and the associated costs.
(D) Such other matters as the Principal Cyber
Advisor considers appropriate.
SEC. 1647. CYBER GOVERNANCE STRUCTURES AND PRINCIPAL CYBER ADVISORS ON
MILITARY CYBER FORCE MATTERS.
(a) Designation.--
(1) In general.--Not later than one year after the date of
the enactment of this Act, each Secretary of a military
department shall designate a Principal Cyber Advisor to act as
the principal advisor to the Secretary of the military
department on the cyber forces, cyber programs, and
cybersecurity matters of the military department, including
matters relating to weapons systems, enabling infrastructure,
and the defense industrial base.
(2) Nature of position.--Each Principal Cyber Advisor
position under paragraph (1) shall be a senior civilian
leadership position.
(b) Responsibilities Principal Cyber Advisors.--Each Principal
Cyber Advisor of a military department shall be responsible for
advising the Secretary of the military department and coordinating and
overseeing the implementation of policy, strategies, sustainment, and
plans on the following:
(1) The resourcing and training of the military cyber
forces of the military department and ensuring that such
resourcing and training meets the needs of United States Cyber
Command.
(2) Acquisition of offensive and defensive cyber
capabilities for the military cyber forces of the military
department.
(3) Cybersecurity management and operations of the military
department.
(4) Acquisition of cybersecurity tools and capabilities for
the cybersecurity service providers of the military department.
(5) Improving and enforcing a culture of cybersecurity
warfighting and responsibility throughout the military
department.
(c) Administrative Matters.--
(1) Designation of individuals.--In designating a Principal
Cyber Adviser under subsection (a), the Secretary of a military
department may designate an individual in an existing position
in the military department.
(2) Coordination.--The Principal Cyber Advisor of a
military department shall work in close coordination with the
Principal Cyber Advisor of the Department of Defense, the Chief
Information Officer of the Department, relevant military
service chief information officers, and other relevant military
service officers to ensure service compliance with the
Department of Defense Cyber Strategy.
(d) Responsibility to the Senior Acquisition Executives.--In
addition to the responsibilities set forth in subsection (b), the
Principal Cyber Advisor of a military department shall be responsible
for advising the senior acquisition executive of the military
department and, as determined by the Secretary of the military
department, for advising and coordinating and overseeing the
implementation of policy, strategies, sustainment, and plans for--
(1) cybersecurity of the industrial base; and
(2) cybersecurity of Department of Defense information
systems and information technology services, including how
cybersecurity threat information is incorporated and the
development of cyber practices, cyber testing, and mitigation
of cybersecurity risks.
(e) Review of Current Responsibilities.--
(1) In general.--Not later than January 1, 2021, each
Secretary of a military department shall review the military
department's current governance model for cybersecurity with
respect to current authorities and responsibilities.
(2) Elements.--Each review under paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) An assessment of whether additional changes
beyond the designation of a Principal Cyber Advisor
pursuant to subsection (a) are required.
(B) Consideration of whether the current governance
structure and assignment of authorities--
(i) enable effective top-down governance;
(ii) enable effective Chief Information
Officer and Chief Information Security Officer
action;
(iii) are adequately consolidated so that
the authority and responsibility for
cybersecurity risk management is clear and at
an appropriate level of seniority;
(iv) provides authority to a single
individual to certify compliance of Department
information systems and information technology
services with all current cybersecurity
standards; and
(v) support efficient coordination across
the military departments and services, the
Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Defense
Information Systems Agency, and United States
Cyber Command.
(f) Briefing.--Not later than February 1, 2021, each Secretary of a
military department shall brief the congressional defense committees on
the findings of the Secretary with respect to the review conducted by
the Secretary under subsection (e).
SEC. 1648. DESIGNATION OF TEST NETWORKS FOR TESTING AND ACCREDITATION
OF CYBERSECURITY PRODUCTS AND SERVICES.
(a) Designation.--Not later than April 1, 2020, the Secretary of
Defense shall designate, for use by the Defense Information Systems
Agency and such other components of the Department of Defense as the
Secretary considers appropriate, three test networks for the testing
and accreditation of cybersecurity products and services.
(b) Requirements.--The networks designated under subsection (a)
shall--
(1) be of sufficient scale to realistically test
cybersecurity products and services;
(2) feature substantially different architectures and
configurations;
(3) be live, operational networks; and
(4) feature cybersecurity processes, tools, and
technologies that are appropriate for test purposes and
representative of the processes, tools, and technologies that
are widely used throughout the Department.
SEC. 1649. CONSORTIA OF UNIVERSITIES TO ADVISE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE ON
CYBERSECURITY MATTERS.
(a) Establishment.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish one or
more consortia to advise and assist the Secretary on matters relating
to cybersecurity.
(b) Membership.--The consortium or consortia established under
subsection (a) shall consist of universities that have been designated
as centers of academic excellence by the Director of the National
Security Agency or the Secretary of Homeland Security.
(c) Organization.--
(1) Designation of administrative chair and terms.--For
each consortium established under subsection (a), the
Secretary, based on recommendations from the members of the
consortium, shall designate one member of the consortium to
function as an administrative chair of the consortium for a
term with a specific duration specified by the Secretary.
(2) Subsequent terms.--No member of a consortium designated
under paragraph (1) may serve as the administrative chair of
that consortium for two consecutive terms.
(3) Duties of administrative chair.--Each administrative
chair designated under paragraph (1) for a consortium shall--
(A) act as the leader of the consortium for the
term specified by the Secretary under paragraph (1);
(B) be the liaison between the consortium and the
Secretary;
(C) distribute requests from the Secretary for
advice and assistance to appropriate members of the
consortium and coordinate responses back to the
Secretary; and
(D) act as a clearinghouse for Department of
Defense requests relating to advice and assistance on
matters relating to cybersecurity and to provide
feedback to the Secretary from members of the
consortium.
(d) Functions.--The functions of a consortium established under
subsection (a) are as follows:
(1) To provide to the Secretary access to the expertise of
the members of the consortium on matters relating to
cybersecurity.
(2) To align the efforts of such members in support of the
Department.
(3) To act as a facilitator in responding to Department
requests relating to advice and assistance on matters relating
to cybersecurity and to provide feedback to the Secretary from
members of the consortium.
(e) Procedures.--The Secretary shall establish procedures for
organizations within the Department to access the work product produced
by and the research, capabilities, and expertise of a consortium
established under subsection (a) and the universities that constitute
the consortium.
Subtitle D--Nuclear Forces
SEC. 1661. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITIES RELATING TO NUCLEAR COMMAND,
CONTROL, AND COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM.
(a) Duties and Powers of Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition
and Sustainment.--Section 133b(b) of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (4), (5), (6), and (7) as
paragraphs (5), (6), (7), and (8), respectively;
(2) by inserting after paragraph (3) the following new
paragraph (4):
``(4) establishing policies for, and providing oversight,
guidance, and coordination with respect to, the nuclear
command, control, and communications system;''; and
(3) in paragraph (6), as redesignated by paragraph (1), by
inserting after ``overseeing the modernization of nuclear
forces'' the following: ``, including the nuclear command,
control, and communications system,''.
(b) Duties and Responsibilities of Chief Information Officer.--
Section 142(b)(1) of such title is amended--
(1) by striking subparagraph (G); and
(2) by redesignating subparagraphs (H) and (I) as
subparagraphs (G) and (H), respectively.
SEC. 1662. EXPANSION OF OFFICIALS REQUIRED TO CONDUCT BIENNIAL
ASSESSMENTS OF DELIVERY PLATFORMS FOR NUCLEAR WEAPONS AND
NUCLEAR COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM.
Section 492(d) of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
(1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``; and'' and inserting a
semicolon;
(2) in paragraph (3), by striking the period at the end and
inserting ``; and''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following:
``(4) the Commander of the United States Air Forces in
Europe.''.
SEC. 1663. CONFORMING AMENDMENT TO COUNCIL ON OVERSIGHT OF THE NATIONAL
LEADERSHIP COMMAND, CONTROL, AND COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM.
Section 171a of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``, Technology, and Logistics'' each place it appears and
inserting ``and Sustainment''.
SEC. 1664. 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 2020 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.
SEC. 1665. BRIEFING ON LONG-RANGE STANDOFF WEAPON AND SEA-LAUNCHED
CRUISE MISSILE.
Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment, in
consultation with the Administrator for Nuclear Security, shall provide
to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of
Representatives a briefing on opportunities--
(1) to increase commonality between the long-range standoff
weapon and the sea-launched cruise missile; and
(2) to leverage, in the development of the sea-launched
cruise missile, technologies developed, or under development as
of the date of the briefing, as part of the long-range standoff
weapon program.
SEC. 1666. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON INDUSTRIAL BASE FOR GROUND-BASED
STRATEGIC DETERRENT PROGRAM.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) ensuring the viability of an industrial base of at
least two domestic producers of large solid rocket motors for
the ground-based strategic deterrent program is an important
national security interest; and
(2) in continuing to carry out that program, the Secretary
of Defense should--
(A) strive to maintain competition and proper
vendor capabilities in order to maintain the best value
for the Government;
(B) consider the long-term health and viability of
the industrial base when structuring and awarding major
procurement or development contracts; and
(C) when appropriate, structure programs to provide
stability to the industrial base by maintaining
continued production for an extended period.
SEC. 1667. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON NUCLEAR DETERRENCE COMMITMENTS OF THE
UNITED STATES.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) credible extended deterrence commitments make key
contributions to the security of the United States,
international stability, and the nonproliferation objectives of
the United States;
(2) the nuclear forces of the United States, as well as the
independent nuclear forces of other members of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (in this section referred to as
``NATO''), continue to play a critical role in national
security strategy of the United States and the security of the
NATO alliance;
(3) the forward-deployment of dual-capable aircraft
operated by the United States, and the participation of certain
NATO members in the nuclear deterrence mission, are vitally
important to the deterrence and defense posture of NATO;
(4) such aircraft provide a credible and flexible nuclear
capability that plays a fundamental role in regional deterrence
and effectively assuring allies and partners of the commitment
of the United States to their security; and
(5) nuclear-certified F-35A aircraft provide the most
advanced nuclear fighter capability in the current and future
anti-access area denial environments.
Subtitle E--Missile Defense Programs
SEC. 1671. IRON DOME SHORT-RANGE ROCKET DEFENSE SYSTEM AND ISRAELI
COOPERATIVE MISSILE DEFENSE PROGRAM CO-DEVELOPMENT AND
CO-PRODUCTION.
(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 2020 for procurement, Defense-wide, and available for the
Missile Defense Agency, not more than $95,000,000 may be
provided to the Government of Israel to procure components for
the Iron Dome short-range rocket defense system through co-
production of such 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, as
amended to include co-production for Tamir
interceptors.
(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 and
Sustainment 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, David's Sling
Weapon System Co-production.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (3), of the funds
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020 for
procurement, Defense-wide, and available for the Missile
Defense Agency not more than $50,000,000 may be provided to the
Government of Israel to procure the David's Sling Weapon
System, including for co-production of parts and components in
the United States by United States industry.
(2) Agreement.--(A) Provision of funds specified in
paragraph (1) shall be subject to the terms and conditions in
the bilateral co-production agreement, including--
(i) a one-for-one cash match is made by Israel or
in another matching amount that otherwise meets best
efforts (as mutually agreed to by the United States and
Israel); and
(ii) co-production of parts, components, and all-up
rounds (if appropriate) in the United States by United
States industry for the David's Sling Weapon System is
not less than 50 percent.
(3) Certification and assessment.--The Under Secretary of
Defense for Acquisition and Sustainment shall submit to the
appropriate congressional committees--
(A) a certification that 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 agreement and the bilateral
co-production agreement for the David's Sling Weapon
System; and
(B) an assessment detailing any risks relating to
the implementation of such agreement.
(c) Israeli Cooperative Missile Defense Program, Arrow 3 Upper Tier
Interceptor Program Co-Production.--
(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), of the funds
authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020 for
procurement, Defense-wide, and available for the Missile
Defense Agency not more than $55,000,000 may be provided to the
Government of Israel for the Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor
Program, including for co-production of parts and components in
the United States by United States industry.
(2) Certification.--The Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition and Sustainment shall submit to the appropriate
congressional committees a certification that--
(A) 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
agreement for the Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor
Program;
(B) funds specified in paragraph (1) will be
provided on the basis of a one-for-one cash match made
by Israel or in another matching amount that otherwise
meets best efforts (as mutually agreed to by the United
States and Israel);
(C) 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 subparagraph (D),
the terms of co-production of parts and
components on the basis of the greatest
practicable co-production 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 co-production;
(ii) complete transparency on the
requirement of Israel for the number of
interceptors and batteries that will be
procured, including with respect to the
procurement plans, acquisition strategy, and
funding profiles of Israel;
(iii) technical milestones for co-
production of parts and components and
procurement;
(iv) a joint affordability working group to
consider cost reduction initiatives; and
(v) joint approval processes for third-
party sales; and
(D) the level of co-production described in
subparagraph (C)(i) for the Arrow 3 Upper Tier
Interceptor Program is not less than 50 percent.
(d) Number.--In carrying out paragraph (2) of subsection (b) and
paragraph (2) of subsection (c), the Under Secretary may submit--
(1) one certification covering both the David's Sling
Weapon System and the Arrow 3 Upper Tier Interceptor Program;
or
(2) separate certifications for each respective system.
(e) Timing.--The Under Secretary shall submit to the congressional
defense committees the certification and assessment under subsection
(b)(3) and the certification under subsection (c)(2) by not later than
30 days before the funds specified in paragraph (1) of subsections (b)
and (c) for the respective system covered by the certification are
provided to the Government of Israel.
(f) 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. 1672. EXPANSION OF NATIONAL MISSILE DEFENSE POLICY AND PROGRAM
REDESIGNATION.
(a) Sense of the Senate.--It is the Sense of the Senate that--
(1) the United States must continue to pursue a
comprehensive missile defense strategy that will deliver
integrated and effective capabilities to counter ballistic,
cruise, and hypersonic missile threats;
(2) adversaries are quickly expanding the capabilities of
their existing missile systems, adding new and unprecedented
types of missile capabilities to their arsenals, and further
integrating offensive missiles into their coercive threats,
military exercises, and war planning;
(3) both Russia and China are rapidly enhancing their
existing offensive missile systems and developing advanced sea-
, ground-, and air-launched cruise missiles as well as
hypersonic capabilities;
(4) due to the proliferation of offensive ballistic and
cruise missiles and the emergence of game-changing hypersonic
weapons technologies, all of which threaten regional balances,
our allies and partners, United States deployed armed forces,
and the United States homeland, missile defenses become an even
more critical element of United States strategy; and
(5) the United States must outpace adversary offensive
missile capabilities.
(b) Expansion of Policy.--Section 1681(a) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 10 U.S.C.
2431 note) is amended by striking ``ballistic missile threat'' and
inserting ``ballistic, cruise, and hypersonic missile threats''.
(c) Redesignation Requirement.--Not later than the date on which
the President submits to Congress pursuant to section 1105 of title 31,
United States Code, the annual budget request of the President for
fiscal year 2021, the Secretary of Defense shall, as the Secretary
considers appropriate, redesignate all strategies, policies, programs,
and systems under the jurisdiction of the Secretary to reflect that
missile defense programs of the United States defend against ballistic,
cruise, and hypersonic missiles in all phases of flight.
SEC. 1673. ACCELERATION OF THE DEPLOYMENT OF PERSISTENT SPACE-BASED
SENSOR ARCHITECTURE.
(a) Sense of the Senate.--It is the Sense of the Senate that--
(1) Congress has expressed support for a space-based
missile defense sensor program, in the two most recent enacted
National Defense Authorization Acts;
(2) the Secretary of Defense should rapidly develop and
deploy a persistent, space-based sensor architecture to ensure
missile defenses of the United States are more effective
against ballistic missile threats and more responsive to
emergent threats from hypersonic and cruise missiles;
(3) the responsibility for developing and deploying a
hypersonic and ballistic tracking space sensor should remain
within the Director of the Missile Defense Agency; and
(4) the Director of the Missile Defense Agency should
deploy a hypersonic and ballistic tracking space sensor
constellation as soon as technically feasible.
(b) Assignment of Primary Responsibility for Development and
Deployment of Hypersonic and Ballistic Tracking Space Sensor.--Not
later than 30 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary shall--
(1) assign the Director of the Missile Defense Agency with
the principal responsibility for the development and deployment
of a hypersonic and ballistic tracking space sensor; and
(2) submit to the congressional defense committees
certification of such assignment.
(c) Certification Regarding Funding of Hypersonic and Ballistic
Tracking Space Sensor Program.--At the same time that the President
submits to Congress pursuant to section 1105 of title 31, United States
Code, the annual budget request of the President for fiscal year 2021,
the Under Secretary of Defense Comptroller and the Director for Cost
Assessment and Program Evaluation shall jointly certify to the
congressional defense committees whether the hypersonic and ballistic
tracking space sensor program is sufficiently funded in the future-
years defense program for the Missile Defense Agency.
(d) Deployment Deadline.--Section 1683(a) of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 10 U.S.C.
2431 note) is amended--
(1) by striking ``(a) In General.--'' and inserting the
following:
``(a) Development, Testing, and Deployment.--
``(1) Development.--''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraphs:
``(2) Testing and deployment.--The Director shall begin on-
orbit testing of a hypersonic and ballistic tracking space
sensor no later than December 31, 2021, with full operational
deployment as soon as technically feasible thereafter.
``(3) Waiver.--The Secretary of Defense may waive the
deadline for testing specified in paragraph (2) if the
Secretary submits to the congressional defense committees a
report containing--
``(A) the explanation why the Secretary cannot meet
such deadline;
``(B) the technical risks and estimated cost of
accelerating the program to attempt to meet such
deadline;
``(C) an assessment of threat systems that could
not be detected or tracked persistently due to waiving
such deadline; and
``(D) a plan, including a timeline, for beginning
the required testing.''.
(e) Report on Progress.--
(1) In general.--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 on the
progress of all efforts being made by the Missile Defense
Agency, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Air
Force, and the Space Development Agency relating to space-based
sensing and tracking capabilities for missile defense and how
each of such organizations will work together to avoid
duplication of efforts.
(2) Form.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified
annex.
SEC. 1674. NONSTANDARD ACQUISITION PROCESSES OF MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY.
(a) Sense of the Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the Department of Defense needs to provide capabilities
at the speed of relevance that are more lethal, and to ensure
acquisition processes fulfill the needs of members of the Armed
Forces now and in the future;
(2) significant defense acquisition reforms enacted over
the past three National Defense Authorization Acts have
improved access to nontraditional and commercial innovation and
to expanded flexible acquisition authorities in the development
of alternative acquisition pathways to acquire critical
national security capabilities;
(3) the Department appropriately recently recognized the
Missile Defense Agency for its acquisition success by
presenting it with the 2018 David Packard Excellence in
Acquisition Award for the development of the Space-Based Kill
Assessment (SKA) program and the Missile Defense Agency should
be commended for its numerous and rapid acquisition successes;
(4) the recently completed Missile Defense Review
explicitly highlights, in stark terms, the threat posed to the
United States by ballistic and hypersonic missile threats; and
(5) the Missile Defense Agency should maintain its
nonstandard acquisition authorities in order to continue to
rapidly design, test, and deliver critically needed defensive
capabilities to the warfighter.
(b) Changes to Nonstandard Acquisition Processes and
Responsibilities.--
(1) Limitation.--None of the funds authorized to be
appropriated by this Act may be obligated or expended to change
the nonstandard acquisition processes and responsibilities
described in paragraph (2) until the Secretary--
(A) has consulted with the Under Secretary of
Defense for Research and Engineering, the Under
Secretary of Defense for Policy, the secretaries of the
military departments, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, the Commander of United States Strategic
Command (USSTRATCOM), the Commander of United States
Northern Command (USNORTHCOM), and the Director of the
Missile Defense Agency;
(B) certifies to the congressional defense
committees that the Secretary has coordinated the
changes with and received the views of the individuals
referred to in subparagraph (A);
(C) submits to the congressional defense committees
a report describing the changes, the rationale for the
changes, and the views of the individuals referred to
in subparagraph (A) with respect to such changes; and
(D) a period of 270 days has elapsed since
submittal of the report under subparagraph (C).
(2) Nonstandard acquisition processes and responsibilities
described.--The nonstandard acquisition processes and
responsibilities described in this paragraph are such processes
and responsibilities described in--
(A) the memorandum of the Secretary of Defense
titled ``Missile Defense Program Direction'' signed on
January 2, 2002; and
(B) Department of Defense Directive 5134.09, as in
effect on the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 1675. PLAN FOR THE REDESIGNED KILL VEHICLE.
(a) Report Required.--The Director of the Missile Defense Agency
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the
delay in the Redesigned Kill Vehicle Program.
(b) Elements.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
the following:
(1) A description of the reason for the delay.
(2) An overview of the revised program schedule including a
revised test plan and revised acquisition strategy.
(3) A detailed description of any recommendations that
could be utilized to accelerate the scheduled fielding
including modifications to the acquisition strategy or the
procurement and assembly of long-lead materials unaffected by
the reason for the delay.
(4) A timeline associated with such recommendations.
(5) Additional funding required to carry out such
recommendations.
(6) An assessment of risk associated with such
recommendations.
(7) A description of any recommendations that were
submitted to the Director by contractors that the Director
considers reasonable but were not adopted.
(8) An explanation as to why the recommendations described
in paragraph (7) were not adopted.
(c) Form of Report.--The report required under subsection (a) shall
be submitted in unclassified form, but may contain a classified annex.
SEC. 1676. REPORT ON IMPROVING GROUND-BASED MIDCOURSE DEFENSE ELEMENT
OF BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEM.
(a) Report Required.--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--
(1) options to increase the capability, capacity, and
reliability of the ground-based midcourse defense element of
the United States ballistic missile defense system; and
(2) the infrastructure requirements for increasing the
number of ground-based interceptors as part of such element.
(b) Contents.--The report required by subsection (a) shall include
the following:
(1) An assessment of the requirements of the ground-based
midcourse defense element of the United States ballistic
missile defense system to meet threats outlined in the 2018
National Defense Strategy and the 2019 Missile Defense Review.
(2) An assessment of the feasibility of fielding up to 104
ground-based interceptors as part of such element, including a
description of the additional infrastructure and components
needed to further outfit missile fields at Fort Greely, Alaska.
(3) A cost estimate of such infrastructure and components.
(4) An estimated schedule for completing such construction
as may be required for such infrastructure and components.
(5) An identification of any environmental assessments or
impact studies that would need to be conducted to expand
missile fields at Fort Greely beyond current capacity.
(6) 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 block 1 interceptors
after the fielding of the redesigned kill vehicle.
(7) The modernization requirements for the ground-based
midcourse system, including all command and control, ground
systems, sensors and sensor interfaces, boosters and kill
vehicles, and integration of known future systems and
components.
(8) A discussion of the obsolescence of such systems and
components.
(9) The industrial base requirements relating to the
ground-based midcourse system, as determined by the Director of
the Missile Defense Agency.
(10) Such other matters as the Director considers
appropriate.
(c) Form.--The report submitted under subsection (a) shall be
submitted in unclassified form, but may include a classified annex.
SEC. 1677. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON RECENT MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY TESTS.
It is the Sense of the Senate that the Office of the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, the Missile Defense
Agency, the Office of the Director for Operational Test and Evaluation,
the operational test agencies, the military departments, and
warfighters should--
(1) be strongly commended for a highly successful 2018
flight test campaign, which consisted of 13 total flight test
events including--
(A) FTX-35, which successfully proved
interoperability between Terminal High Altitude Area
Defense (THAAD) and the Phased Array Tracking Radar to
Intercept on Target (PATRIOT) to detect and track a
simulated engagement with a short-range ballistic
missile;
(B) Pacific Dragon 2018, which successfully
demonstrated joint ballistic missile defense
interoperability with Japan and Korea to engage a
short-range ballistic missile with a Standard Missile 3
(SM-3) Block IB by a Japanese ship and an Aegis Ashore
site;
(C) JFTM-5, which successfully demonstrated the
intercept of an short-range ballistic missile with a
Standard Missile 3 Block IB threat upgrade from a
Japanese ship;
(D) FTM-45, which successfully demonstrated the
intercept of a medium-range ballistic missile with a
Standard Missile 3 Block IIA from a United States ship;
and
(E) FTI-03, which as a part of the operational test
of the European Phased Adaptive Approach (EPAA) Phase 3
architecture, successfully demonstrated the intercept
of an intermediate-range ballistic missile using the
Aegis Weapon System's Engage-on-Remote capability; and
(2) be especially recognized for the success of FTG-11, the
first salvo test of the United States of the Ground-based
Midcourse Defense system, during which two ground-based
interceptors were launched nearly simultaneously from the same
location and successfully intercepted the kill vehicle of a
threat-representative intercontinental ballistic missile
target, and then the next most lethal object.
SEC. 1678. SENSE OF THE SENATE ON MISSILE DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT PRIORITIES.
It is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) the 2019 Missile Defense Review articulates a
comprehensive approach to preventing and defeating the rapidly
expanding offensive missile threat through a combination of
deterrence, active and passive missile defense, and attack
operations;
(2) to counter the expanding offense missile capabilities
of potential adversaries and hedge against unanticipated
missile threats, the Secretary of Defense should aggressively
pursue new missile defense capabilities and examine concepts
and technologies for advanced missile defense systems;
(3) the Secretary should fully implement the 2019 Missile
Defense Review's focus on increasing investments in and
deploying new technologies and concepts; and
(4) the Secretary should work to ensure that all missile
defense systems are more survivable, including through--
(A) more distributed air and missile defense
operations; and
(B) improved camouflage, concealment, and
deception, including emission control.
SEC. 1679. PUBLICATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT PREPARED FOR
CERTAIN POTENTIAL FUTURE MISSILE DEFENSE SITES.
The Secretary of Defense shall make available to the public the
environmental impact statement prepared pursuant to section 227(b) of
the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 (126 Stat.
1679; Public Law 112-239).
Subtitle F--Other Matters
SEC. 1681. MATTERS RELATING TO MILITARY OPERATIONS IN THE INFORMATION
ENVIRONMENT.
(a) Affirming the Authority of the Secretary of Defense to Conduct
Military Operations in the Information Environment.--
(1) In general.--Chapter 19 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new
section:
``Sec. 397. Military operations in the information environment
``(a) Affirmation of Authority.--(1) Congress affirms that the
Secretary of Defense is authorized to conduct military operations,
including clandestine operations, in the information environment to
defend the United States, allies of the United States, and interests of
the United States, including in response to malicious influence
activities carried out against the United States or a United States
person by a foreign power.
``(2) The military operations referred to in paragraph (1), when
appropriately authorized include the conduct of military operations
short of hostilities and in areas outside of areas of active
hostilities for the purpose of preparation of the environment,
influence, force protection, and deterrence of hostilities.
``(b) Treatment of Clandestine Military Operations in the
Information Environment as Traditional Military Activities.--A
clandestine military operation in the information environment shall be
considered a traditional military activity for the purposes of section
503(e)(2) of the National Security Act of 1947 (50 U.S.C. 3093(e)(2)).
``(c) Quarterly Information Operations Briefings.--(1) Not less
frequently than once each quarter, the Secretary of Defense shall
provide the congressional defense committees a briefing on significant
military operations, including all clandestine operations in the
information environment, carried out by the Department of Defense
during the immediately preceding quarter.
``(2) Each briefing under subsection (1) shall include, with
respect to the military operations in the information environment
described in such paragraph, the following:
``(A) An update, disaggregated by geographic and functional
command, that describes the operations carried out by the
commands.
``(B) An overview of authorities and legal issues
applicable to the operations, including any relevant legal
limitations.
``(C) An outline of any interagency activities and
initiatives relating to the operations.
``(D) Such other matters as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
``(d) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section shall be
construed to limit, expand, or otherwise alter the authority of the
Secretary to conduct military operations, including clandestine
operations, in the information environment, to authorize specific
military operations, or to limit, expand, or otherwise alter or
otherwise affect the War Powers Resolution (50 U.S.C. 1541 et seq.) or
an authorization for use of military force that was in effect on the
day before the date of the enactment of this Act.
``(e) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The terms `foreign person' and `United States person'
have the meanings given such terms in section 101 of the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (50 U.S.C. 1801).
``(2) The term `hostilities' has the same meaning as such
term is used in the War Powers Resolution (50 U.S.C. 1541 et
seq.).
``(3) The term `clandestine military operation in the
information environment' means an operation or activity, or
associated preparatory actions, authorized by the President or
the Secretary of Defense, that--
``(A) is marked by, held in, or conducted with
secrecy, where the intent is that the operation or
activity will not be apparent or acknowledged publicly;
and
``(B) is to be carried out--
``(i) as part of a military operation plan
approved by the President or the Secretary of
Defense;
``(ii) to deter, safeguard, or defend
against attacks or malicious influence
activities against the United States, allies of
the United States, and interests of the United
States; or
``(iii) in support of hostilities or
military operations involving the United States
armed forces; or
``(iv) in support of military operations
short of hostilities and in areas where
hostilities are not occurring for the purpose
of preparation of the environment, influence,
force protection, and deterrence.''.
(2) Clerical amendments.--
(A) Chapter 19.--
(i) Chapter heading.--The heading of
chapter 19 of such title is amended to read as
follows:
``CHAPTER 19--CYBER AND INFORMATION OPERATIONS MATTERS''.
(ii) Table of sections.--The table of
sections at the beginning of chapter 19 of such
title is amended by inserting at the end the
following new item:
``397. Military operations in the information environment.''.
(B) Table of chapters.--The table of chapters for
part I of subtitle A of such title is amended by
striking the item relating to chapter 19 and inserting
the following new item:
``19. Cyber and Information Operations Matters.............. 391''.
(b) Principal Information Operations Advisor.--
(1) Designation.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate,
from among officials appointed to a position in the Department
of Defense by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, a
Principal Information Operations Advisor to act as the
principal advisor to the Secretary on all aspects of
information operations conducted by the Department.
(2) Responsibilities.--The Principal Information Operations
Advisor shall have the following responsibilities:
(A) Oversight of policy, strategy, planning,
resource management, operational considerations,
personnel, and technology development across all the
elements of information operations of the Department.
(B) Overall integration and supervision of the
deterrence of, conduct of, and defense against
information operations.
(C) Promulgation of policies to ensure adequate
coordination and deconfliction with the Department of
State, the intelligence community (as defined in
section 3 of the National Security Act of 1947 (50
U.S.C. 3003)), and other relevant agencies and
departments of the Federal Government.
(D) Coordination with the head of the Global
Engagement Center to support the purpose of the Center
(as set forth by section 1287(a)(2) of the National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public
Law 114-328; 22 U.S.C. 2656 note)) and liaison with the
Center and other relevant Federal Government entities
to support such purpose.
(E) Establishing and supervising a rigorous risk
management process to mitigate the risk of potential
exposure of United States Persons to information
intended exclusively for foreign audiences.
(F) Development of guidance for, and promotion of,
the capability of the Department to liaison with the
private sector and academia on matters relating to the
influence activities of malign actors.
(G) Such other matters relating to information
operations as the Secretary shall specify for purposes
of this subsection.
(c) Cross-functional Team.--
(1) Establishment.--The Principal Information Operations
Advisor shall integrate the expertise in all elements of
information operations and perspectives of appropriate
organizations within the Office of the Secretary of Defense,
Joint Staff, military departments, Defense Agencies, and
combatant commands by establishing and maintaining a full-time
cross-functional team composed of subject-matter experts
selected from those organizations.
(2) Selection and organization.--The cross-functional team
established under paragraph (1) shall be selected, organized,
and managed in a manner consistent with section 911 of the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (Public
Law 114-328; 10 U.S.C. 111 note).
(d) Designation of Coordinating Authority.--
(1) Designation.--The Secretary of Defense shall designate
United States Special Operations Command as the coordinating
authority for information operations of the Department.
(2) Responsibilities.--The combatant command designated
under paragraph (1) shall be responsible for the following:
(A) Synchronizing the Department's information
operations plans and operations across combatant
commands.
(B) Acting as the joint proponent for information
operations capabilities.
(e) Strategy and Posture Review.--
(1) Strategy and posture review required.--The Secretary of
Defense, acting through the Principal Information Operations
Advisor and the cross-functional team established under
subsection (c)(1), shall--
(A) develop or update, as appropriate, a strategy
for operations in the information environment; and
(B) conduct an information operations posture
review, including an analysis of capability gaps that
inhibit the Department's ability to successfully
execute the strategy developed or updated pursuant to
subparagraph (A).
(2) Elements.--At a minimum, the strategy developed or
updated pursuant to paragraph (1)(A) shall include the
following:
(A) The establishment of lines of effort,
objectives, and tasks that are necessary to implement
the strategy and eliminate the gaps identified under
paragraph (1)(B).
(B) Designation of offices of primary
responsibility for implementing and achieving the tasks
as set forth in the strategy.
SEC. 1682. EXTENSION OF AUTHORIZATION FOR PROTECTION OF CERTAIN
FACILITIES AND ASSETS FROM UNMANNED AIRCRAFT.
Section 130i(i) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``2020'' both places it appears and inserting ``2024''.
SEC. 1683. HARD AND DEEPLY BURIED TARGETS.
(a) Report Required.--
(1) In general.--Not later than December 1, 2019, the
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff shall, in consultation
with the Commander of the United States Strategic Command,
submit to the congressional defense committees a classified
report on hard and deeply buried targets.
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) An estimate of the total number of high-value
hard and deeply buried targets associated with Unites
States military operations plans.
(B) A description of the contents, functions, and
hardening characteristics of the targets described in
subparagraph (A), as well as their level of protection
by anti-access and area denial capabilities.
(C) An assessment of the current ability of the
United States to hold such targets at risk using
existing conventional and nuclear capabilities.
(D) An assessment of the potential ability of the
United States to hold such targets at risk using
projected conventional and nuclear capabilities as of
2030.
(b) Plan.--Not later than February 15, 2020, the Secretary of
Defense shall develop a plan to ensure that the United States possesses
by 2025 the capabilities to pose a credible deterrent threat against
targets described in the report required by subsection (a).
(c) Certification.--Not later than March 1, 2020, and annually
thereafter, the Secretary shall certify to the congressional defense
committees that the plan required by subsection (b) is being
implemented in accordance with the 2025 deadline specified in that
subsection.
DIVISION B--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AUTHORIZATIONS
SEC. 2001. SHORT TITLE.
This division may be cited as the ``Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020''.
SEC. 2002. EXPIRATION OF AUTHORIZATIONS AND AMOUNTS REQUIRED TO BE
SPECIFIED BY LAW.
(a) Expiration of Authorizations After Five 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, 2024; or
(2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds
for military construction for fiscal year 2025.
(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, 2024; or
(2) the date of the enactment of an Act authorizing funds
for fiscal year 2025 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, 2019; 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 2103(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..................................... Redstone Arsenal................................. $38,000,000
Colorado.................................... Fort Carson...................................... $71,000,000
Georgia..................................... Fort Gordon...................................... $107,000,000
Hunter Army Airfield............................. $62,000,000
Kentucky.................................... Fort Campbell.................................... $61,300,000
Massachusetts............................... Soldier Systems Center Natick.................... $50,000,000
Michigan.................................... Detroit Arsenal.................................. $24,000,000
New York.................................... Fort Drum........................................ $44,000,000
North Carolina.............................. Fort Bragg....................................... $12,500,000
Oklahoma.................................... Fort Sill........................................ $73,000,000
Pennsylvania................................ Carlisle Barracks................................ $98,000,000
South Carolina.............................. Fort Jackson..................................... $88,000,000
Texas....................................... Corpus Christi Army Depot........................ $86,000,000
Fort Hood........................................ $50,500,000
Virginia.................................... Fort Belvoir..................................... $60,000,000
Joint Base Langley-Eustis........................ $55,000,000
Washington.................................. Joint Base Lewis-McChord......................... $46,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2103(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 military construction
projects for the installations or locations outside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Army: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Honduras...................................... Soto Cano Air Base............................. $34,000,000
Japan......................................... Kadena Air Base................................ $80,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2102. FAMILY HOUSING.
(a) Construction and Acquisition.--Using amounts appropriated
pursuant to the authorization of appropriations in section 2103(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 or Location Units Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pennsylvania........................... Tobyhanna Army Depot....... Family Housing $19,000,000
Replacement Construction
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Planning and Design.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant to
the authorization of appropriations in section 2103(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 $9,222,000.
SEC. 2103. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, ARMY.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized
to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2019,
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 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. 2104. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2019 PROJECT.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section
2101(a) of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2019 (division B of Public Law 115-232) for Anniston Army Depot,
Alabama, for construction of a weapon maintenance shop, the Secretary
of the Army may construct a 21,000 square foot weapon maintenance shop.
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............................................ $189,760,000
California................................... Camp Pendleton................................. $185,569,000
China Lake...................................... $64,500,000
Coronado........................................ $165,830,000
Marine Corps Air Station Miramar................ $37,400,000
Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego............ $9,900,000
Seal Beach...................................... $123,310,000
Travis Air Force Base........................... $64,000,000
Connecticut................................. New London..................................... $72,260,000
Florida...................................... Naval Air Station Jacksonville.................. $32,420,000
Marine Corps Support Facility Blount Island..... $18,700,000
Hawaii....................................... Kaneohe Bay..................................... $134,050,000
West Loch....................................... $53,790,000
North Carolina............................... Camp Lejeune.................................... $229,010,000
Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point........... $166,870,000
New River....................................... $11,320,000
South Carolina............................... Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island........ $37,200,000
Virginia..................................... Norfolk......................................... $79,100,000
Portsmouth...................................... $48,930,000
Quantico........................................ $143,350,000
Yorktown........................................ $59,000,000
Washington................................... Bremerton....................................... $51,010,000
Keyport......................................... $25,050,000
Kitsap.......................................... $48,000,000
Unspecified CONUS............................ Zulu............................................ $59,600,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(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 installations or locations outside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Navy: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Australia..................................... Darwin.......................................... $211,500,000
Bahrain Island................................ Southwest Asia.................................. $53,360,000
Guam.......................................... Joint Region Marianas........................... $226,000,000
Italy......................................... Sigonella....................................... $77,400,000
Japan......................................... Iwakuni......................................... $15,870,000
Yokosuka........................................ $174,692,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2202. FAMILY HOUSING.
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 $5,863,000.
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) of this Act 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 $41,798,000.
SEC. 2204. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NAVY.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized
to be appropriated for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2019,
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 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.
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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaska......................................... Eielson Air Force Base...................... $8,600,000
Arkansas....................................... Little Rock Air Force Base.................. $47,000,000
California..................................... Travis Air Force Base....................... $43,100,000
Colorado....................................... Peterson Air Force Base..................... $54,000,000
Schriever Air Force Base.................... $148,000,000
Illinois....................................... Scott Air Force Base........................ $100,000,000
Missouri....................................... Whiteman Air Force Base..................... $27,000,000
Montana........................................ Malmstrom Air Force Base.................... $235,000,000
Nevada......................................... Nellis Air Force Base....................... $65,200,000
New Mexico..................................... Holloman Air Force Base..................... $20,000,000
Kirtland Air Force Base..................... $37,900,000
North Dakota.................................. Minot Air Force Base........................ $5,500,000
Texas.......................................... Joint Base San Antonio...................... $207,300,000
Utah........................................... Hill Air Force Base......................... $114,500,000
Washington..................................... Fairchild Air Force Base.................... $31,000,000
Wyoming........................................ F.E. Warren Air Force Base.................. $18,100,000
Unspecified CONUS.............................. Zulu........................................ $31,200,000
Unspecified Worldwide.......................... Zulu........................................ $230,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(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 installations or locations outside the United States,
and in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Air Force: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Australia...................................... Tindal...................................... $70,600,000
Cyprus......................................... Royal Air Force Akrotiri.................... $27,000,000
Guam........................................... Joint Region Marianas....................... $65,000,000
Japan.......................................... Kadena Air Base............................. $31,500,000
Misawa Air Base............................. $5,300,000
Yokota Air Base............................. $12,400,000
Jordan......................................... Azraq....................................... $66,000,000
Mariana Islands................................ Tinian...................................... $316,000,000
United Kingdom................................. Royal Air Force Lakenheath.................. $14,300,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 $3,409,000.
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 $53,584,000.
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, 2019,
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 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. 2305. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2015 PROJECT.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section
2301(b) of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2015 (division B of Public Law 113-291; 128 Stat. 3679) for Royal Air
Force Croughton, for JIAC Consolidation Phase 1, the location shall be
Royal Air Force Molesworth, United Kingdom.
SEC. 2306. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2016 PROJECT.
In the case of the authorization contained in the table in section
2301(b) of the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2016 (division B of Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1153) for JIAC
Consolidation Phase 2, as modified by section 2305 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (division B of
Public Law 115-232) for an unspecified location in the United Kingdom,
the Secretary of the Air Force may construct a 5,152 square meter
intelligence analytic center, a 5,234 square meter intelligence fusion
center, and a 807 square meter battlefield information collection and
exploitation system center at Royal Air Force Molesworth, United
Kingdom.
SEC. 2307. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2017 PROJECT.
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 JIAC
Consolidation Phase 3, as modified by section 2305 of the Military
Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (division B of
Public Law 115-32) for an unspecified location in the United Kingdom,
the Secretary of the Air Force may construct a 1,562 square meter
regional joint intelligence training facility and a 4,495 square meter
combatant command intelligence facility at Royal Air Force Molesworth,
United Kingdom.
SEC. 2308. ADDITIONAL AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR 2018
PROJECTS.
(a) Joint Base San Antonio.--In the case of the authorization
contained in the table in section 2301(a) of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (division B of Public Law 115-
91; 131 Stat. 1826) for Joint Base San Antonio, Texas--
(1) for construction of a dining and classroom facility the
Secretary of the Air Force may construct a 750 square meter
equipment building; and
(2) for construction of an air traffic control tower the
Secretary of the Air Force may construct a 636 square meter air
traffic control tower.
(b) Rygge.--In the case of the authorization contained in the table
in section 2903 of the Military Construction Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2018 (division B of Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1876) for
Rygge, Norway, for repairing and expanding a quick reaction alert pad,
the Secretary of the Air Force may construct 1,327 square meters of
aircraft shelter and a 404 square meter fire protection support
building.
SEC. 2309. MODIFICATION OF AUTHORITY TO CARRY OUT CERTAIN FISCAL YEAR
2019 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 2019 (division B of Public Law 115-
232) for Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts, for the construction of
a semiconductor or microelectronics lab facility, the Secretary of the
Air Force may construct a 1,000 kilowatt stand-by generator.
(b) Royal Air Force Lakenheath.--In the case of the authorization
contained in the table in section 2301(b) of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (division B of Public Law 115-
232) for Royal Air Force Lakenheath, United Kingdom, for the
construction of an F-35 dormitory, the Secretary of the Air Force may
construct a 5,900 square meter dormitory.
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.................................... Beale Air Force Base............................ $33,700,000
Camp Pendleton.................................. $17,700,000
CONUS Classified.............................. Classified Location............................. $82,200,000
Florida....................................... Elgin Air Force Base............................ $16,500,000
Hurlburt Field.................................. $108,386,000
Key West........................................ $16,000,000
Hawaii........................................ Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam.................. $67,700,000
Maryland...................................... Fort Detrick.................................... $27,846,000
Mississippi................................... Columbus Air Force Base......................... $16,800,000
North Carolina............................... Camp Lejeune.................................... $13,400,000
Fort Bragg...................................... $84,103,000
Oklahoma...................................... Tulsa International Airport..................... $18,900,000
Rhode Island.................................. Quonset State Airport........................... $11,600,000
South Carolina................................ Joint Base Charleston........................... $33,300,000
South Dakota.................................. Ellsworth Air Force Base........................ $24,800,000
Virginia...................................... Dam Neck........................................ $12,770,000
Defense Distribution Depot Richmond............. $98,800,000
Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort Story $45,604,000
Pentagon........................................ $28,802,000
Washington................................... Joint Base Lewis-McChord........................ $47,700,000
Wisconsin..................................... General Mitchell International Airport.......... $25,900,000
Unspecified CONUS............................. Zulu............................................ $100,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(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...................................... Geilenkirchen Air Base........................ $30,479,000
Ramstein Air Base............................. $66,880,000
Guam........................................ Joint Region Marianas......................... $19,200,000
Japan........................................ Yokota Air Base............................... $136,411,000
Worldwide Classified......................... Classified Location........................... $52,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2402. AUTHORIZED ENERGY RESILIENCE AND CONSERVATION INVESTMENT
PROGRAM PROJECTS.
(a) Inside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2403(a) and available
for energy conservation projects as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of Defense may carry out energy
conservation projects under chapter 173 of title 10, United States
Code, for the installations or locations inside the United States, and
in the amounts, set forth in the following table:
ERCIP Projects: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California................................... Mountain View................................. $9,700,000
Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake.......... $8,950,000
Naval Support Activity Monterey............... $10,540,000
Hawaii...................................... Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam................ $4,000,000
Louisiana.................................... Joint Reserve Base Naval Air Station New $5,340,000
Orleans......................................
Maryland..................................... South Potomac................................. $18,460,000
Naval Support Activity Bethesda............... $13,840,000
New Mexico................................... White Sands Missile Range..................... $5,800,000
Texas........................................ Fort Hood..................................... $16,500,000
Camp Swift.................................... $4,500,000
Virginia..................................... National Reconnaissance Office Headquarters... $66,000
Washington................................... Naval Base Kitsap............................. $23,670,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Outside the United States.--Using amounts appropriated pursuant
to the authorization of appropriations in section 2403(a) and available
for energy conservation projects as specified in the funding table in
section 4601, the Secretary of Defense may carry out energy
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:
ERCIP Projects: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Installation or Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Guam......................................... Naval Base Guam............................... $16,970,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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, 2019,
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.
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.
(a) Authorization.--Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated
for fiscal years beginning after September 30, 2019, 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.
(b) Authority to Recognize NATO Authorization Amounts as Budgetary
Resources for Project Execution.--When the United States is designated
as the Host Nation for the purposes of executing a project under the
NATO Security Investment Program (NSIP), the Department of Defense
construction agent may recognize the NATO project authorization amounts
as budgetary resources to incur obligations for the purposes of
executing the NSIP project.
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 Carroll...... Army Prepositioned $51,000,000
Stock-4 Wheeled
Vehicle
Maintenance
Facility.........
Army.............. Camp Humphreys.... Unaccompanied $154,000,000
Enlisted
Personnel
Housing, P1......
Army.............. Camp Humphreys.... Unaccompanied $211,000,000
Enlisted
Personnel
Housing, P2......
Army.............. Camp Humphreys.... Satellite $32,000,000
Communications
Facility.........
Air Force......... Gwangju Air Base.. Hydrant Fuel $35,000,000
System Upgrade
Electrical.......
Air Force......... Kunsan Air Base... Distribution $14,200,000
System...........
Air Force......... Kunsan Air Base... Dining Facility... $21,000,000
Air Force......... Suwon Air Base.... Hydrant Fuel $24,000,000
System...........
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XXVI--GUARD AND RESERVE FORCES FACILITIES
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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama..................................... Anniston Army Depot.............................. $34,000,000
Foley............................................ $12,000,000
California.................................. Camp Roberts..................................... $12,000,000
Idaho....................................... Orchard Training Area............................ $29,000,000
Maryland.................................... Havre de Grace................................... $12,000,000
Massachusetts............................... Camp Edwards..................................... $9,700,000
Minnesota................................... New Ulm.......................................... $11,200,000
Mississippi................................. Camp Shelby...................................... $8,100,000
Missouri.................................... Springfield...................................... $12,000,000
Nebraska.................................... Bellevue......................................... $29,000,000
New Hampshire............................... Concord.......................................... $5,950,000
New York.................................... Jamaica Armory................................... $91,000,000
Pennsylvania................................ Moon Township.................................... $23,000,000
Vermont..................................... Camp Ethan Allen................................. $30,000,000
Washington.................................. Richland......................................... $11,400,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Delaware...................................... Dover Air Force Base........................... $21,000,000
Wisconsin..................................... Fort McCoy..................................... $25,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Louisiana..................................... New Orleans.................................... $25,260,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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.................................... Moffett Air National Guard Base................ $57,000,000
Georgia....................................... Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport..... $24,000,000
Missouri...................................... Rosecrans Memorial Airport..................... $9,500,000
Puerto Rico................................... Luis Munoz Marin International Airport......... $50,000,000
Wisconsin..................................... Truax Field Air National Guard Base............ $34,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Georgia....................................... Robins Air Force Base.......................... $43,000,000
Minnesota..................................... Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport..... $9,800,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2606. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS, NATIONAL GUARD AND RESERVE.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2019, 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.
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, 2019, 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.
TITLE XXVIII--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION GENERAL PROVISIONS
Subtitle A--Military Construction Program
SEC. 2801. MILITARY INSTALLATION RESILIENCE PLANS AND PROJECTS OF
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
(a) Plans and Projects.--
(1) In general.--Subchapter I of chapter 169 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new sections:
``Sec. 2815. Military installation resilience plans
``(a) In General.--The Secretary of each military department shall
ensure the maintenance and enhancement of military installation
resilience through the development and implementation of military
installation resilience plans under this section for each military
installation under the jurisdiction of such Secretary that is in a
coastal area.
``(b) Military Installation Resilience Plans for National Guard
Installations.--The Secretary of a military department, subject to the
availability of appropriations, may develop and implement a military
installation resilience plan for a State-owned installation of the
National Guard that is in a coastal area if--
``(1) such a plan is developed and implemented in
coordination with the chief executive officer of the State in
which the installation is located; and
``(2) such a plan is deemed, for purposes of any other
provision of law, to be for lands or other geographical areas
owned or controlled by the Department of Defense, or designated
for use by the Department of Defense.
``(c) Required Elements of Plans.--To the extent appropriate and
applicable, each military installation resilience plan under this
section shall provide for the following:
``(1) A qualitative and, to the extent practicable,
quantitative assessment of--
``(A) current risks and threats to the resilience
of the military installation, including from extreme
weather events, mean sea level fluctuation, flooding,
and other changes in environmental conditions; and
``(B) future risks and threats, including from
extreme weather events, mean sea level fluctuation,
flooding, and other changes in environmental
conditions, based on projections from reliable and
authorized sources as described in section 2805(c) of
the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2019 (division B of Public Law 115-232; 10 U.S.C.
2864 note), to the resilience of any project considered
in the master plan for the installation under section
2864 of this title during the 50-year lifespan of the
installation.
``(2) A description of the--
``(A) assets or infrastructure located on the
installation vulnerable to the risks and threats
described in paragraph (1), with special emphasis on
assets or infrastructure critical to the accomplishment
of the missions of the installation and missions of any
members of the armed forces stationed at the
installation; and
``(B) community infrastructure and resources
located outside the military installation that are--
``(i) critical to the accomplishment of the
missions of the military installation and of
members of the armed forces stationed at the
installation; and
``(ii) vulnerable to the risks and threats
described in paragraph (1).
``(3) A description of the--
``(A) current or planned infrastructure projects or
other measures to mitigate the impacts of risks and
threats described in paragraph (1) to the resilience of
the military installation and the accomplishment of the
missions of the military installation and missions of
members of the armed forces stationed at the
installation;
``(B) estimated costs associated with such current
or planned infrastructure projects or other mitigation
measures; and
``(C) current or planned interagency agreements,
cooperative agreements, memoranda of agreement, or
other agreements with other Federal agencies, Indian
tribes, State or local governments or entities, or
other organizations or individuals for the purpose of
or that will assist in maintaining or enhancing
military installation resilience and the resilience of
the community infrastructure and resources described in
paragraph (2)(B).
``(d) Consistency and Integration With Other Plans.--The Secretary
of each military department shall ensure that each military
installation resilience plan prepared by such Secretary under this
section is--
``(1) consistent with the integrated natural resource
management plan of the Secretary required by section
101(a)(1)(B) of the Sikes Act (16 U.S.C. 670a);
``(2) consistent with and integrated into the installation
energy resilience master plan of the Secretary required by
section 2911(b)(3) of this title; and
``(3) consistent with and integrated into the installation
master plan of the Secretary required by section 2864 of this
title.
``(e) Inclusion of Certain Projects.--The Secretary of each
military department shall include in military installation resilience
plans under this section projects or improvements to facilities
conducted using amounts for sustainment, restoration, and
modernization.
``(f) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) The term `community infrastructure' has the meaning
given that term in section 2391(e)(4) of this title.
``(2) The term `Indian tribe' has the meaning given that
term in section 4 of the Indian Self-Determination and
Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 5304).''.
``Sec. 2815a. Military installation resilience projects
``(a) Projects Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall carry out
military construction projects for military installation resilience,
not previously authorized, using funds authorized to be appropriated or
otherwise made available for that purpose.
``(b) Congressional Notification.--(1) When a decision is made to
carry out a project under this section, the Secretary of Defense shall
notify the congressional defense committees of that decision.
``(2) The Secretary of Defense shall include in each notification
submitted under paragraph (1) the rationale for how the project would--
``(A) enhance military installation resilience;
``(B) enhance mission assurance;
``(C) support mission critical functions; and
``(D) address known vulnerabilities.
``(c) Timing of Projects.--A project may be carried out under this
section only after the end of the 14-day period beginning on the date
that notification with respect to that project under subsection (b) is
received by the congressional defense committees in an electronic
medium pursuant to section 480 of this title.
``(d) Annual Report.--Not later than 90 days after the end of each
fiscal year, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on the status of the planned and active
projects carried out under this section (including completed projects),
and shall include in the report with respect to each such project the
following information:
``(1) The title, location, a brief description of the scope
of work, the original project cost estimate, and the current
working cost estimate.
``(2) The rationale for how the project would--
``(A) enhance military installation resilience;
``(B) enhance mission assurance;
``(C) support mission critical functions; and
``(D) address known vulnerabilities.
``(3) Such other information as the Secretary considers
appropriate.
``(e) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be
appropriated to the Department of Defense to carry out this section
$100,000,000 for each fiscal year.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of chapter 169 of such title is amended by inserting
after the item relating to section 2814 the following new
items:
``2815. Military installation resilience plans.
``2815a. Military installation resilience projects.''.
(b) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a report on the extent to which military
installation resilience plans were prepared or implemented in
accordance with section 2815 of title 10, United States Code,
as added by subsection (a)(1).
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
(A) The number of military installation resilience
plans in effect, including the date on which each plan
was issued in final form or most recently revised.
(B) The amounts expended on mitigation measures
conducted pursuant to or consistent with such plans,
including moving critical military functions of the
Department of Defense to less vulnerable military
installations.
(C) An assessment of the extent to which such plans
comply with section 2815 of title 10, United States
Code, as added by subsection (a)(1).
SEC. 2802. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO REDUCE AIR BASE RESILIENCY OR
DEMOLISH PROTECTED AIRCRAFT SHELTERS IN THE EUROPEAN
THEATER WITHOUT CREATING A SIMILAR PROTECTION FROM
ATTACK.
No funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise
made available for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2020 may
be obligated or expended to implement any activity that reduces air
base resiliency or demolishes protected aircraft shelters in the
European theater without creating a similar protection from attack in
the European theater until such time as the Secretary of Defense
certifies to the congressional defense committees that protected
aircraft shelters are not required in the European theater.
SEC. 2803. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO CLOSE OR RETURN TO THE HOST
NATION ANY EXISTING AIR BASE.
No funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or otherwise
made available for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2020 may
be obligated or expended to implement any activity that closes or
returns to the host nation any existing air base until such time as the
Secretary of Defense certifies that there is no longer a need for a
rotational military presence in the European theater.
SEC. 2804. INCREASED AUTHORITY FOR CERTAIN UNSPECIFIED MINOR MILITARY
CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS.
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding the limitations specified in
section 2805 of title 10, United States Code, the Secretary concerned
may carry out unspecified minor military construction projects in an
amount not to exceed $12,000,000 at the following installations:
(1) Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida.
(2) Camp Ashland, Nebraska.
(3) Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska.
(4) Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
(5) Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, North Carolina.
(b) Adjustment of Limitation.--The Secretary concerned may adjust
the dollar limitation specified in subsection (a) applicable to a
project described in such subsection to reflect the area construction
cost index for military construction projects published by the
Department of Defense during the prior fiscal year for the location of
the project, except that no such limitation may exceed $19,000,000 as
the result of any adjustment made under this subsection.
(c) Termination.--The authority under this section shall terminate
on the date that is five years after the date of the enactment of this
Act.
SEC. 2805. TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS TO INSTALLATION
RESILIENCE.
(a) Defense Access Roads.--Section 210 of title 23, United States
Code, is amended--
(1) in subsection (a), by striking ``(a)(1) The Secretary''
and all that follows through the end of paragraph (1) and
inserting the following:
``(a) Authorization.--
``(1) In general.--Of the funds appropriated for defense
access roads, the Secretary may use such amounts as are
appropriate for--
``(A) the construction and maintenance of defense
access roads (including bridges, tubes, tunnels, and
culverts or other water management structures on those
roads) to--
``(i) military reservations;
``(ii) defense industry sites;
``(iii) air or sea ports that, as
determined by the Secretary, in consultation
with the Secretary of Defense, are necessary
for or are planned to be used for the
deployment or sustainment of members of the
Armed Forces, equipment, or supplies; or
``(iv) sources of raw materials;
``(B) the reconstruction or enhancement of, or
improvements to, those roads to ensure the continued
effective use of the roads, regardless of current or
projected increases in mean high tides, recurrent
flooding, or other weather-related conditions or
natural disasters, in any case in which the roads are
certified to the Secretary as important to the national
defense by--
``(i) the Secretary of Defense; or
``(ii) such other official as the President
may designate; and
``(C) replacing existing highways and highway
connections that are shut off from general public use
by necessary closures, closures due to mean sea level
fluctuation and flooding, or restrictions at--
``(i) military reservations;
``(ii) air or sea ports that are necessary
for or are planned to be used for the
deployment or sustainment of members of the
Armed Forces, equipment, or supplies; or
``(iii) defense industry sites.'';
(2) in subsection (b), by striking ``the construction and
maintenance of'' and inserting ``the construction, maintenance,
reconstruction, or improvement of, or enhancements to,'';
(3) in subsection (c)--
(A) by striking ``him'' and inserting ``the
Secretary'';
(B) by striking ``construction, maintenance, and
repair work'' and inserting ``activities for
construction, maintenance, reconstruction, enhancement,
improvement, and repair'';
(C) by striking ``therein'' and inserting ``in
those areas''; and
(D) by striking ``condition for such training
purposes and for repairing the damage caused to such
highways by the operations'' and inserting the
following: ``condition for--
``(1) that training; and
``(2) repairing the damage to those highways caused by--
``(A) weather-related events, increases in mean
high tide levels, recurrent flooding, or natural
disasters; or
``(B) the operations'';
(4) in subsection (g), in the second sentence, by striking
``construction which has been'' and inserting ``construction
and other activities''; and
(5) by striking subsection (i) and inserting the following:
``(i) Repair of Certain Damages and Infrastructure.--The amounts
made available to carry out this section may be used to pay the cost of
repairing damage caused, or any infrastructure to mitigate a risk
posed, to a defense access road by recurrent or projected recurrent
flooding, sea level fluctuation, a natural disaster, or any other
current or projected change in applicable environmental conditions, if
the Secretary determines that continued access to a military
installation, defense industry site, air or sea port necessary for or
planned to be used for the deployment or sustainment of members of the
Armed Forces, equipment, or supplies, or to a source of raw materials,
has been or is projected to be impacted by those events or
conditions.''.
(b) Study on Certain Threats to Military Installation Resilience.--
(1) Study.--
(A) In general.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall complete a comprehensive
study, to be conducted by the Director of the Engineer
Research and Development Center of the Army Corps of
Engineers, on the risks posed by coastal or inland
flooding, mean sea level fluctuation, and storm surge
to the military installation resilience of military
installations and State-owned installations of the
National Guard that the Secretary determines are
vulnerable to those risks.
(B) Coordination.--The study under subparagraph (A)
shall be conducted in coordination with other elements
of the Army Corps of Engineers, other Federal agencies,
and State, local, and tribal officials to ensure
consistency with other plans or pre-disaster and risk
mitigation measures being planned or taken in the areas
within the scope of the study.
(2) Risk mitigation measures.--The study required by
paragraph (1)(A) shall include the identification of and
recommendations concerning ongoing or potential risk mitigation
measures, including on lands and waters not under the
jurisdiction of the Department of Defense, including authorized
projects of the Army Corps of Engineers and current or
potential projects under the Continuing Authorities Program of
the Corps of Engineers, that would contribute to preserving or
enhancing the military installation resilience of military
installations and State-owned installations of the National
Guard within the scope of the study.
(3) Barriers to maintaining and enhancing resilience.--The
study required by paragraph (1)(A) shall identify
institutional, administrative, legislative, and other barriers
to preserving and enhancing the military installation
resilience of the installations determined by such study to be
vulnerable to the risks posed by coastal or inland flooding,
sea level rise, or storm surge.
(4) Reports.--
(A) Initial 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 providing the status of, interim
results for, and an expected completion date for the
study required by paragraph (1)(A).
(B) Final report.--Not later than two years after
the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a
final report on the study required by paragraph (1)(A).
(5) Definitions.--In this subsection:
(A) Congressional defense committees; military
installation resilience.--The terms ``congressional
defense committees'' and ``military installation
resilience'' have the meanings given those terms in
section 101 of title 10, United States Code.
(B) Continuing authorities program of the corps of
engineers.--The term ``Continuing Authorities Program
of the Corps of Engineers'' means any of the programs
listed in section 1030(a) of the Water Resources Reform
and Development Act of 2014 (33 U.S.C. 400).
(c) Update of United Facilities Criteria to Include Changing
Environmental Condition Projections.--Section 2805(c) of the John S.
McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public
Law 115-232) is amended--
(1) by striking ``Not later than'' and inserting the
following:
``(1) Fiscal year 2019.--Not later than'';
(2) in paragraph (1), as designated by paragraph (1), by
striking ``United Facilities Criteria (UFC) 2-100-01 and UFC 2-
100-02'' and inserting ``United Facilities Criteria (UFC) 1-
200-01 and UFC 1-200-02''; and
(3) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(2) Fiscal year 2020.--Not later than 30 days after the
date of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2020, the Secretary of Defense shall amend the
United Facilities Criteria (UFC) as follows:
``(A) To require that installations of the
Department of Defense assess the risks from extreme
weather and related effects and develop plans to
address those risks.
``(B) To require in the design of any military
construction project the use of the following weather
projections:
``(i) Population projections from the
Bureau of the Census.
``(ii) Land use change projections and
weather projections from the National Academy
of Sciences.
``(iii) Land use change projections through
the use of land use and land cover modeling by
the United States Geological Survey.
``(iv) Weather projections from the United
States Global Change Research Program,
including in the National Climate Assessment.
``(v) Weather projections developed through
the use of Localized Constructed Analogs
Statistical Downscaling.
``(vi) Weather projections developed
through the Earth Exchange program of the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
``(vii) Weather projections included in the
technical report NOS CO-OPS 083 set forth by
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration.
``(viii) Any customized, high-resolution
model weather projections developed by the
Strategic Environmental Research and
Development Program for specific regions with
the goal of assessing the vulnerability of
installations of the Department.
``(C) To require the Secretary to provide guidance
to project designers and master planners on how to use
weather projections.
``(D) To require the use throughout the Department
of the Naval Facilities Engineering Command Climate
Change Installation Adaptation and Resilience planning
handbook.''.
Subtitle B--Land Conveyances
SEC. 2811. RELEASE OF INTERESTS RETAINED IN CAMP JOSEPH T. ROBINSON,
ARKANSAS, FOR USE OF SUCH LAND AS A VETERANS CEMETERY.
(a) Release of Retained Interests.--
(1) In general.--With respect to a parcel of land at Camp
Joseph T. Robinson, Arkansas, consisting of approximately
141.52 acres that lies in a part of section 35, township 3
north, range 12 west, Pulaski County, Arkansas, and comprising
a portion of the property conveyed by the United States to the
State of Arkansas for training of the National Guard and for
other military purposes pursuant to ``An Act authorizing the
transfer of part of Camp Joseph T. Robinson to the State of
Arkansas'', approved June 30, 1950 (64 Stat. 311, chapter 429),
the Secretary of the Army may release the terms and conditions
imposed, and reversionary interests retained, by the United
States under section 2 of such Act, and the right to reenter
and use the property retained by the United States under
section 3 of such Act.
(2) Impact on other rights or interests.--The release of
terms and conditions and retained interests under paragraph (1)
with respect to the parcel described in such paragraph shall
not be construed to alter the rights or interests retained by
the United States with respect to the remainder of the real
property conveyed to the State of Arkansas under the Act
described in such paragraph.
(b) Instrument of Release and Description of Property.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of the Army may execute and
file in the appropriate office a deed of release, amended deed,
or other appropriate instrument reflecting the release of terms
and conditions and retained interests under subsection (a).
(2) Legal description.--The exact acreage and legal
description of the property described in subsection (a) shall
be determined by a survey satisfactory to the Secretary of the
Army.
(c) Conditions on Release and Reversionary Interest.--
(1) Expansion of veterans cemetery and reversionary
interest.--
(A) Expansion of veterans cemetery.--The State of
Arkansas may use the parcel of land described in
subsection (a)(1) only for the expansion of the
Arkansas State Veterans Cemetery.
(B) Reversionary interest.--If the Secretary of the
Army determines at any time that the parcel of land
described in subsection (a)(1) is not being used in
accordance with the purpose specified in subparagraph
(A), all right, title, and interest in and to the land,
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
parcel.
(2) Additional terms and conditions.--The Secretary of the
Army may require in the instrument of release such additional
terms and conditions in connection with the release of terms
and conditions and retained interests under subsection (a) as
the Secretary considers appropriate to protect the interests of
the United States.
(d) Payment of Administrative Costs.--
(1) Payment required.--
(A) In general.--The Secretary of the Army may
require the State of Arkansas to cover costs to be
incurred by the Secretary, or to reimburse the
Secretary for costs incurred by the Secretary, to carry
out the release of terms and conditions and retained
interests under subsection (a), including survey costs,
costs related to environmental documentation, and other
administrative costs related to the release.
(B) Refund of amounts.--If amounts paid to the
Secretary by the State of Arkansas in advance under
subparagraph (A) exceed the costs actually incurred by
the Secretary to carry out the release, the Secretary
shall refund the excess amount to the State.
(2) Treatment of amounts received.--Amounts received under
paragraph (1) as reimbursement for costs incurred by the
Secretary to carry out the release of terms and conditions and
retained interests 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 release. 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.
SEC. 2812. TRANSFER OF ADMINISTRATIVE JURISDICTION OVER CERTAIN PARCELS
OF FEDERAL LAND IN ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA.
(a) Transfer to the Secretary of the Army.--
(1) Transfer.--Administrative jurisdiction over the parcel
of Federal land described in paragraph (2) is transferred from
the Secretary of the Interior to the Secretary of the Army.
(2) Description of land.--The parcel of Federal land
referred to in paragraph (1) is the approximately 16.09-acre
parcel of land in Arlington, Virginia, as depicted on the map
entitled ``Arlington National Cemetery, Memorial Ave-NPS
Parcel'' and dated February 11, 2019.
(b) Transfer to the Secretary of the Interior.--
(1) Transfer.--Administrative jurisdiction over the parcel
of Federal land described in paragraph (2) is transferred from
the Secretary of the Army to the Secretary of the Interior.
(2) Description of land.--The parcel of Federal land
referred to in paragraph (1) is the approximately 1.04-acre
parcel of land in Arlington, Virginia, as depicted on the map
entitled ``Arlington National Cemetery-Chaffee NPS Land Swap''
and dated October 31, 2018.
(c) Land Surveys.--The exact acreage and legal description of a
parcel of Federal land described in subsection (a)(2) or (b)(2) shall
be determined by a survey satisfactory to the Secretary of the Army and
the Secretary of the Interior.
(d) Authority to Correct Errors.--The Secretary of the Army and the
Secretary of the Interior may correct any clerical or typographical
error in a map described in subsection (a)(2) or (b)(2).
(e) Terms and Conditions.--
(1) No reimbursement or consideration.--A transfer by
subsection (a)(1) or (b)(1) shall be without reimbursement or
consideration.
(2) Continued recreational access.--The use of a bicycle
trail or recreational access within a parcel of Federal land
described in subsection (a)(2) or (b)(2) in which the use or
access is authorized before the date of enactment of this Act
shall be allowed to continue after the transfer of the
applicable parcel of Federal land by subsection (a)(1) or
(b)(1).
(3) Management of parcel transferred to secretary of the
army.--The parcel of Federal land transferred to the Secretary
of the Army by section (a)(1) shall be administered by the
Secretary of the Army--
(A) as part of Arlington National Cemetery; and
(B) in accordance with applicable law, including--
(i) regulations; and
(ii) section 2409 of title 38, United
States Code.
(4) Management of parcel transferred to secretary of the
interior.--The parcel of Federal land transferred to the
Secretary of the Interior by subsection (b)(1) shall be--
(A) included within the boundary of Arlington
House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial; and
(B) administered by the Secretary of the Interior--
(i) as part of the memorial referred to in
subparagraph (A); and
(ii) in accordance with applicable law
(including regulations).
SEC. 2813. MODIFICATION OF REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO LAND ACQUISITION IN
ARLINGTON COUNTY, VIRGINIA.
Section 2829A of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal
Year 2017 (Public Law 114-328; 130 Stat. 2728) is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) in paragraph (2)--
(i) in subparagraph (A)--
(I) by striking ``to remove'' and
inserting ``if existing County
utilities in the Southgate Road right
of way are permitted to remain in
accordance with a mutually agreed upon
utility easement, to remove''
(II) by striking ``through a
realignment'' and inserting ``through--
``(i) a realignment'';
(III) in clause (i), as designated
by subclause (I), by striking ``and''
at the end and inserting ``or''; and
(IV) by adding at the end the
following new clause:
``(ii) the replacement of Southgate Road
with a new access road to Joint Base Myer-
Henderson Hall; and''; and
(ii) in subparagraph (B), by striking the
period at the end and inserting ``in accordance
with this section and applicable Federal,
Commonwealth, and County road right of way
engineering standards and requirements.''; and
(B) by amending paragraph (3) to read as follows:
``(3) Consideration.--
``(A) In general.--The Secretary shall expend
amounts up to fair market value consideration for the
interests in land acquired under this subsection as
such value is determined by an independent appraisal
process in accordance with the Uniform Relocation
Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act
of 1970 (42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.).
``(B) In-kind consideration.--
``(i) In general.--Any substitute or
replacement facilities provided as in-kind
consideration to replace existing Commonwealth
or County roadways under this subsection
shall--
``(I) be conveyed in fee simple
absolute with no encumbrances or
restrictions unless otherwise agreed by
the Commonwealth or the County;
``(II) comply with applicable
Commonwealth or County road right of
way engineering standards and
requirements; and
``(III) with respect to any
substitute facility provided for the
realignment of Columbia Pike--
``(aa) include a right-of-
way profile (including
constructed roadway, sidewalks,
bicycle trails, multi-use
trails, buffers, etc.) of not
less than 92 feet in width; and
``(bb) ensure that, if a
vehicle or equipment tunnel
under Columbia Pike is
determined by the Secretary to
be necessary, there is a depth
of not less than 10 feet
between the top of the tunnel
and the surface of the roadway.
``(ii) Difference in fair market value.--
The Commonwealth and the County shall be
entitled to monetary compensation in an amount
equal to the difference in the fair market
value of any property acquired under this
subsection and any property provided as in-kind
consideration under this subparagraph for such
acquired property, which shall be appraised--
``(I) as if such properties were to
be made available as surplus; and
``(II) as determined by an
independent appraisal process in
accordance with the Uniform Relocation
Assistance and Real Property
Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (42
U.S.C. 4601 et seq.).'';
(2) in subsection (c), by striking ``appraisals acceptable
to the Secretary'' and inserting ``an independent appraisal
process in accordance with the Uniform Relocation Assistance
and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (42 U.S.C.
4601 et seq.)''; and
(3) in subsection (d), by striking ``, in consultation with
the Commonwealth and the County where practicable'' and
inserting ``the Commonwealth, and the County''.
SEC. 2814. WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE LAND ENHANCEMENTS.
(a) Definitions.--In this section:
(1) Map.--The term ``Map'' means the map entitled ``White
Sands National Park Proposed Boundary Revision & Transfer of
Lands Between National Park Service & Department of the Army'',
numbered 142/136,271, and dated February 14, 2017.
(2) Military munitions.--The term ``military munitions''
has the meaning given the term in section 101(e) of title 10,
United States Code.
(3) Missile range.--The term ``missile range'' means the
White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, administered by the
Secretary of the Army.
(4) Monument.--The term ``Monument'' means the White Sands
National Monument, New Mexico, established by Presidential
Proclamation No. 2025 (54 U.S.C. 320301 note), dated January
18, 1933, and administered by the Secretary.
(5) Munitions debris.--The term ``munitions debris'' has
the meaning given the term in volume 8 of the Department of
Defense Manual Number 6055.09-M entitled ``DoD Ammunitions and
Explosives Safety Standards'' and dated February 29, 2008 (as
in effect on the date of enactment of this Act).
(6) Park.--The term ``Park'' means the White Sands National
Park established by subsection (b)(2)(A).
(7) Public land order.--The term ``Public Land Order''
means Public Land Order 833, dated May 21, 1952 (17 Fed. Reg.
4822).
(8) Secretary.--The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary
of the Interior.
(9) State.--The term ``State'' means the State of New
Mexico.
(b) White Sands National Park.--
(1) Findings.--Congress finds that--
(A) White Sands National Monument was established
on January 18, 1933, by President Herbert Hoover under
chapter 3203 of title 54, United States Code (commonly
known as the ``Antiquities Act of 1906'');
(B) President Hoover proclaimed that the Monument
was established ``for the preservation of the white
sands and additional features of scenic, scientific,
and educational interest'';
(C) the Monument was expanded by Presidents
Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Carter, and Clinton in 1934,
1942, 1953, 1978, and 1996, respectively;
(D) the Monument contains a substantially more
diverse set of nationally significant historical,
archaeological, scientific, and natural resources than
were known of at the time the Monument was established,
including a number of recent discoveries;
(E) the Monument is recognized as a major unit of
the National Park System with extraordinary values
enjoyed by more visitors each year since 1995 than any
other unit in the State;
(F) the Monument contributes significantly to the
local economy by attracting tourists; and
(G) designation of the Monument as a national park
would increase public recognition of the diverse array
of nationally significant resources at the Monument and
visitation to the unit.
(2) Establishment of white sands national park.--
(A) Establishment.--To protect, preserve, and
restore its scenic, scientific, educational, natural,
geological, historical, cultural, archaeological,
paleontological, hydrological, fish, wildlife, and
recreational values and to enhance visitor experiences,
there is established in the State the White Sands
National Park as a unit of the National Park System.
(B) Abolishment of white sands national monument.--
(i) Abolishment.--Due to the establishment
of the Park, the Monument is abolished.
(ii) Incorporation.--The land and interests
in land that comprise the Monument are
incorporated in, and shall be considered to be
part of, the Park.
(C) References.--Any reference in a law, map,
regulation, document, paper, or other record of the
United States to the ``White Sands National Monument''
shall be considered to be a reference to the ``White
Sands National Park''.
(D) Availability of funds.--Any funds available for
the Monument shall be available for the Park.
(E) Administration.--The Secretary shall administer
the Park in accordance with--
(i) this subsection; and
(ii) the laws generally applicable to units
of the National Park System, including section
100101(a), chapter 1003, sections 100751(a),
100752, 100753, and 102101, and chapter 3201 of
title 54, United States Code.
(F) World heritage list nomination.--
(i) County concurrence.--The Secretary
shall not submit a nomination for the Park to
be included on the World Heritage List of the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization unless each county in
which the Park is located concurs in the
nomination.
(ii) Army notification.--Before submitting
a nomination for the Park to be included on the
World Heritage List of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization, the Secretary shall notify the
Secretary of the Army of the intent of the
Secretary to nominate the Park.
(G) Effect.--Nothing in this paragraph affects--
(i) valid existing rights (including water
rights);
(ii) permits or contracts issued by the
Monument;
(iii) existing agreements, including
agreements with the Department of Defense;
(iv) the jurisdiction of the Department of
Defense regarding the restricted airspace above
the Park; or
(v) the airshed classification of the Park
under the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et
seq.).
(c) Modification of Boundaries of White Sands National Park and
White Sands Missile Range.--
(1) Transfers of administrative jurisdiction.--
(A) Transfer of administrative jurisdiction to the
secretary.--
(i) In general.--Administrative
jurisdiction over the land described in clause
(ii) is transferred from the Secretary of the
Army to the Secretary.
(ii) Description of land.--The land
referred to in clause (i) is--
(I) the approximately 2,826 acres
of land identified as ``To NPS, lands
inside current boundary'' on the Map;
and
(II) the approximately 5,766 acres
of land identified as ``To NPS, new
additions'' on the Map.
(B) Transfer of administrative jurisdiction to the
secretary of the army.--
(i) In general.--Administrative
jurisdiction over the land described in clause
(ii) is transferred from the Secretary to the
Secretary of the Army.
(ii) Description of land.--The land
referred to in clause (i) is the approximately
3,737 acres of land identified as ``To DOA'' on
the Map.
(2) Boundary modifications.--
(A) Park.--
(i) In general.--The boundary of the Park
is revised to reflect the boundary depicted on
the Map.
(ii) Map.--
(I) In general.--The Secretary, in
coordination with the Secretary of the
Army, shall prepare and keep on file
for public inspection in the
appropriate office of the Secretary a
map and a legal description of the
revised boundary of the Park.
(II) Effect.--The map and legal
description under subclause (I) shall
have the same force and effect as if
included in this section, except that
the Secretary may correct clerical and
typographical errors in the map and
legal description.
(iii) Boundary survey.--As soon as
practicable after the date of the establishment
of the Park and subject to the availability of
funds, the Secretary shall complete an official
boundary survey of the Park.
(B) Missile range.--
(i) In general.--The boundary of the
missile range and the Public Land Order are
modified to exclude the land transferred to the
Secretary under paragraph (1)(A) and to include
the land transferred to the Secretary of the
Army under paragraph (1)(B).
(ii) Map.--The Secretary shall prepare a
map and legal description depicting the revised
boundary of the missile range.
(C) Conforming amendment.--Section 2854 of Public
Law 104-201 (54 U.S.C. 320301 note) is repealed.
(3) Administration.--
(A) Park.--The Secretary shall administer the land
transferred under paragraph (1)(A) in accordance with
laws (including regulations) applicable to the Park.
(B) Missile range.--Subject to subparagraph (C),
the Secretary of the Army shall administer the land
transferred to the Secretary of the Army under
paragraph (1)(B) as part of the missile range.
(C) Infrastructure; resource management.--
(i) Range road 7.--
(I) Infrastructure management.--To
the maximum extent practicable, in
planning, constructing, and managing
infrastructure on the land described in
subclause (III), the Secretary of the
Army shall apply low-impact development
techniques and strategies to prevent
impacts within the missile range and
the Park from stormwater runoff from
the land described in that subclause.
(II) Resource management.--The
Secretary of the Army shall--
(aa) manage the land
described in subclause (III) in
a manner consistent with the
protection of natural and
cultural resources within the
missile range and the Park and
in accordance with section
101(a)(1)(B) of the Sikes Act
(16 U.S.C. 670a(a)(1)(B)),
division A of subtitle III of
title 54, United States Code,
and the Native American Graves
Protection and Repatriation Act
(25 U.S.C. 3001 et seq.); and
(bb) include the land
described in subclause (III) in
the integrated natural and
cultural resource management
plan for the missile range.
(III) Description of land.--The
land referred to in subclauses (I) and
(II) is the land that is transferred to
the administrative jurisdiction of the
Secretary of the Army under paragraph
(1)(B) and located in the area east of
Range Road 7 in--
(aa) T. 17 S., R. 5 E.,
sec. 31;
(bb) T. 18 S., R. 5 E.; and
(cc) T. 19 S., R. 5 E.,
sec. 5.
(ii) Fence.--
(I) In general.--The Secretary of
the Army shall continue to allow the
Secretary to maintain the fence shown
on the Map until such time as the
Secretary determines that the fence is
unnecessary for the management of the
Park.
(II) Removal.--If the Secretary
determines that the fence is
unnecessary for the management of the
Park under subclause (I), the Secretary
shall promptly remove the fence at the
expense of the Department of the
Interior.
(D) Research.--The Secretary of the Army and the
Secretary may enter into an agreement to allow the
Secretary to conduct certain research in the area
identified as ``Cooperative Use Research Area'' on the
Map.
(E) Military munitions and munitions debris.--
(i) Response action.--With respect to any
Federal liability, the Secretary of the Army
shall remain responsible for any response
action addressing military munitions or
munitions debris on the land transferred under
paragraph (1)(A) to the same extent as on the
day before the date of enactment of this Act.
(ii) Investigation of military munitions
and munitions debris.--
(I) In general.--The Secretary may
request that the Secretary of the Army
conduct 1 or more investigations of
military munitions or munitions debris
on any land transferred under paragraph
(1)(A).
(II) Access.--The Secretary shall
give access to the Secretary of the
Army to the land covered by a request
under subclause (I) for the purposes of
conducting the 1 or more investigations
under that subclause.
(III) Limitation.--An investigation
conducted under this clause shall be
subject to available appropriations.
(iii) Applicable law.--Any activities
undertaken under this subparagraph shall be
carried out in accordance with--
(I) the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. 9601 et seq.);
(II) the purposes for which the
Park was established; and
(III) any other applicable law.
Subtitle C--Other Matters
SEC. 2821. EQUAL TREATMENT OF INSURED DEPOSITORY INSTITUTIONS AND
CREDIT UNIONS OPERATING ON MILITARY INSTALLATIONS.
Section 2667 of title 10, United States Code, is amended by adding
at the end the following:
``(l) Treatment of Insured Depository Institutions.--(1) Each
covered insured depository institution operating on a military
installation within the continental United States may be allotted space
or leased land on the military installation without charge for rent or
services in the same manner as a credit union organized under State law
or a Federal credit union under section 124 of the Federal Credit Union
Act (12 U.S.C. 1770) if space is available.
``(2) Each covered insured depository institution, credit union
organized under State law, and Federal credit union operating on a
military installation within the continental United States shall be
treated equally with respect to policies of the Department of Defense
governing the financial terms of leases, logistical support, services,
and utilities.
``(3) The Secretary concerned shall not be required to provide no-
cost office space or a no-cost land lease to any covered insured
depository institution, credit union organized under State law, or
Federal credit union.
``(4) In this subsection:
``(A) The term `covered insured depository institution'
means an insured depository institution that meets the
requirements applicable to a credit union organized under State
law or a Federal credit union under section 124 of the Federal
Credit Union Act (12 U.S.C. 1770). The depositors of an insured
depository institution shall be considered members for purposes
of the application of this subparagraph to that section.
``(B) The term `Federal credit union' has the meaning given
the term in section 101 of the Federal Credit Union Act (12
U.S.C. 1752).
``(C) The term `insured depository institution' has the
meaning given the term in section 3 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813).''.
SEC. 2822. EXPANSION OF TEMPORARY AUTHORITY FOR ACCEPTANCE AND USE OF
CONTRIBUTIONS FOR CERTAIN CONSTRUCTION, MAINTENANCE, AND
REPAIR PROJECTS MUTUALLY BENEFICIAL TO THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE AND KUWAIT MILITARY FORCES.
(a) Expansion.--Section 2804 of the Military Construction
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2016 (10 U.S.C. 2350j note) is
amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) by striking ``government of Kuwait'' and
inserting ``Government of Kuwait and the Government of
the Republic of Korea''; and
(B) by striking ``Kuwait military forces'' and
inserting ``the military forces of the applicable
contributing country'';
(2) in subsection (b), by inserting ``for contributions
from the contributing country'' after ``Secretary of Defense'';
(3) in subsection (c), by striking ``government of Kuwait''
and inserting ``government of the contributing country''; and
(4) in subsection (e)--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking ``government of
Kuwait'' and inserting ``government of the contributing
country''; and
(B) in paragraph (2)--
(i) in subparagraph (A), by striking
``Kuwait military forces'' and inserting
``military forces of the contributing
country''; and
(ii) in subparagraph (C), by striking
``Kuwait military forces'' and inserting ``the
military forces of the contributing country''.
(b) Conforming Amendment.--The heading of such section is amended
to read as follows:
``SEC. 2804. TEMPORARY AUTHORITY FOR ACCEPTANCE AND USE OF
CONTRIBUTIONS FOR CERTAIN CONSTRUCTION, MAINTENANCE, AND
REPAIR PROJECTS MUTUALLY BENEFICIAL TO THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENSE AND THE MILITARY FORCES OF KUWAIT AND THE
REPUBLIC OF KOREA.''.
SEC. 2823. DESIGNATION OF SUMPTER SMITH JOINT NATIONAL GUARD BASE.
(a) Designation.--The Sumpter Smith Air National Guard Base in
Birmingham, Alabama, shall after the date of the enactment of this Act
be known and designated as the ``Sumpter Smith Joint National Guard
Base''.
(b) Reference.--Any reference in any law, regulation, map,
document, paper, or other record of the United States to the
installation referred to in subsection (a) shall be considered to be a
reference to the Sumpter Smith Joint National Guard Base.
SEC. 2824. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS TO PRIVATIZE TEMPORARY LODGING
ON INSTALLATIONS OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE.
No funds may be authorized to be appropriated to the Department of
Defense for fiscal year 2020 to privatize temporary lodging on
installations of the Department.
SEC. 2825. PILOT PROGRAM TO EXTEND SERVICE LIFE OF ROADS AND RUNWAYS
UNDER THE JURISDICTION OF THE SECRETARIES OF THE MILITARY
DEPARTMENTS.
(a) Pilot Program Authorized.--Each Secretary of a military
department may carry out a pilot program to design, build, and test
technologies and innovative pavement materials in order to extend the
service life of roads and runways under the jurisdiction of the
Secretary concerned.
(b) Scope.--A pilot program under subsection (a) shall include the
following:
(1) The design, testing, and assembly of technologies and
systems suitable for pavement applications.
(2) Research, development, and testing of new pavement
materials for use in different geographic areas in the United
States.
(3) The design and procurement of platforms and equipment
to test the performance, cost, feasibility, and effectiveness
of the technologies, systems, and materials described in
paragraphs (1) and (2).
(c) Award of Contracts or Grants.--
(1) In general.--Each Secretary of a military department
may carry out a pilot program under subsection (a) through the
award of contracts or grants for the designing, building, or
testing of technologies or innovative pavement materials under
the pilot program.
(2) Merit-based selection.--Any award of a contract or
grant under a pilot program under subsection (a) shall be made
using merit-based selection procedures.
(d) Report.--
(1) In general.--Not later than two years after the
commencement of a pilot program under subsection (a), the
Secretary of the military department concerned shall submit to
the congressional defense committees a report on the pilot
program.
(2) Contents.--Each report under paragraph (1) with respect
to a pilot program shall include the following:
(A) An assessment of the effectiveness of
activities under the pilot program in improving the
service life of roads and runways under the
jurisdiction of the Secretary concerned.
(B) An analysis of the potential lifetime cost
savings and reduction in energy demands associated with
the extended service life of such roads and runways.
(e) Termination of Authority.--Each pilot program under subsection
(a) shall terminate on September 30, 2024.
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 Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cuba.......................................... Guantanamo Bay................................. $33,800,000
Worldwide Unspecified......................... Unspecified Worldwide Locations................ $42,200,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2902. AUTHORIZED NAVY CONSTRUCTION AND LAND ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
The Secretary of the Navy 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:
Navy: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Spain......................................... Rota........................................... $69,570,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Iceland....................................... Keflavik....................................... $57,000,000
Spain......................................... Moron.......................................... $8,500,000
Worldwide Unspecified......................... Unspecified Worldwide Locations................ $175,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2904. AUTHORIZED DEFENSE AGENCIES CONSTRUCTION AND LAND
ACQUISITION PROJECTS.
The Secretary of Defense 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:
Defense Agencies: Outside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Country Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Germany....................................... Gemersheim..................................... $46,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2905. DISASTER RECOVERY PROJECTS.
(a) Navy.--The Secretary of the Navy may acquire real property and
carry out military construction projects inside the United States
relating to disaster recovery for the locations, and in the amounts,
set forth in the following table:
Navy: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
North Carolina................................ Camp Lejeune................................... $861,587,000
Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point.......... $64,561,000
Unspecified................................... Zulu........................................... $50,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Air Force.--The Secretary of the Air Force may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects inside the United
States relating to disaster recovery for the locations, and in the
amounts, set forth in the following table:
Air Force: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Florida....................................... Tyndall Air Force Base......................... $1,278,700,000
Unspecified................................... Zulu........................................... $247,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Army National Guard.--The Secretary of the Army may acquire
real property and carry out military construction projects inside the
United States relating to disaster recovery for the locations, and in
the amounts, set forth in the following table:
Army National Guard: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Florida....................................... Panama City.................................... $25,000,000
North Carolina................................ MTA Fort Fisher................................ $25,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) Defense-wide.--The Secretary of Defense may acquire real
property and carry out military construction projects inside the United
States relating to disaster recovery for the locations, and in the
amounts, set forth in the following table:
Defense-wide: Inside the United States
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State Location Amount
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
North Carolina................................ Camp Lejeune--Defense Health Agency............ $45,313,000
Camp Lejeune--SOCOM............................ $30,000,000
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 2906. REPLENISHMENT OF CERTAIN MILITARY CONSTRUCTIONS FUNDS.
(a) In General.--Of the amount authorized to be appropriated for
fiscal year 2020 by section 2905 and available as specified in the
funding table in section 4602, $3,600,000,000 shall be available for
replenishment of funds that were authorized to be appropriated by
military construction authorization Acts for fiscal years before fiscal
year 2020 for military construction projects authorized by such Acts,
but were used instead for military construction projects authorized by
section 2808 of title 10, United States Code, in connection with the
national emergency along the southern land border of the United States
declared in 2019 pursuant to the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C.
1601 et seq.).
(b) Replenishment by Transfer.--
(1) In general.--Any amounts available under subsection (a)
that are used for replenishment of funds as described in that
subsection shall be transferred to the account that was the
source of such funds.
(2) Inapplicability toward transfer limitations.--Any
transfer of amounts under this subsection shall not count
toward any limitation on transfer of Department of Defense
funds in section 1001 or 1512 or any other limitation on
transfer of Department of funds in law.
(3) Sunset of authority.--The authority to make transfers
under this subsection shall terminate on September 30, 2020.
(c) Use of Funds.--
(1) In general.--Amounts transferred under subsection (b)
for replenishment of funds as described in subsection (a) may
be used only for military construction projects for which such
funds were originally authorized in a military construction
authorization Act described in subsection (a).
(2) No increase in authorized amount of projects.--The
total amount of funds available for a military construction
project described in paragraph (1) may not exceed the current
amount authorized for such project by applicable military
construction authorization Acts (including this Act). A
replenishment of funds under this section for a military
construction project shall not operate to increase the
authorized amount of the project or the amount authorized to be
available for the project.
SEC. 2907. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated for fiscal years
beginning after September 30, 2019, for the military construction
projects outside the United States authorized by this title as
specified in the funding table in section 4602.
TITLE XXX--MILITARY HOUSING PRIVATIZATION REFORM
SEC. 3001. DEFINITIONS.
(a) In General.--In this title:
(1) Landlord.--The term ``landlord'' has the meaning given
that term in section 2871 of title 10, United States Code, as
amended by subsection (b).
(2) Privatized military housing.--The term ``privatized
military housing'' means housing provided under subchapter IV
of chapter 169 of title 10, United States Code.
(b) Title 10.--Section 2871 of title 10, United States Code, is
amended--
(1) by redesignating paragraphs (7) and (8) as paragraphs
(9) and (11), respectively;
(2) by inserting after paragraph (6) the following new
paragraphs:
``(7) The term `incentive fees' means any amounts payable
to a landlord for meeting or exceeding performance metrics as
specified in a contract with the Department of Defense.
``(8) The term `landlord' means an eligible entity or
lessor who owns, manages, or is otherwise responsible for a
housing unit under this subchapter.''; and
(3) by inserting after paragraph (9), as redesignated by
paragraph (1) of this subsection, the following new paragraph:
``(10) The term `tenant' means a member of the armed
forces, including a reserve component thereof, or a family
member of a member of the armed forces who resides at a housing
unit under this subchapter.''.
Subtitle A--Accountability and Oversight
SEC. 3011. TENANT BILL OF RIGHTS FOR PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2887. Tenant Bill of Rights
``(a) In General.--(1) The Secretary of Defense, in coordination
with the Secretary of each military department, shall develop a
document known as the `Tenant Bill of Rights' for tenants of housing
units under this subchapter.
``(2) At a minimum, the document developed under paragraph (1)
shall contain the right of each tenant as follows:
``(A) To reside in a home and community that meets health
and environmental standards established by the Secretary of
Defense.
``(B) To reside in a home that has working fixtures,
appliances, and utilities and reside in a community with well-
maintained common areas and amenity spaces.
``(C) To report inadequate housing standards or deficits in
habitability to the landlord, chain of command, and housing
management office without fear of reprisal.
``(D) With respect to the housing management office of the
installation of the Department at which the housing unit is
located--
``(i) to use such office as an advocate relating to
such housing unit; and
``(ii) to receive advice and support from such
office relating to such housing unit.
``(E) To receive property management services provided by a
landlord that meet or exceed industry standards and that are
performed by professionally trained, responsive, and courteous
customer service and maintenance staff.
``(F) To have multiple, convenient methods to communicate
directly with the landlord and maintenance staff, and to
receive honest, straightforward, and responsive communications
at all times.
``(G) With respect to repairs--
``(i) to prompt and professional repairs;
``(ii) to be informed of the required time frame
for those repairs when a maintenance request is
submitted; and
``(iii) to prompt relocation into suitable lodging
or other housing at no cost to the tenant until the
repairs are completed or relocation to an alternative
residence on the installation or within the surrounding
local community at no cost to the tenant.
``(H) To enter into a dispute resolution process under
section 2891 of this title concerning disputes over repairs,
damage claims, and rental payments to be resolved by a neutral
decision maker, with any decision in favor of the tenant to
include a reduction in rent owed to the landlord to be paid or
credited to the tenant.
``(I) To withhold basic allowance for housing (including
for any dependents of the tenant in the tenant's household)
under section 403 of title 37, or any pay of the tenant subject
to allotment described in section 2882(c) of this title, if the
tenant is engaged in a dispute under subparagraph (H) until a
decision in the matter is made.
``(J) To be fully briefed by the landlord on all rights and
responsibilities associated with tenancy prior to signing a
lease and receive a 30-day followup to review these
responsibilities.
``(K) To have sufficient time and opportunity to prepare
and be present for move-in and move-out inspections, including
an opportunity to obtain necessary paperwork.
``(L) To have reasonable, advance notice of any entrance by
a landlord into the housing unit, except in the case of an
emergency.
``(M) To have clearly defined rental terms in the lease
agreement.
``(N) To not pay non-refundable fees or have application of
rent credits arbitrarily held.
``(O) To have universal procedures for housing under this
subchapter that are the same for all installations of the
Department.
``(P) To file claims against a landlord.
``(3) The document developed under paragraph (1) shall contain the
responsibilities of each tenant as follows:
``(A) To report maintenance or quality of life issues to
the landlord in a timely manner.
``(B) To maintain standard upkeep of the housing unit as
recommended by the housing management office.
``(b) Distribution.--The Secretary shall ensure that the Tenant
Bill of Rights under this section is attached to each lease agreement
for housing under this subchapter.
``(c) Report and Publication.--(1) Beginning in fiscal year 2021,
and biennially thereafter, the Secretary of Defense, in coordination
with the Secretary of each military department, shall submit to the
congressional defense committees, as part of the annual budget
submission of the President for that year under section 1105(a) of
title 31, United States Code, the Tenant Bill of Rights under this
section.
``(2) Upon submitting the Tenant Bill of Rights to the
congressional defense committees under paragraph (1), the Secretary of
Defense shall publish the Tenant Bill of Rights on a publicly available
Internet website of the Department of Defense.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2886 the following new item:
``2887. Tenant Bill of Rights.''.
(c) Military Department Plans.--Not later than February 1, 2020,
the Secretary of each military department shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a plan for the implementation by that
military department of section 2887 of title 10, United States Code, as
added by subsection (a).
SEC. 3012. DESIGNATION OF CHIEF HOUSING OFFICER FOR PRIVATIZED MILITARY
HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2872a the following
new section:
``Sec. 2872b. Chief Housing Officer
``(a) In General.--(1) The Secretary of Defense shall designate,
from among officials of the Department of Defense who are appointed by
the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, a Chief
Housing Officer who shall oversee housing provided under this
subchapter.
``(2) The official designated under paragraph (1) may have duties
in addition to the duties of the Chief Housing Officer under this
section.
``(b) Duties.--The Chief Housing Officer shall oversee all aspects
of the provision of housing under this subchapter, including by
carrying out the following:
``(1) Creation and standardization of policies and
processes.
``(2) Oversight of the administration of lease agreements
by the Secretary of each military department.
``(3) Audits of the provision of housing under this
subchapter, including audits of lease agreements and other
contracts, maintenance work orders, and incentive fee payments
and general audits in the conduct of oversight.
``(c) Office and Staff.--(1) The Chief Housing Officer shall
establish and maintain an office staffed by military personnel and
employees of the Department of Defense whose skills and capabilities
will assist the Chief Housing Officer in the exercise of the duties of
the Chief Housing Officer under subsection (b). Such office shall be
known as the `Office of the Chief Housing Officer'.
``(2) Personnel and employees staffed under paragraph (1) shall
include legal counsel, engineers, and auditors.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2872a the following new item:
``2872b. Chief Housing Officer.''.
(c) Report.--Not later than 60 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on--
(1) the designation of a Chief Housing Officer under
section 2872b of title 10, United States Code, as added by
subsection (a); and
(2) the organizational structure, funding, human resources,
and other relevant requirements of the Office of the Chief
Housing Officer under such section.
SEC. 3013. COMMAND OVERSIGHT OF MILITARY PRIVATIZED HOUSING AS ELEMENT
OF PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS.
(a) Evaluations in General.--Each Secretary of a military
department shall ensure that the performance evaluations of any
individual described in subsection (b) under the jurisdiction of such
Secretary indicates the extent to which such individual has or has not
exercised effective oversight and leadership in the following:
(1) Improving conditions of privatized housing under the
military privatized housing initiative under subchapter IV of
chapter 169, United States Code.
(2) Addressing concerns with respect to such housing of
members of the Armed Forces and their families who reside in
such housing on an installation of the military department
concerned.
(b) Covered Individuals.--The individuals described in this
subsection are as follows:
(1) The commander of an installation of a military
department at which on-installation housing is managed by a
landlord under the military privatized housing initiative
referred to in subsection (a)(1).
(2) Each officer or senior enlisted member of the Armed
Forces at an installation described in paragraph (1) whose
duties include facilities or housing management at such
installation.
(3) Any other officer or enlisted member of the Armed
Forces (whether or not at an installation described in
paragraph (1)) as specified by the Secretary of the military
department concerned for purposes of this section.
SEC. 3014. CONSIDERATION OF HISTORY OF LANDLORD IN CONTRACT RENEWAL
PROCESS FOR PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2874 the following
new section:
``Sec. 2874a. Consideration of history of landlord in contract renewal
process
``(a) In General.--In deciding whether to enter into or renew a
contract with a landlord under this subchapter, the Secretary of
Defense shall develop a standard process for determining past
performance for purposes of informing future decisions regarding the
award of such a contract.
``(b) Elements of Process.--The process developed under subsection
(a) shall include, at a minimum, consideration of the following:
``(1) Any history of the landlord of providing substandard
housing.
``(2) The recommendation of the commander of the
installation at which the housing is to be located under the
contract.
``(3) The recommendation of the commander of any
installation at which the landlord has provided housing under
this subchapter.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2874 the following new item:
``2874a. Consideration of history of landlord in contract renewal
process.''.
SEC. 3015. TREATMENT OF BREACH OF CONTRACT FOR PRIVATIZED MILITARY
HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2874a the following
new section:
``Sec. 2874b. Treatment of breach of contract
``Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Secretary of
Defense--
``(1) shall withhold amounts to be paid under a contract
under this subchapter if the other party to the contract is
found to have engaged in a material breach of the contract;
``(2) shall rescind a contract under this subchapter if the
other party to the contract, based on credible evidence, fails
to cure such breach within 90 days; and
``(3) shall not permit the other party to a contract
rescinded under paragraph (2) to enter into new contracts with
the Secretary under this subchapter or undertake expansions
under existing contracts with the Secretary under this
subchapter.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2874a the following new item:
``2874b. Treatment of breach of contract.''.
SEC. 3016. UNIFORM CODE OF BASIC STANDARDS FOR PRIVATIZED MILITARY
HOUSING AND PLAN TO CONDUCT INSPECTIONS AND ASSESSMENTS.
(a) Uniform Code.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish a
uniform code of basic housing standards for safety, comfort, and
habitability for privatized military housing.
(b) Plan.--
(1) In general.--Not later than February 1, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a plan of the Department of Defense to contract with
home inspectors described in subsection (c) to conduct a
thorough inspection and assessment of the structural integrity
and habitability of each privatized military housing unit.
(2) Inclusion of uniform code.--The plan submitted under
paragraph (1) shall include the uniform code established under
subsection (a).
(3) Implementation.--
(A) In general.--Not later than February 1, 2021,
the Secretary of each military department shall conduct
inspections and assessments of privatized military
housing units under the jurisdiction of the Secretary
concerned pursuant to the plan submitted under
paragraph (1) to identify issues and ensure compliance
with applicable housing codes, including the uniform
code established under subsection (a).
(B) Report.--Not later than March 1, 2021, the
Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on the findings of the
inspections and assessments conducted under
subparagraph (A).
(c) Home Inspectors Described.--A home inspector described in this
subsection is a home inspector that is not affiliated with--
(1) the Federal Government; or
(2) an individual or entity who owns or manages a
privatized military housing unit.
SEC. 3017. REPEAL OF SUPPLEMENTAL PAYMENTS TO LESSORS AND REQUIREMENT
FOR USE OF FUNDS IN CONNECTION WITH THE MILITARY HOUSING
PRIVATIZATION INITIATIVE.
(a) Repeal.--
(1) In general.--Section 606 of the John S. McCain National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-
232; 132 Stat. 1795; 10 U.S.C. 2871 note) is amended by
striking subsection (a).
(2) Effective date.--The amendment made by paragraph (1)
shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act, and
shall apply with respect to months beginning on or after that
date.
(b) Use of Funds in Connection With MHPI.--
(1) In general.--Each month beginning with the first month
after the date of the enactment of this Act, each Secretary of
a military department shall do the following:
(A) Payments to lessors.--Use funds, in an amount
calculated pursuant to paragraph (2)(A), for payments
to lessors of covered housing in the manner provided by
subsection (a) of section 606 of the John S. McCain
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2019, as in effect on the day before the date of the
enactment of this Act.
(B) Improvement of oversight and management of
agreements.--Use funds, in an amount calculated
pursuant to paragraph (2)(B), for improvements of the
oversight and management of agreements for MHPI housing
under the jurisdiction of such Secretary.
(2) Monthly amounts.--
(A) For payments to lessors.--The amount calculated
for a military department for a month pursuant to this
subparagraph is 2 percent of the aggregate of the
amounts calculated under section 403(b)(3)(A)(i) of
title 37, United States Code, for covered housing under
the jurisdiction of such department for such month.
(B) For improvement of oversight and management of
agreements.--The amount calculated for a military
department for a month pursuant to this subparagraph is
3 percent of the aggregate of the amounts calculated
under section 403(b)(3)(A)(i) of title 37, United
States Code, for covered housing under the jurisdiction
of such department for such month.
(3) Improvements.--Improvements under paragraph (1)(B) to
the oversight and management of agreements described in that
paragraph may include the following:
(A) Assignment of additional civilian personnel to
perform oversight and management functions with respect
to such agreements.
(B) Investment in technological mechanisms to
assist the military department concerned in overseeing
the maintenance and upkeep of MHPI housing.
(C) Such additional investment in the oversight and
management of such agreements, and in overseeing the
maintenance and upkeep of MHPI housing, as the
Secretary of the military department concerned
considers appropriate.
(4) Additional payments to lessors.--In any month described
in paragraph (1), the Secretary of a military department may
use amounts, in addition to amounts calculated pursuant to
paragraph (2)(A), for payments to lessors as described in
paragraph (1)(A) if such Secretary provides advance notice of
such payments to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate
and the House of Representatives.
(5) Definitions.--In this subsection, the terms ``covered
housing'' and ``MHPI housing'' have the meanings given such
terms in section 606(d) of the John S. McCain National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019.
SEC. 3018. STANDARD FOR COMMON CREDENTIALS FOR HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL
INSPECTORS OF PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Not later than February 1, 2020, the Secretary of
Defense shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
that contains a standard for common credentials to be used throughout
the Department of Defense for all inspectors of health and
environmental hazards at privatized military housing units, including
inspectors contracted by the Department.
(b) Inclusion of Categories for Specific Environmental Hazards.--
The standard submitted under subsection (a) shall include categories
for specific environmental hazards such as lead, mold, and radon.
SEC. 3019. IMPROVEMENT OF PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) Complaint Database and Financial Transparency.--
(1) In general.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new sections:
``Sec. 2888. Complaint database
``(a) Database Required.--The Secretary of Defense shall establish
a database that is available to the public of complaints relating to
housing units under this subchapter.
``(b) Filing of Complaints.--The Secretary shall ensure that a
tenant of a housing unit under this subchapter may file a complaint
relating to such housing unit for inclusion in the database under
subsection (a).
``(c) Response by Landlord.--(1) The Secretary shall include in any
contract with a landlord responsible for a housing unit under this
subchapter a requirement that the landlord respond to any complaints
included in the database under subsection (a) that relate to the
housing unit.
``(2) Any response under paragraph (1) shall be included in the
database under subsection (a).
``Sec. 2889. Financial transparency
``(a) Publication of Details of Contracts.--(1) Not less frequently
than annually, the Secretary Defense shall publish in the Federal
Register the financial details of each contract for the management of
housing units under this subchapter.
``(2) The financial details published under paragraph (1) shall
include the following:
``(A) Base management fees for managing the housing units.
``(B) Incentive fees relating to the housing units,
including details on the following:
``(i) Metrics upon which such incentive fees are
paid.
``(ii) Whether incentive fees were paid in full or
withheld in part or in full during the year covered by
the publication, and if so, why.
``(C) Asset management fees relating to the housing units.
``(D) Preferred return fees relating to the housing units.
``(E) Any deferred fees or other fees relating to the
housing units.
``(F) Residual cash flow distributions relating to the
housing units.
``(b) Annual Financial Statements.--(1) The Secretary of Defense
shall require that each landlord submit to the Secretary, not less
frequently than annually, financial statements equivalent to a 10-K (or
successor form) for--
``(A) the landlord; and
``(B) each contract entered into between the landlord and
the Department of Defense under this subchapter.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of such subchapter is amended by inserting after the
item relating to section 2887 the following new items:
``2888. Complaint database.
``2889. Financial transparency.''.
(b) Annual Reports on Privatized Military Housing and Denied
Requests to Withhold Payments.--Section 2884 of title 10, United States
Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new subsections:
``(d) Annual Report on Housing.--(1) Not less frequently than
annually, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees and publish on a publicly available website of the
Department of Defense a report on housing units under this subchapter,
disaggregated by military installation.
``(2) Each report submitted under paragraph (1) shall include the
following:
``(A) An assessment of the condition of housing units under
this subchapter based on the average age of those units and the
estimated time until recapitalization.
``(B) An analysis of complaints of tenants of such housing
units.
``(C) An assessment of maintenance response times and
completion of maintenance requests relating to such housing
units.
``(D) An assessment of dispute resolution relating to such
housing units.
``(E) An assessment of overall customer service for tenants
of such housing units.
``(F) A description of the results of any no-notice housing
inspections conducted for such housing units.
``(G) The results of any resident surveys conducted with
respect to such housing units.
``(e) Report on Denied Requests to Withhold Payments.--Not less
frequently than annually, the commander of each military installation
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report on all
requests that were made by members of the armed forces who are tenants
of housing units under this subchapter to withhold from the landlord of
such unit any basic allowance for housing payable to the member
(including for any dependents of the member in the member's household)
under section 403 of title 37, or any other allotment of pay under
section 2882(c) of this title, and that were denied during the year
covered by the report.''.
SEC. 3020. ACCESS TO MAINTENANCE WORK ORDER SYSTEM OF LANDLORDS OF
PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2890. Access to maintenance work order system
``The Secretary of Defense shall require each landlord that
provides housing under this subchapter at an installation of the
Department of Defense to provide access to the maintenance work order
system of such landlord with respect to such housing to the following:
``(1) Personnel of the housing management office at such
installation.
``(2) Personnel of the installation and engineer command or
center of the military department concerned.
``(3) Such other personnel of the Department of Defense as
the Secretary determines necessary.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2889 the following new item:
``2890. Access to maintenance work order system.''.
SEC. 3021. ACCESS BY TENANTS OF PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING TO WORK
ORDER SYSTEM OF LANDLORD.
The Secretary of Defense shall require that each landlord for a
privatized military housing unit--
(1) have an electronic work order system for all work
orders for maintenance requests relating to such unit; and
(2) provide to a tenant of such unit access to such system
to, at a minimum, track the status and progress of work orders
for maintenance requests relating to such unit.
Subtitle B--Prioritizing Families
SEC. 3031. DISPUTE RESOLUTION PROCESS FOR LANDLORD-TENANT DISPUTES
REGARDING PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING AND REQUESTS TO
WITHHOLD PAYMENTS.
(a) Dispute Resolution and Request to Withhold Payment.--
(1) In general.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new sections:
``Sec. 2891. Landlord-tenant dispute resolution process
``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall implement a
standardized formal dispute resolution process on each military
installation with housing units under this subchapter to ensure the
prompt and fair resolution of landlord-tenant disputes concerning
maintenance and repairs, damage claims, rental payments, move-out
charges, and such other issues relating to such housing units as the
Secretary determines appropriate.
``(b) Dispute Submittal.--(1) Each landlord shall establish a
process through which a tenant of a housing unit under this subchapter
may submit a dispute directly to the landlord through an online or
other form.
``(2) Not later than 24 hours after receiving a dispute submittal
from a tenant under paragraph (1), the landlord shall--
``(A) notify the tenant that the submittal has been
received; and
``(B) transmit a copy of such submittal to the housing
management office of the installation in which the housing unit
is located.
``(3)(A) Not later than seven days after receiving a dispute
submittal from a tenant under paragraph (1), the landlord shall--
``(i) submit to the tenant a decision regarding the
dispute; and
``(ii) transmit a copy of such decision to the housing
management office.
``(B)(i) For purposes of conducting an assessment necessary to make
a decision under subparagraph (A) with respect to a housing unit, the
landlord may access the housing unit at a time and for a duration
mutually agreed upon by the landlord and the tenant.
``(ii) The tenant may request that an employee of the housing
management office be present when the landlord accesses the housing
unit of the tenant under clause (i).
``(c) Appeals.--(1) Not later than 30 days after a tenant receives
a decision by a landlord under subsection (b)(3), the tenant may appeal
that decision for review under subsection (d) by the commander of the
military installation at which the housing unit is located.
``(2) Any appeal submitted under paragraph (1) shall be submitted--
``(A) on a standardized form; and
``(B) to an address designated by the commander for such
purpose.
``(3) The Secretary shall ensure that, in preparing an appeal to
the commander under this subsection, a tenant shall have access to
advice and assistance from a military housing advocate employed by the
military department concerned or a military legal assistance attorney
under section 1044 of this title.
``(d) Review Process.--(1) The commander of each military
installation with housing units under this subchapter shall establish a
military privatized housing dispute resolution appeals process--
``(A) to review and decide appeals by tenants under
subsection (c) relating to such housing units; and
``(B) to review and decide requests to withhold payments
under section 2891a of this title
``(2)(A) Before making any decision with respect to an appeal or a
request under the process established under paragraph (1) with respect
to a housing unit, the commander shall certify that the commander has
solicited recommendations or information relating to such appeal or
request from the following:
``(i) The chief of the housing management office of the
installation.
``(ii) A representative of the landlord for the housing
unit.
``(iii) The tenant filing the appeal or request.
``(iv) A qualified judge advocate of the military
department concerned.
``(v) The civil engineer for the installation.
``(3)(A) The commander shall make a decision with respect to an
appeal or a request under the process established under paragraph (1)
not later than 30 days after the appeal or request has been made.
``(B) A commander may take longer than the 30-day period set forth
under subparagraph (A) to make a decision described in such
subparagraph in limited circumstances as determined by the Secretary of
Defense, but in no case shall such a decision be made more than 60 days
after the appeal or request has been made.
``(4) Decisions by a commander under this subsection shall be
final.
``(e) Rule of Construction on Use of Other Adjudicative Bodies.--
Nothing in this section or any other provision of law shall be
construed to prohibit a tenant of a housing unit under this subchapter
from pursuing a claim against a landlord in any adjudicative body with
jurisdiction over the housing unit or the claim.
``Sec. 2891a. Request to withhold payments
``(a) In General.--A member of the armed forces or family member of
a member of the armed forces who is a tenant of a housing unit under
this subchapter may submit to the commander of the installation of the
Department of Defense at which the member is stationed a request to
withhold all or part of any basic allowance for housing payable to the
member (including for any dependents of the member in the member's
household) under section 403 of title 37, or all or part of any pay of
a tenant subject to allotment as described in section 2882(c) of this
title, for lease of the unit during the period in which--
``(1) the landlord responsible for such housing unit has
not met maintenance guidelines and procedures established by
the landlord or the Department of Defense, either through
contract or otherwise; or
``(2) such housing unit is uninhabitable according to State
and local law for the jurisdiction in which the housing unit is
located.
``(b) Procedures.--(1) Upon the filing of a request by a tenant
under subsection (a)--
``(A) under such procedures as the Secretary of Defense
shall establish, the Defense Finance and Accounting Service
(DFAS) or such other appropriate office or offices of the
Department of Defense as the Secretary shall specify for
purposes of such procedures, shall tentatively grant the
request and hold any amounts withheld in escrow with notice to
the landlord; and
``(B) the housing management office of the installation in
which the housing unit is located shall, not later than 15 days
after the date on which the request was submitted to the
commander of the installation, complete an investigation that
includes an inspection conducted by housing inspectors that are
certified at the State and local level.
``(2) If the commander agrees with a request by a tenant under
subsection (a) with respect to a housing unit, the housing management
office shall notify the landlord responsible for such unit of the
issues described in subsection (a) that require remediation in
accordance with the requirements of the Department of Defense or State
or local law.
``(c) Remediation.--In accordance with procedures established under
subsection (b)(1)(A) for the withholding of any basic allowance for
housing or other allotment pay under this section, if the landlord
responsible for the housing unit does not remediate the issues
described in subsection (a) within a reasonable period of time
established by the commander of the installation for the remediation of
the issues, the amount payable to the landlord for such unit shall be
reduced by 10 percent for each period of five days during which the
issues are not remediated.
``(d) Disclosure of Rights.--(1) Each housing management office of
an installation of the Department of Defense shall disclose in writing
to each new tenant of a housing unit under this subchapter, upon the
signing of the lease for the housing unit, their rights with respect to
the housing unit and the procedures under this section for submitting a
request to the landlord responsible for the housing unit.
``(2) The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that each lease entered
into with a tenant for a housing unit under this subchapter clearly
expresses in a separate addendum the procedures under this section for
submitting a request to the landlord responsible for the housing
unit.''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of such subchapter is amended by adding at the end
the following new items:
``2891. Landlord-tenant dispute resolution process.
``2891a. Request to withhold payments.''.
(b) Modification of Definition of Military Legal Assistance.--
Section 1044(d)(3)(B) of such title is amended by striking ``and
1565b(a)(1)(A)'' and inserting ``1565b(a)(1)(A), and 2891(c)(3)''.
(c) Timing of Establishment.--Not later than 180 days after the
date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
establish the dispute resolution process required under section 2891 of
title 10, United States Code, as added by subsection (a).
(d) Agreement by Landlords.--
(1) In general.--Not later than February 1, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall seek agreement from all landlords to
participate in the dispute resolution process required under
section 2891 of such title.
(2) Submittal of list to congress.--Not later than March 1,
2020, the Secretary shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a list of all landlords who did not agree under
paragraph (1) to participate in the dispute resolution process
under section 2891 of such title.
(3) Consideration of lack of agreement in future
contracts.--The Secretary shall include any lack of agreement
under paragraph (1) as past performance considered under
section 2888 of such title with respect to entering into or
renewing any future contracts.
SEC. 3032. SUSPENSION OF RESIDENT ENERGY CONSERVATION PROGRAM.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall suspend the
initiative of the Department of Defense known as the ``Resident Energy
Conservation Program'' and instruct the Secretary of each military
department to suspend any program carried out by such Secretary that
measures the energy usage for each military housing unit on an
installation of the Department of Defense.
(b) Term of Suspension.--The suspension under subsection (a) shall
remain in effect until the Secretary of Defense certifies to the
congressional defense committees that--
(1) 100 percent of military housing on an installation of
the Department of Defense is individually metered; and
(2) energy audits conducted by an independent entity, or
entities, confirm that such housing is individually metered.
(c) Termination.--If the Secretary of Defense is unable to make the
certification under subsection (b), each program described in
subsection (a) shall be terminated on the date that is two years after
the date of the enactment this Act.
SEC. 3033. ACCESS BY TENANTS TO HISTORICAL MAINTENANCE INFORMATION FOR
PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new section:
``Sec. 2892. Access by tenants to historical maintenance information
``The Secretary shall require each landlord that provides housing
under this subchapter at an installation of the Department of Defense
to provide a prospective tenant of such housing, before the tenant
moves in, all information regarding maintenance conducted with respect
to that housing unit for the previous 10 years.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2891 the following new item:
``2892. Access by tenants to historical maintenance information.''.
SEC. 3034. PROHIBITION ON USE OF CALL CENTERS OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES
FOR MAINTENANCE CALLS BY TENANTS OF PRIVATIZED MILITARY
HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2886 the following
new section:
``Sec. 2886a. Prohibiting use of call centers outside the United States
for tenant maintenance calls
``A landlord responsible for a housing unit under this subchapter
may not use a call center outside the United States for any call from a
tenant relating to maintenance with respect to the housing unit.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2886 the following new item:
``2886a. Prohibiting use of call centers outside the United States for
tenant maintenance calls.''.
(c) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section shall take
effect on the date that is one year after the date of the enactment of
this Act.
SEC. 3035. RADON TESTING FOR PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) Report.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the Secretary of Defense
shall submit to the congressional defense committees a report
identifying the installations of the Department of Defense that have
privatized military housing that should be monitored for radon.
(b) Initial Testing.--
(1) Procedures.--The Secretary shall establish testing
procedures for all privatized military housing at installations
identified under subsection (a), whether through regular
testing of such housing or the installation of monitoring
equipment, to ensure radon levels are below recommended levels
established by the Environmental Protection Agency.
(2) Completion of testing.--Not later than June 1, 2020,
the Secretary shall complete testing described in paragraph (1)
for all privatized military housing identified under subsection
(a).
(c) Notification Regarding Mitigation Device.--In the event that a
privatized military housing unit is determined under testing under
subsection (b)(2) to need a radon mitigation device, the Secretary
shall notify the landlord of such unit not later than seven days after
such determination.
(d) Annual Testing.--Not less frequently than annually, the
Secretary of each military department shall certify to the
congressional defense committees that radon testing is being conducted
for privatized military housing at installations identified under
subsection (a) under the jurisdiction of the Secretary concerned,
whether through regular testing of such housing or the installation of
monitoring equipment.
SEC. 3036. EXPANSION OF WINDOWS COVERED BY REQUIREMENT TO USE WINDOW
FALL PREVENTION DEVICES IN PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
Section 2879(c) of title 10, United States Code, is amended by
striking ``24 inches'' and inserting ``42 inches''.
SEC. 3037. REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO MOVE OUT AND MAINTENANCE WITH
RESPECT TO PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
Not later than 30 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Secretary of each
military department, shall--
(1) develop a uniform move-out checklist for tenants of
privatized military housing throughout the Department of
Defense to assist the oversight of such housing by the housing
management office of the installation at which such housing is
located;
(2) develop a uniform checklist throughout the Department
for the validation by the housing management office of the
completion of all maintenance work related to health and safety
issues at privatized military housing; and
(3) require that all maintenance issues and work orders
related to health and safety issues at privatized military
housing be reported to the commander of the installation at
which the housing is located.
Subtitle C--Long-Term Quality Assurance
SEC. 3041. DEVELOPMENT OF STANDARDIZED DOCUMENTATION, TEMPLATES, AND
FORMS FOR PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the
Secretary of each military department, shall develop throughout the
Department of Defense standardized documentation, templates, and forms
for privatized military housing.
(b) Initial Guidance.--Not later than 30 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall issue guidance to
develop the following:
(1) Policies and standard operating procedures of the
Department for privatized military housing.
(2) A universal lease agreement for privatized military
housing that includes--
(A) the Tenant Bill of Rights under section 2887 of
title 10, United States Code; and
(B) any addendum required by the law of the State
in which the housing unit is located.
(3) A standardized operating agreement for landlords.
(c) Military Department Plans.--Not later than February 1, 2020,
the Secretary of each military department shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a plan for the implementation of this
section by that military department.
SEC. 3042. COUNCIL ON PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) In General.--The Assistant Secretary concerned shall establish
a council (in this section referred to as the ``Council'') to identify
and resolve problems with privatized military housing at installations
of the Department of Defense under the jurisdiction of the Assistant
Secretary concerned.
(b) Members.--
(1) In general.--Each Council shall be comprised of the
Assistant Secretary concerned and the following members
selected by the Assistant Secretary concerned:
(A) Not fewer than two civil engineers employed at
an installation under the jurisdiction of the Assistant
Secretary concerned.
(B) Not fewer than two chiefs of a housing
management office at such an installation.
(C) Not fewer than two commanders of such an
installation.
(2) Limitation.--In each Council, not more than two members
may be from the same installation.
(3) Terms.--
(A) Two years.--The term for a member of the
Council, other than the Assistant Secretary concerned,
shall be two years.
(B) Limitation on terms.--A member of the Council,
other than the Assistant Secretary concerned, may serve
not more than two terms.
(c) Duties.--Each Council shall review, at a minimum, the
following:
(1) Systemic concerns from tenants relating to privatized
military housing under the jurisdiction of the Assistant
Secretary concerned.
(2) Best practices for housing management offices at
installations under the jurisdiction of the Assistant Secretary
concerned.
(3) Best practices for handling installation-wide
maintenance issues.
(d) Meetings.--Each Council shall meet not less frequently than
quarterly.
(e) Report.--Not later than 60 days after the first meeting of the
Council, and not later than October 1 of each year thereafter, the
Council shall submit to the Secretary of Defense a report on the
findings of the Council during the period covered by the report.
(f) Assistant Secretary Concerned.--The term ``Assistant Secretary
concerned'' means--
(1) with respect to the Army, the Assistant Secretary of
the Army for Energy, Installations, and Environment;
(2) with respect to the Navy, the Marine Corps, and the
Coast Guard when it is operating as a service in the Department
of the Navy, the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Energy,
Installations, and Environment; and
(3) with respect to the Air Force, the Assistant Secretary
of the Air Force for Energy, Installations, and Environment.
SEC. 3043. REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO MANAGEMENT OF PRIVATIZED MILITARY
HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2872b following new
section:
``Sec. 2872c. Requirements relating to management of housing
``(a) In General.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that the
operating agreement for each installation of the Department of Defense
at which on-base housing is managed by a landlord under this subchapter
includes the requirements set forth in this section relating to such
housing.
``(b) Requirements for Installation Commanders.--The commander of
each installation described in subsection (a) shall do the following:
``(1) On an annual basis, review and approve the mold
mitigation plan and pest control plan of each landlord at such
installation.
``(2) Use the assigned bio-environmental personnel or
contractor equivalent at such installation to test for mold,
unsafe water conditions, and other health and safety conditions
if requested by the head of the housing management office of
such installation.
``(c) Requirements for Housing Management Office.--The head of the
housing management office of each installation described in subsection
(a) shall, with respect to housing units under this subchapter, do the
following:
``(1) Conduct physical inspections and approve the
habitability of each vacant housing unit before the landlord
offers the unit available for occupancy.
``(2) Conduct physical inspections upon tenant move out and
receive copies of any move out charges that a landlord seeks to
collect from an outgoing tenant.
``(3) Establish contact with a tenant regarding the
satisfaction of the tenant with the housing unit not later
than--
``(A) 15 days after move-in; and
``(B) 60 days after move-in.
``(4) Maintain all test results relating to the health,
environmental, and safety condition of a housing unit and the
results of any official housing inspection for the life of the
contract relating to that housing unit.
``(d) Requirements for Landlords.--The landlord of any housing unit
under this subchapter at an installation described in subsection (a)
shall do the following:
``(1) Disclose to the Secretary of Defense bonus structures
for community managers and regional executives and bonus
structures relating to maintenance to minimize the impact of
those incentives on the operating budget of the installation.
``(2) With respect to test results relating to the health
and safety condition of the housing unit--
``(A) not later than three days after receiving
those results, share those results with the tenant of
such unit and submit those results to the head of the
housing management office for the installation; and
``(B) include with any environmental hazard test
results a simple guide explaining those results,
preferably citing standards set forth by the Federal
Government relating to environmental hazards.
``(3) Conduct a walkthrough inspection before a prospective
tenant signs a lease--
``(A) with the prospective tenant; or
``(B) if the prospective tenant is not able to be
present for the inspection, with an official of the
housing management office designated by the prospective
tenant to conduct the inspection on their behalf.
``(4) In the event that the housing unit does not meet
minimum health, safety, and welfare standards set forth in
Federal, State, and local law after inspection under subsection
(c)(1), the landlord shall remediate any issues and make any
appropriate repairs prior to another inspection by the housing
management office under such subsection.
``(5) Not conduct any promotional events to incentivize
tenants to fill out maintenance comment cards or satisfaction
surveys of any kind without the approval of the chief of the
housing management office.
``(6) Not award an installation of the Department or an
officer or employee of the Department a `Partner of the Year'
award or similar award.
``(7) Not have a tenant agree to any form of settlement,
nondisclosure, or release of liability without--
``(A) first notifying the tenant of their right to
assistance from the legal assistance office at the
installation; and
``(B) not later than five days before agreeing to
any such settlement, nondisclosure, or release of
liability, providing a copy of such agreement to the
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Sustainment;
``(8) Not change the position of a prospective tenant on a
waiting list for a housing unit or remove a prospective tenant
from the waiting list if the prospective tenant turns down an
offer for a housing unit determined unsatisfactory by the
prospective tenant and confirmed by the housing management
office and the commander of the installation.
``(9) Allow, with permission of the tenant as appropriate,
employees of the housing management office and other officers
and employees of the Department to conduct physical inspections
of common grounds and individual quarters of the housing unit.
``(10) Agree to a mechanism under which all or part of
basic allowance for housing payable to the tenant (including
for any dependents of the tenant in the tenant's household)
under section 403 of title 37, or all or part of any other
allotment of pay under section 2882(c) of this title can be
held in escrow until--
``(A) any dispute between the tenant and the
landlord is resolved; and
``(B) the commander of the installation has
reviewed and decided such dispute.
``(11) Ensure that the needs of enrollees in the
Exceptional Family Member Program, or any successor program,
are considered in assigning prospective tenants to housing
units.
``(12) Keep any maintenance work order system up to date
with the latest software, functionality, and features.
``(13) Have any agreements or forms to be used by the
landlord approved by the Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Sustainment, including the following:
``(A) A common lease agreement.
``(B) Any disclosure or nondisclosure forms that
could be given to a tenant.
``(C) Any notices required to be provided to the
tenant under the Tenant Bill of Rights under section
2887 of this title.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2872b the following new item:
``2872c. Requirements relating to management of housing.''.
(c) Military Department Plans.--Not later than February 1, 2020,
the Secretary of each military department shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a plan for the implementation by that
military department of section 2872c of title 10, United States Code,
as added by subsection (a).
SEC. 3044. REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO CONTRACTS FOR PRIVATIZED MILITARY
HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2872c the following
new section:
``Sec. 2872d. Requirements relating to contracts for provision of
housing
``(a) In General.--The Secretary of each military department shall
include in any contract for a term of more than 10 years with a
landlord for the provision of housing under this subchapter at an
installation under the jurisdiction of the Secretary concerned the
following:
``(1) The Secretary concerned may renegotiate the contract
with the landlord not less frequently than once every five
years.
``(2) The landlord shall prohibit any employee of the
landlord who commits work order fraud under the contract, as
determined by the Secretary concerned, from doing any work
under the contract.
``(3) If the landlord fails to or is unable to remedy any
health or environmental hazard at a housing unit under the
contract, such failure or inability will be taken into
consideration in determining whether to pay or withhold all or
part of any incentive fees for which the landlord may be
eligible under the contract.
``(4) If the landlord is found by the Secretary concerned
to have not maintained the minimum standards of habitability
for a housing unit under such contract, the landlord shall pay
all medical bills for a tenant of such housing unit that are
associated with the conditions of such housing unit that do not
meet such minimum standards.
``(5) The landlord shall pay reasonable relocation costs
associated with the permanent relocation of a tenant from a
housing unit of the landlord to new housing due to health or
environmental hazards--
``(A) present in the housing unit being vacated
through no fault of the tenant; and
``(B) confirmed by the housing management office of
the installation as making the unit uninhabitable.
``(6) The landlord shall pay reasonable relocation costs
and actual costs of living, including per diem, associated with
the temporary relocation of a tenant to new housing due to
health or environmental hazards--
``(A) present in the housing unit being vacated
through no fault of the tenant; and
``(B) confirmed by the housing management office of
the installation as making the unit uninhabitable.
``(7) The landlord shall ensure that the maintenance work
order system of the landlord (hardware and software) is up to
date, including by --
``(A) providing a reliable mechanism through which
a tenant may submit work order requests through an
Internet portal and mobile application, which shall
incorporate the ability to upload photos, communicate
with maintenance personnel, and rate individual service
calls;
``(B) allowing real-time access to such system by
officials of the Department at the installation, major
subordinate command, and service-wide levels; and
``(C) allowing the work order or maintenance ticket
to be closed only once the tenant and the head of the
housing management office of the installation sign off.
``(b) Payment of Actual Costs of Living.--The landlord shall pay
actual costs of living under subsection (a)(6) in connection with a
health or environmental hazard until such time as--
``(1)(A) the health or environmental hazard is remediated;
``(B) the housing unit being vacated is determined to be
habitable by the tenant, the housing management office of the
installation, and chain of command; and
``(C) the tenant resumes occupancy of the housing unit; or
``(2) the tenant moves to a new housing unit.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2872c the following new item:
``2872d. Requirements relating to contracts for provision of
housing.''.
(c) Effective Date.--Section 2872d of such title, as added by
subsection (a), shall apply to contracts entered into or renewed on and
after the date of the enactment of this Act.
SEC. 3045. WITHHOLDING OF INCENTIVE FEES FOR LANDLORDS OF PRIVATIZED
MILITARY HOUSING FOR FAILURE TO REMEDY A HEALTH OR
ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARD.
(a) In General.--Subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United
States Code, is amended by inserting after section 2874b the following
new section:
``Sec. 2874c. Withholding of incentive fees for landlords
``The Secretary of Defense shall withhold incentive fees paid to a
landlord for failure by the landlord to remedy a health or
environmental hazard at a housing unit under this subchapter, as
determined by the Secretary.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the beginning of
such subchapter is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 2874b the following new item:
``2874c. Withholding of incentive fees for landlords.''.
SEC. 3046. EXPANSION OF DIRECT HIRE AUTHORITY FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
FOR CHILDCARE SERVICES PROVIDERS FOR DEPARTMENT CHILD
DEVELOPMENT CENTERS TO INCLUDE DIRECT HIRE AUTHORITY FOR
INSTALLATION MILITARY HOUSING OFFICE PERSONNEL.
(a) In General.--Section 559 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat. 1406; 10 U.S.C.
1792 note) is amended--
(1) in subsection (a)--
(A) in the matter preceding paragraph (1), by
inserting ``, and individuals to fill vacancies in
installation military housing offices,'' after
``childcare services providers'';
(B) in paragraph (1), by inserting ``or for
employees at installation military housing offices''
before the semicolon; and
(C) in paragraph (2), by inserting ``or for
installation military housing office employees'' before
the period;
(2) by redesignating subsection (f) as subsection (g); and
(3) by inserting after subsection (e) the following new
subsection (f):
``(f) Installation Military Housing Office Defined.--The term
`installation military housing office' means any office whose primary
function is performing day-to-day supervision of military housing
covered by subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title 10, United States
Code.''.
(b) Heading and Technical Amendments.--
(1) Heading amendment.--The heading of such section is
amended to read as follows:
``SEC. 599. DIRECT HIRE AUTHORITY FOR DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FOR
CHILDCARE SERVICES PROVIDERS FOR DEPARTMENT CHILD
DEVELOPMENT CENTERS AND INSTALLATION MILITARY HOUSING
OFFICES.''.
(2) Technical amendment.--Subsection (d) of such section is
amended by striking ``Oversight and Government Reform'' and
inserting ``Oversight and Reform''.
(c) Use of Existing Regulations.--The Secretary of Defense shall
use the authority in section 599 of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 2018 granted by the amendments made by this section
in a manner consistent with the regulations prescribed for purposes of
such section 599 pursuant to subsection (b) of such section 599,
without the need to prescribe separate regulations for the use of such
authority.
SEC. 3047. PLAN ON ESTABLISHMENT OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE JURISDICTION
OVER OFF-BASE PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
Not later than 30 days after the date of the enactment of this Act,
the Secretary of Defense, in consultation with the Secretary of each
military department, shall submit to the congressional defense
committees a plan to establish jurisdiction by the Department of
Defense, concurrently with local community law enforcement, at
locations with privatized military housing that is not located on an
installation of the Department of Defense.
Subtitle D--Other Housing Matters
SEC. 3051. LEAD-BASED PAINT TESTING AND REPORTING.
(a) Establishment of Department of Defense Policy on Lead Testing
on Military Installations.--
(1) In general.--Not later than February 1, 2020, the
Secretary of Defense shall establish a policy under which--
(A) a qualified individual may access a military
installation for the purpose of conducting lead testing
on the installation, subject to the approval of the
Secretary; and
(B) the results of any lead testing conducted on a
military installation shall be transmitted--
(i) in the case of a military installation
located inside the United States, to--
(I) the civil engineer of the
installation;
(II) the housing management office
of the installation;
(III) the major subordinate command
of the Armed Force with jurisdiction
over the installation; and
(IV) if required by law, any
relevant Federal, State, and local
agencies; and
(ii) in the case of a military installation
located outside the United States, to the civil
engineer or commander of the installation who
shall transmit those results to the major
subordinate command of the Armed Force with
jurisdiction over the installation.
(2) Definitions.--In this subsection:
(A) United states.--The term ``United States'' has
the meaning given such term in section 101(a)(1) of
title 10, United States Code.
(B) Qualified individual.--The term ``qualified
individual'' means an individual who is certified by
the Environmental Protection Agency or by a State as--
(i) a lead-based paint inspector; or
(ii) a lead-based paint risk assessor.
(b) Annual Reporting on Lead-based Paint in Military Housing.--
(1) In general.--Subchapter III of chapter 169 of title 10,
United States Code, is amended by adding at the end the
following new section:
``Sec. 2869a. Annual reporting on lead-based paint in military housing
``(a) Annual Reports.--
``(1) In general.--Not later than February 1 of each year,
the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report that sets forth, with respect to
military housing under the jurisdiction of each Secretary of a
military department for the calendar year preceding the year in
which the report is submitted, the following:
``(A) A certification that indicates whether the
military housing under the jurisdiction of the
Secretary concerned is in compliance with the
requirements respecting lead-based paint, lead-based
paint activities, and lead-based paint hazards
described in section 408 of the Toxic Substances
Control Act (15 U.S.C. 2688).
``(B) A detailed summary of the data, disaggregated
by military department, used in making the
certification under subparagraph (A).
``(C) The total number of military housing units
under the jurisdiction of the Secretary concerned that
were inspected for lead-based paint in accordance with
the requirements described in subparagraph (A).
``(D) The total number of military housing units
under the jurisdiction of the Secretary concerned that
were not inspected for lead-based paint.
``(E) The total number of military housing units
that were found to contain lead-based paint in the
course of the inspections described in subparagraph
(C).
``(F) A description of any abatement efforts with
respect to lead-based paint conducted regarding the
military housing units described in subparagraph (E).
``(2) Publication.--The Secretary of Defense shall publish
each report submitted under paragraph (1) on a publicly
available website of the Department of Defense.
``(b) Military Housing Defined.--In this section, the term
`military housing' includes military family housing and military
unaccompanied housing (as such term is defined in section 2871 of this
title).''.
(2) Clerical amendment.--The table of sections at the
beginning of such subchapter is amended by adding at the end
the following new item:
``2869a. Annual reporting on lead-based paint in military housing.''.
SEC. 3052. SATISFACTION SURVEY FOR TENANTS OF MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) In General.--Not later than March 1, 2020, the Secretary of
Defense shall require that each installation of the Department of
Defense use the same satisfaction survey for tenants of military
housing, which shall be an electronic survey with embedded privacy and
security mechanisms.
(b) Privacy and Security Mechanisms.--The privacy and security
mechanisms used under subsection (a)--
(1) may include a code unique to the tenant to be surveyed
that is sent to the cell phone number of the tenant and
required to be entered to access the survey; and
(2) in the case of housing under subchapter IV of chapter
169 of title 10, United States Code, shall ensure that the
survey is not shared with the landlord of the housing unit
until the survey is reviewed and the results are tallied by an
employee of the Department of Defense.
SEC. 3053. INFORMATION ON LEGAL SERVICES PROVIDED TO MEMBERS OF THE
ARMED FORCES HARMED BY HEALTH OR ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS AT
MILITARY HOUSING.
(a) 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 on the legal services that the Secretary
may provide to members of the Armed Forces who have been harmed by a
health or environmental hazard while living in military housing.
(b) Availability of Information.--The Secretary of the military
department concerned shall make the information contained in the report
submitted under subsection (a) available to members of the Armed Forces
at all installations of the Department of Defense in the United States.
SEC. 3054. MITIGATION OF RISKS POSED BY CERTAIN ITEMS IN MILITARY
FAMILY HOUSING UNITS.
(a) Anchoring of Items by Residents.--The Secretary of Defense
shall allow a resident of a military family housing unit to anchor any
furniture, television, or large appliance to the wall of the unit for
purposes of preventing such item from tipping over without incurring a
penalty or obligation to repair the wall upon vacating the unit.
(b) Anchoring of Items for All Units.--
(1) Existing units.--Not later than one year after the date
of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
ensure that all freestanding chests, door chests, armoires,
dressers, entertainment centers, bookcases taller than 27
inches, televisions, and large appliances provided by the
Department of Defense are securely anchored in each furnished
military family housing unit under the jurisdiction of the
Department as of the date of the enactment of this Act.
(2) New units.--The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that
all freestanding chests, door chests, armoires, dressers,
entertainment centers, bookcases taller than 27 inches,
televisions, and large appliances provided by the Department of
Defense are securely anchored in each furnished military family
housing unit made available after the date of the enactment of
this Act.
SEC. 3055. TECHNICAL CORRECTION TO CERTAIN PAYMENTS FOR LESSORS OF
PRIVATIZED MILITARY HOUSING.
Paragraph (3) of section 606(d) of the John S. McCain National
Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 (Public Law 115-232; 10
U.S.C. 2871 note) is amended to read as follows:
``(3) The term `MHPI housing' means housing procured,
acquired, constructed, or for which any phase or portion of a
project agreement was first finalized and signed, under the
alternative authority of subchapter IV of chapter 169 of title
10, United States Code (known as the Military Housing
Privatization Initiative), on or before September 30, 2014.''.
SEC. 3056. PILOT PROGRAM TO BUILD AND MONITOR USE OF SINGLE FAMILY
HOMES.
(a) In General.--The Secretary of the Army shall carry out a pilot
program to build and monitor the use of not fewer than 5 single family
homes for members of the Army and their families.
(b) Location.--The Secretary of the Army shall carry out the pilot
program at an installation of the Army as determined by the Secretary.
(c) Design.--In building homes under the pilot program, the
Secretary of the Army shall use the All-American Abode design from the
suburban single-family division design by the United States Military
Academy.
(d) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be
appropriated to the Secretary of the Army $1,000,000 to carry out the
pilot program under this section.
DIVISION C--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY AUTHORIZATIONS AND
OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
TITLE XXXI--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY NATIONAL SECURITY PROGRAMS
Subtitle A--National Security Programs and 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 2020 for
the activities of the National Nuclear Security Administration in
carrying out programs as specified in the funding table in section
4701.
(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 20-D-931, KL Fuel Development Laboratory, Knolls
Atomic Power Laboratory, Schenectady, New York, $23,700,000.
General Purpose Project, PF-4 Power and Communications
Systems Upgrade, Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico,
$16,000,000.
SEC. 3102. DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP.
(a) Authorization of Appropriations.--Funds are hereby authorized
to be appropriated to the Department of Energy for fiscal year 2020 for
defense environmental cleanup activities in carrying out programs as
specified in the funding table in section 4701.
(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, for defense environmental cleanup
activities, the following new plant projects:
Project 20-D-401, Saltstone Disposal Units numbers 10, 11,
and 12, Savannah River Site, Aiken, South Carolina, $1,000,000.
Project 20-D-402, Advanced Manufacturing Collaborative,
Savannah River Site, Aiken, South Carolina, $50,000,000.
Project 20-U-401, On-Site Waste Disposal Facility (Cell
Lines 2 and 3), Portsmouth Site, Pike County, Ohio,
$10,000,000.
SEC. 3103. OTHER DEFENSE ACTIVITIES.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Department of
Energy for fiscal year 2020 for other defense activities in carrying
out programs as specified in the funding table in section 4701.
SEC. 3104. NUCLEAR ENERGY.
Funds are hereby authorized to be appropriated to the Department of
Energy for fiscal year 2020 for nuclear energy as specified in the
funding table in section 4701.
Subtitle B--Program Authorizations, Restrictions, and Limitations
SEC. 3111. TECHNICAL CORRECTIONS TO NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY
ADMINISTRATION ACT AND ATOMIC ENERGY DEFENSE ACT.
(a) Definitions in National Nuclear Security Administration Act.--
Section 3281(2)(A) of the National Nuclear Security Administration Act
(50 U.S.C. 2471(2)(A)) is amended by striking ``Plant'' and inserting
``National Security Campus''.
(b) Amendments to Atomic Energy Defense Act.--
(1) Definitions.--Section 4002(9)(A) of the Atomic Energy
Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2501(9)(A)) is amended striking
``Plant'' and inserting ``National Security Campus''.
(2) Stockpile stewardship, management, and responsiveness
plan.--Section 4203 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C.
2523) is amended--
(A) in subsection (d)(4)(A)(ii), by striking
``quadrennial defense review if such strategy has not
been submitted'' and inserting ``national defense
strategy'';
(B) in subsection (e)(1)(A)(i), by striking ``or
the most recent quadrennial defense review, as
applicable under subsection (d)(4)(A), and the'' and
inserting ``referred to in subsection (d)(4)(A)(i), the
most recent the national defense strategy, and the most
recent''; and
(C) in subsection (f)--
(i) by striking paragraph (4);
(ii) by redesignating paragraph (3) as
paragraph (4); and
(iii) by inserting after paragraph (2) the
following new paragraph (3):
``(3) The term `national defense strategy' means the review
of the defense programs and policies of the United States that
is carried out every four years under section 113(g) of title
10, United States Code.''.
(3) Manufacturing infrastructure for nuclear weapons
stockpile.--Section 4212 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50
U.S.C. 2532) is amended--
(A) in subsection (a)(1), in the matter preceding
subparagraph (A), by inserting ``most recent'' before
``Nuclear Posture Review''; and
(B) in subsection (b)--
(i) in paragraph (2), by striking ``Plant''
and inserting ``National Security Complex'';
and
(ii) in paragraph (4), by striking
``Plant'' and inserting ``National Security
Campus, Kansas City, Missouri''.
(4) Reports on life extension programs.--
(A) In general.--Section 4216 of the Atomic Energy
Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2536) is amended--
(i) in the section heading, by striking
``lifetime'' and inserting ``life''; and
(ii) by striking ``lifetime'' each place it
appears and inserting ``life''.
(B) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for
the Atomic Energy Defense Act is amended by striking
the item relating to section 4216 and inserting the
following new item:
``Sec. 4216. Reports on life extension programs.''.
(5) Advice on safety, security, and reliability of nuclear
weapons stockpile.--Section 4218 of the Atomic Energy Defense
Act (50 U.S.C. 2538) is amended--
(A) in subsection (d), by striking ``or the
Commander of the United States Strategic Command''; and
(B) in subsection (e)(1)--
(i) by striking ``, a member of'' and all
that follows through ``Strategic Command'' and
inserting ``or a member of the Nuclear Weapons
Council''; and
(ii) by striking ``, member, or Commander''
and inserting ``or member''.
(6) Life-cycle cost estimates.--Section 4714(a) of the
Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2754(a)) is amended--
(A) by striking ``413.3'' and inserting ``413.3B'';
and
(B) by inserting ``, or a successor order,'' after
``assets)''.
(7) Unfunded priorities.--
(A) In general.--Section 4716 of the Atomic Energy
Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2756) is amended in the section
heading by striking ``national nuclear security
administration'' and inserting ``administration''.
(B) Clerical amendment.--The table of contents for
the Atomic Energy Defense Act is amended by striking
the item relating to section 4716 and inserting the
following new item:
``Sec. 4716. Unfunded priorities of the Administration.''.
(8) Reviews of capital assets acquisition projects.--
Section 4733(d)(3)(B) of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50
U.S.C. 2773(d)(3)(B)) is amended by striking ``413.3'' and
inserting ``413.3B''.
SEC. 3112. NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY ADMINISTRATION PERSONNEL SYSTEM.
(a) In General.--Subtitle C of the National Nuclear Security
Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2441 et seq.) is amended by adding at the
end the following new section:
``SEC. 3248. ALTERNATIVE PERSONNEL SYSTEM.
``(a) In General.--The Administrator may adapt the pay banding and
performance-based pay adjustment demonstration project carried out by
the Administration under the authority provided by section 4703 of
title 5, United States Code, into a permanent alternative personnel
system for the Administration (to be known as the `National Nuclear
Security Administration Personnel System') and implement that system
with respect to employees of the Administration.
``(b) Modifications.--In adapting the demonstration project
described in subsection (a) into a permanent alternative personnel
system, the Administrator--
``(1) may, subject to paragraph (2), revise the
requirements and limitations of the demonstration project to
the extent necessary; and
``(2) shall--
``(A) ensure that the permanent alternative
personnel system is carried out in a manner consistent
with the final plan for the demonstration project
published in the Federal Register on December 21, 2007
(72 Fed. Reg. 72776);
``(B) ensure that significant changes in the system
not take effect until revisions to the plan for the
demonstration project are approved by the Office of
Personnel Management and published in the Federal
Register;
``(C) ensure that procedural modifications or
clarifications to the final plan for the demonstration
project be made through local notification processes;
``(D) authorize, and establish incentives for,
employees of the 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; and
``(E) establish requirements for employees of the
Administration who are in the permanent alternative
personnel system described in subsection (a) to be
promoted to senior-level positions in the
Administration, including requirements with respect
to--
``(i) professional training and continuing
education; and
``(ii) a certain number and types of
rotational assignments under subparagraph (D),
as determined by the Administrator.
``(c) Application to Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program.--The
Director of the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program established pursuant
to section 4101 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2511) and
section 3216 of this Act may, with the concurrence of the Secretary of
the Navy, apply the alternative personnel system under subsection (a)
to--
``(1) all employees of the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program
in the competitive service (as defined in section 2102 of title
5, United States Code); and
``(2) all employees of the Department of Navy who are
assigned to the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program and are in the
excepted service (as defined in section 2103 of title 5, United
States Code) (other than such employees in statutory excepted
service systems).''.
(b) Briefing.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Administrator for Nuclear
Security shall provide a briefing to the appropriate
congressional committees on the implementation of section 3248
of the National Nuclear Security Administration Act, as added
by subsection (a).
(2) Appropriate congressional committees defined.--In this
subsection, the term ``appropriate congressional committees''
means--
(A) the congressional defense committees;
(B) the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources
of the Senate and the Committee on Energy and Commerce
of the House of Representatives; and
(C) 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) Conforming Amendments.--Section 3116 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018 (Public Law 115-91; 131 Stat.
1888; 50 U.S.C. 2441 note prec) is amended--
(1) by striking subsections (a) and (d); and
(2) by redesignating subsections (b) and (c) as subsections
(a) and (b), respectively.
(d) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents for the National
Nuclear Security Administration Act is amended by inserting after the
item relating to section 3247 the following new item:
``Sec. 3248. Alternative personnel system.''.
SEC. 3113. CONTRACTING, PROGRAM MANAGEMENT, SCIENTIFIC, ENGINEERING,
AND TECHNICAL POSITIONS AT NATIONAL NUCLEAR SECURITY
ADMINISTRATION.
(a) In General.--Section 3241 of the National Nuclear Security
Administration Act (50 U.S.C. 2441) is amended in the first sentence--
(1) by striking ``may'' and inserting ``shall''; and
(2) by striking ``not more than 600''.
(b) Conforming Amendments.--Such section is further amended--
(1) in the section heading, by striking ``authority to
establish'' and inserting ``establishment of''; and
(2) in the second sentence, by striking ``Subject to the
limitations in the preceding sentence, the authority'' and
inserting ``The authority''.
(c) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents for the National
Nuclear Security Administration Act is amended by striking the item
relating to section 3241 and inserting the following new item:
``Sec. 3241. Establishment of contracting, program management,
scientific, engineering, and technical
positions.''.
SEC. 3114. PROHIBITION ON USE OF LABORATORY-DIRECTED RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT FUNDS FOR GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE OVERHEAD
COSTS.
Section 4811 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2791) is
amended--
(1) by redesignating subsection (d) as subsection (e); and
(2) by inserting after subsection (c) the following new
subsection (d):
``(d) Funds provided to a national security laboratory or nuclear
weapons production facility for laboratory-directed research and
development may not be used to cover the costs of general and
administrative overhead for the laboratory or facility.''.
SEC. 3115. PROHIBITION ON USE OF FUNDS FOR ADVANCED NAVAL NUCLEAR FUEL
SYSTEM BASED ON LOW-ENRICHED URANIUM.
None of the funds authorized to be appropriated for the National
Nuclear Security Administration for fiscal year 2020 or any fiscal year
thereafter may be obligated or expended to conduct research and
development of an advanced naval nuclear fuel system based on low-
enriched uranium until the following certifications are submitted to
the congressional defense committees:
(1) A joint certification of the Secretary of Energy and
the Secretary of Defense that the determination made by the
Secretary of Energy and the Secretary of the Navy pursuant to
section 3118(c)(1) of the National Defense Authorization Act
for Fiscal Year 2016 (Public Law 114-92; 129 Stat. 1196) and
submitted to the congressional defense committees on March 25,
2018, that the United States should not pursue such research
and development, no longer reflects the policy of the United
States.
(2) A certification of the Secretary of the Navy that an
advanced naval nuclear fuel system based on low-enriched
uranium would not reduce vessel capability, increase expense,
or reduce operational availability as a result of refueling
requirements.
Subtitle C--Plans and Reports
SEC. 3121. ESTIMATION OF COSTS OF MEETING DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP
MILESTONES REQUIRED BY CONSENT ORDERS.
(a) In General.--Subtitle A of title XLIV of the Atomic Energy
Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2581 et seq.) is amended by adding at the end
the following section:
``SEC. 4409. ESTIMATION OF COSTS OF MEETING DEFENSE ENVIRONMENTAL
CLEANUP MILESTONES REQUIRED BY CONSENT ORDERS.
``The Secretary of Energy shall include in the budget justification
materials submitted to Congress in support of the Department of Energy
budget for each fiscal year (as submitted with the budget of the
President under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code) a
report on the cost of meeting milestones required by a consent order at
each defense nuclear facility at which defense environmental cleanup
activities are occurring. The report shall include, for each such
facility--
``(1) a specification of the cost of meeting such
milestones during that fiscal year; and
``(2) an estimate of the cost of meeting such milestones
during the four fiscal years following that fiscal year.''.
(b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of contents for the Atomic
Energy Defense Act is amended by inserting after the item relating to
section 4408 the following new item:
``Sec. 4409. Estimation of costs of meeting defense environmental
cleanup milestones required by consent
orders.''.
SEC. 3122. EXTENSION OF SUSPENSION OF CERTAIN ASSESSMENTS RELATING TO
NUCLEAR WEAPONS STOCKPILE.
Section 3255(b) of the National Nuclear Security Administration Act
(50 U.S.C. 2455(b)) is amended by striking ``fiscal year 2018 or 2019''
and inserting ``any of fiscal years 2018 through 2023''.
SEC. 3123. REPEAL OF REQUIREMENT FOR REVIEW RELATING TO ENHANCED
PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY.
Section 4806 of the Atomic Energy Defense Act (50 U.S.C. 2786) is
amended--
(1) by striking subsection (e); and
(2) by redesignating subsections (f) and (g) as subsections
(e) and (f), respectively.
SEC. 3124. DETERMINATION OF EFFECT OF TREATY OBLIGATIONS WITH RESPECT
TO PRODUCING TRITIUM.
Not later than February 15, 2020, the Secretary of Energy shall--
(1) determine whether the Agreement for Cooperation on the
Uses of Atomic Energy for Mutual Defense Purposes, signed at
Washington July 3, 1958 (9 UST 1028), between the United States
and the United Kingdom, permits the United States to obtain
low-enriched uranium for the purposes of producing tritium in
the United States; and
(2) submit to the congressional defense committees a report
on that determination.
SEC. 3125. ASSESSMENT OF HIGH ENERGY DENSITY PHYSICS.
(a) In General.--Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Administrator for Nuclear Security shall
enter into an arrangement with the National Academies of Sciences,
Engineering, and Medicine to conduct an assessment of recent advances
and the current status of research in the field of high energy density
physics.
(b) Elements.--The assessment conducted under subsection (a) shall
include the following:
(1) Theoretical and computational modeling of high energy
density material phases, radiation-matter interactions, plasmas
atypical of astrophysical conditions, and conditions unique to
the National Nuclear Security Administration.
(2) The simulation of such phases, interactions, plasmas,
and conditions.
(3) Instrumentation and target fabrication.
(4) Workforce training.
(5) An assessment of advancements made by other countries
in high energy density physics.
(6) Such others items as are agreed upon by the
Administrator and the National Academies.
(c) Applicability of Internal Controls.--The assessment under
subsection (a) shall be conducted in accordance with the internal
controls of the National Academies.
(d) Report to Congress.--Not later than 18 months after entering
into the arrangement under subsection (a), the National Academy of
Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine shall submit to the congressional
defense committees a report on the assessment conducted under that
subsection.
(e) High Energy Density Physics Defined.--In this section, the term
``high energy density physics'' means the physics of matter and
radiation at--
(1) energy densities exceeding 100,000,000,000 joules per
cubic meter; and
(2) other temperature and pressure ranges within the warm
dense matter regime.
TITLE XXXII--DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD
SEC. 3201. AUTHORIZATION.
There are authorized to be appropriated for fiscal year 2020,
$29,450,000 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.).
SEC. 3202. IMPROVEMENT OF MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION OF DEFENSE
NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD.
(a) Provision of Information to Board.--Subsection (c) of section
311 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2286) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (2), by striking ``paragraphs (5), (6),
and (7)'' and inserting ``paragraphs (5) and (6)'';
(2) by striking paragraph (6); and
(3) by redesignating paragraph (7) as paragraph (6).
(b) Executive Director for Operations.--Paragraph (6) of such
subsection, as redesignated by subsection (a)(3), is further amended in
subparagraph (C)--
(1) by redesignating clauses (i), (ii), and (iii) as
clauses (ii), (iii), and (iv), respectively; and
(2) by inserting before clause (ii), as redesignated by
paragraph (1), the following new clause (i):
``(i) The executive director for operations, who shall
report directly to the Chairman.''.
(c) Organization of Staff of Board.--Section 313(b) of such Act (42
U.S.C. 2286b(b)) is amended--
(1) in paragraph (1)(A), by striking ``section 311(c)(7)''
and inserting ``section 311(c)(6)''; and
(2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(3) Subject to the approval of the Board, the Chairman may
organize the staff of the Board as the Chairman considers appropriate
to best accomplish the mission of the Board described in section
312(a).''.
SEC. 3203. MEMBERSHIP OF DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD.
(a) List of Candidates for Nomination.--Subsection (b) of section
311 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2286) is amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4) The President shall enter into an arrangement with the
National Academy of Sciences under which the National Academy shall
maintain a list of individuals who meet the qualifications described in
paragraph (1) to assist the President in selecting individuals to
nominate for positions as members of the Board.''.
(b) Terms of Members.--
(1) In general.--Subsection (d) of such section is
amended--
(A) in paragraph (1), by striking the second
sentence and inserting the following new sentence: ``A
member of the Board may not serve for two consecutive
terms.''; and
(B) in paragraph (3), by striking the second
sentence and inserting the following new sentence: ``A
member may not serve after the expiration of the
member's term.''.
(2) Effective date.--The amendments made by paragraph (1)
shall take effect on April 1, 2020.
(c) Filling Vacancies.--Such subsection is further amended by
adding at the end the following new paragraph:
``(4)(A) Not later than 180 days after the expiration of the term
of a member of the Board, the President shall--
``(i) submit to the Senate the nomination of an individual
to fill the vacancy; or
``(ii) submit to the Committee on Armed Services of the
Senate a report that includes--
``(I) a description of the reasons the President
did not submit such a nomination; and
``(II) a plan for submitting such a nomination
during the 90-day period following the submission of
the report.
``(B) If the President does not submit to the Senate the nomination
of an individual to fill a vacancy during the 90-day period described
in subclause (II) of subparagraph (A)(ii), the President shall submit
to the Committee on Armed Services a report described in that
subparagraph not less frequently than every 90 days until the President
submits such a nomination.''.
TITLE XXXV--MARITIME ADMINISTRATION
SEC. 3501. MARITIME ADMINISTRATION.
Section 109 of title 49, United States Code, is amended to read as
follows:
``Sec. 109. Maritime Administration
``(a) Organization and Mission.--The Maritime Administration is an
administration in the Department of Transportation. The mission of the
Maritime Administration is to foster, promote, and develop the merchant
maritime industry of the United States.
``(b) Maritime Administrator.--The head of the Maritime
Administration is the Maritime Administrator, who is appointed by the
President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The
Administrator shall report directly to the Secretary of Transportation
and carry out the duties prescribed by the Secretary.
``(c) Deputy Maritime Administrator.--The Maritime Administration
shall have a Deputy Maritime Administrator, who is appointed in the
competitive service by the Secretary, after consultation with the
Administrator. The Deputy Administrator shall carry out the duties
prescribed by the Administrator. The Deputy Administrator shall be
Acting Administrator during the absence or disability of the
Administrator and, unless the Secretary designates another individual,
during a vacancy in the office of Administrator.
``(d) Duties and Powers Vested in Secretary.--All duties and powers
of the Maritime Administration are vested in the Secretary.
``(e) Regional Offices.--The Maritime Administration shall have
regional offices for the Atlantic, Gulf, Great Lakes, and Pacific port
ranges, and may have other regional offices as necessary. The Secretary
shall appoint a qualified individual as Director of each regional
office. The Secretary shall carry out appropriate activities and
programs of the Maritime Administration through the regional offices.
``(f) Interagency and Industry Relations.--The Secretary shall
establish and maintain liaison with other agencies, and with
representative trade organizations throughout the United States,
concerned with the transportation of commodities by water in the export
and import foreign commerce of the United States, for the purpose of
securing preference to vessels of the United States for the
transportation of those commodities.
``(g) Detailing Officers From Armed Forces.--To assist the
Secretary in carrying out duties and powers relating to the Maritime
Administration, not more than five officers of the Armed Forces may be
detailed to the Secretary at any one time, in addition to details
authorized by any other law. During the period of a detail, the
Secretary shall pay the officer an amount that, when added to the
officer's pay and allowances as an officer in the Armed Forces, makes
the officer's total pay and allowances equal to the amount that would
be paid to an individual performing work the Secretary considers to be
of similar importance, difficulty, and responsibility as that performed
by the officer during the detail.
``(h) Contracts, Cooperative Agreements, and Audits.--
``(1) Contracts and cooperative agreements.--In the same
manner that a private corporation may make a contract within
the scope of its authority under its charter, the Secretary may
make contracts and cooperative agreements for the United States
Government and disburse amounts to--
``(A) carry out the Secretary's duties and powers
under this section, subtitle V of title 46, and all
other Maritime Administration programs; and
``(B) protect, preserve, and improve collateral
held by the Secretary to secure indebtedness.
``(2) Audits.--The financial transactions of the Secretary
under paragraph (1) shall be audited by the Comptroller
General. The Comptroller General shall allow credit for an
expenditure shown to be necessary because of the nature of the
business activities authorized by this section or subtitle V of
title 46. At least once a year, the Comptroller General shall
report to Congress any departure by the Secretary from this
section or subtitle V of title 46.
``(i) Grant Administrative Expenses.--Except as otherwise provided
by law, the administrative and related expenses for the administration
of any grant programs by the Maritime Administrator may not exceed 3
percent.
``(j) Authorization of Appropriations.--
``(1) In general.--Except as otherwise provided in this
subsection, there are authorized to be appropriated such
amounts as may be necessary to carry out the duties and powers
of the Secretary relating to the Maritime Administration.
``(2) Limitations.--Only those amounts specifically
authorized by law may be appropriated for the use of the
Maritime Administration for--
``(A) acquisition, construction, or reconstruction
of vessels;
``(B) construction-differential subsidies incident
to the construction, reconstruction, or reconditioning
of vessels;
``(C) costs of national defense features;
``(D) payments of obligations incurred for
operating-differential subsidies;
``(E) expenses necessary for research and
development activities, including reimbursement of the
Vessel Operations Revolving Fund for losses resulting
from expenses of experimental vessel operations;
``(F) the Vessel Operations Revolving Fund;
``(G) National Defense Reserve Fleet expenses;
``(H) expenses necessary to carry out part B of
subtitle V of title 46; and
``(I) other operations and training expenses
related to the development of waterborne transportation
systems, the use of waterborne transportation systems,
and general administration.''.
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 1522 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 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 2020 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY
FIXED WING
2 UTILITY F/W AIRCRAFT............ 16,000 0
Program zeroed out in FYDP.. [-16,000]
4 RQ-11 (RAVEN)................... 23,510 23,510
ROTARY
5 TACTICAL UNMANNED AIRCRAFT 12,100 12,100
SYSTEM (TUAS)..................
8 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK IIIA REMAN... 806,849 806,849
9 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK IIIA REMAN AP 190,870 190,870
10 AH-64 APACHE BLOCK IIIB NEW 0 105,000
BUILD..........................
Increase fielding for Active [105,000]
and ARNG units..............
12 UH-60 BLACKHAWK M MODEL (MYP)... 1,411,540 1,271,540
Funding ahead of acquisition [-140,000]
strategy....................
13 UH-60 BLACKHAWK M MODEL (MYP) AP 79,572 79,572
14 UH-60 BLACK HAWK L AND V MODELS. 169,290 204,290
Increase fielding for ARNG [35,000]
units.......................
15 CH-47 HELICOPTER................ 140,290 140,290
16 CH-47 HELICOPTER AP............. 18,186 18,186
MODIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT
19 UNIVERSAL GROUND CONTROL 2,090 2,090
EQUIPMENT (UAS)................
20 GRAY EAGLE MODS2................ 14,699 14,699
21 MULTI SENSOR ABN RECON (MIP).... 35,189 35,189
22 AH-64 MODS...................... 58,172 58,172
23 CH-47 CARGO HELICOPTER MODS 11,785 11,785
(MYP)..........................
24 GRCS SEMA MODS (MIP)............ 5,677 5,677
25 ARL SEMA MODS (MIP)............. 6,566 6,566
26 EMARSS SEMA MODS (MIP).......... 3,859 3,859
27 UTILITY/CARGO AIRPLANE MODS..... 15,476 15,476
28 UTILITY HELICOPTER MODS......... 6,744 6,744
29 NETWORK AND MISSION PLAN........ 105,442 105,442
30 COMMS, NAV SURVEILLANCE......... 164,315 164,315
32 GATM ROLLUP..................... 30,966 30,966
33 RQ-7 UAV MODS................... 8,983 8,983
34 UAS MODS........................ 10,205 10,205
GROUND SUPPORT AVIONICS
35 AIRCRAFT SURVIVABILITY EQUIPMENT 52,297 52,297
36 SURVIVABILITY CM................ 8,388 8,388
37 CMWS............................ 13,999 13,999
38 COMMON INFRARED COUNTERMEASURES 168,784 168,784
(CIRCM)........................
OTHER SUPPORT
39 AVIONICS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 1,777 1,777
40 COMMON GROUND EQUIPMENT......... 18,624 18,624
41 AIRCREW INTEGRATED SYSTEMS...... 48,255 48,255
42 AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL............. 32,738 32,738
44 LAUNCHER, 2.75 ROCKET........... 2,201 2,201
45 LAUNCHER GUIDED MISSILE: LONGBOW 991 991
HELLFIRE XM2...................
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY 3,696,429 3,680,429
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY
SURFACE-TO-AIR MISSILE SYSTEM
1 SYSTEM INTEGRATION AND TEST 0 113,857
PROCUREMENT....................
Transfer back to base [113,857]
funding.....................
2 M-SHORAD--PROCUREMENT........... 0 103,800
Transfer back to base [103,800]
funding.....................
3 MSE MISSILE..................... 0 698,603
Transfer back to base [698,603]
funding.....................
4 INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION 0 239,237
CAPABILITY INC 2-I.............
Full funding of Iron Dome [229,900]
battery.....................
Transfer back to base [9,337]
funding.....................
5 THAAD........................... 0 425,900
THAAD program transfer from [425,900]
MDA.........................
AIR-TO-SURFACE MISSILE SYSTEM
6 HELLFIRE SYS SUMMARY............ 0 193,284
Transfer back to base [193,284]
funding.....................
7 JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND MSLS (JAGM). 0 233,353
Transfer back to base [233,353]
funding.....................
ANTI-TANK/ASSAULT MISSILE SYS
8 JAVELIN (AAWS-M) SYSTEM SUMMARY. 0 138,405
Transfer back to base [138,405]
funding.....................
9 TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY............ 0 114,340
Transfer back to base [114,340]
funding.....................
10 TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY AP......... 0 10,500
Transfer back to base [10,500]
funding.....................
11 GUIDED MLRS ROCKET (GMLRS)...... 0 797,213
Transfer back to base [797,213]
funding.....................
12 MLRS REDUCED RANGE PRACTICE 0 27,555
ROCKETS (RRPR).................
Transfer back to base [27,555]
funding.....................
14 ARMY TACTICAL MSL SYS (ATACMS)-- 0 209,842
SYS SUM........................
Transfer back to base [209,842]
funding.....................
MODIFICATIONS
16 PATRIOT MODS.................... 0 279,464
Transfer back to base [279,464]
funding.....................
17 ATACMS MODS..................... 0 85,320
Transfer back to base [85,320]
funding.....................
18 GMLRS MOD....................... 0 5,094
Transfer back to base [5,094]
funding.....................
19 STINGER MODS.................... 0 81,615
Transfer back to base [81,615]
funding.....................
20 AVENGER MODS.................... 0 14,107
Transfer back to base [14,107]
funding.....................
21 ITAS/TOW MODS................... 0 3,469
Transfer back to base [3,469]
funding.....................
22 MLRS MODS....................... 0 39,019
Transfer back to base [39,019]
funding.....................
23 HIMARS MODIFICATIONS............ 0 12,483
Transfer back to base [12,483]
funding.....................
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
24 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 0 26,444
Transfer back to base [26,444]
funding.....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
25 AIR DEFENSE TARGETS............. 0 10,593
Transfer back to base [10,593]
funding.....................
TOTAL MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY. 0 3,863,497
PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY
TRACKED COMBAT VEHICLES
2 ARMORED MULTI PURPOSE VEHICLE 264,040 264,040
(AMPV).........................
MODIFICATION OF TRACKED COMBAT
VEHICLES
3 STRYKER (MOD)................... 144,387 393,587
UPL Stryker lethality 30 mm [249,200]
cannon......................
4 STRYKER UPGRADE................. 550,000 550,000
5 BRADLEY PROGRAM (MOD)........... 638,781 598,781
Excess to need due to [-40,000]
termination of subprogram...
6 M109 FOV MODIFICATIONS.......... 25,756 25,756
7 PALADIN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT 553,425 553,425
(PIM)..........................
9 ASSAULT BRIDGE (MOD)............ 2,821 2,821
10 ASSAULT BREACHER VEHICLE........ 31,697 31,697
11 M88 FOV MODS.................... 4,500 4,500
12 JOINT ASSAULT BRIDGE............ 205,517 205,517
13 M1 ABRAMS TANK (MOD)............ 348,800 348,800
14 ABRAMS UPGRADE PROGRAM.......... 1,752,784 1,717,784
Early to need............... [-35,000]
WEAPONS & OTHER COMBAT VEHICLES
16 MULTI-ROLE ANTI-ARMOR ANTI- 19,420 19,420
PERSONNEL WEAPON S.............
17 GUN AUTOMATIC 30MM M230......... 20,000 20,000
19 MORTAR SYSTEMS.................. 14,907 14,907
20 XM320 GRENADE LAUNCHER MODULE 191 191
(GLM)..........................
21 PRECISION SNIPER RIFLE.......... 7,977 7,977
22 COMPACT SEMI-AUTOMATIC SNIPER 9,860 9,860
SYSTEM.........................
23 CARBINE......................... 30,331 30,331
24 SMALL ARMS--FIRE CONTROL........ 8,060 8,060
25 COMMON REMOTELY OPERATED WEAPONS 24,007 24,007
STATION........................
26 HANDGUN......................... 6,174 6,174
MOD OF WEAPONS AND OTHER COMBAT
VEH
28 MK-19 GRENADE MACHINE GUN MODS.. 3,737 3,737
29 M777 MODS....................... 2,367 2,367
30 M4 CARBINE MODS................. 17,595 17,595
33 M240 MEDIUM MACHINE GUN MODS.... 8,000 8,000
34 SNIPER RIFLES MODIFICATIONS..... 2,426 2,426
35 M119 MODIFICATIONS.............. 6,269 6,269
36 MORTAR MODIFICATION............. 1,693 1,693
37 MODIFICATIONS LESS THAN $5.0M 4,327 4,327
(WOCV-WTCV)....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
38 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (WOCV- 3,066 3,066
WTCV)..........................
39 PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT (WOCV- 2,651 2,651
WTCV)..........................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY 4,715,566 4,889,766
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, ARMY
SMALL/MEDIUM CAL AMMUNITION
1 CTG, 5.56MM, ALL TYPES.......... 0 68,949
Transfer back to base [68,949]
funding.....................
2 CTG, 7.62MM, ALL TYPES.......... 0 114,228
Transfer back to base [114,228]
funding.....................
3 CTG, HANDGUN, ALL TYPES......... 0 17,807
Transfer back to base [17,807]
funding.....................
4 CTG, .50 CAL, ALL TYPES......... 0 63,966
Transfer back to base [63,966]
funding.....................
5 CTG, 20MM, ALL TYPES............ 0 35,920
Transfer back to base [35,920]
funding.....................
6 CTG, 25MM, ALL TYPES............ 0 8,990
Transfer back to base [8,990]
funding.....................
7 CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES............ 0 68,813
Transfer back to base [68,813]
funding.....................
8 CTG, 40MM, ALL TYPES............ 0 103,952
Transfer back to base [103,952]
funding.....................
MORTAR AMMUNITION
9 60MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES.......... 0 50,580
Transfer back to base [50,580]
funding.....................
10 81MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES.......... 0 59,373
Transfer back to base [59,373]
funding.....................
11 120MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES......... 0 125,452
Transfer back to base [125,452]
funding.....................
TANK AMMUNITION
12 CARTRIDGES, TANK, 105MM AND 0 171,284
120MM, ALL TYPES...............
Transfer back to base [171,284]
funding.....................
ARTILLERY AMMUNITION
13 ARTILLERY CARTRIDGES, 75MM & 0 44,675
105MM, ALL TYPES...............
Transfer back to base [44,675]
funding.....................
14 ARTILLERY PROJECTILE, 155MM, ALL 0 266,037
TYPES..........................
Transfer back to base [266,037]
funding.....................
15 PROJ 155MM EXTENDED RANGE M982.. 0 57,434
Transfer back to base [57,434]
funding.....................
16 ARTILLERY PROPELLANTS, FUZES AND 0 271,602
PRIMERS, ALL...................
Transfer back to base [271,602]
funding.....................
MINES
17 MINES & CLEARING CHARGES, ALL 0 55,433
TYPES..........................
Transfer back to base [55,433]
funding.....................
ROCKETS
18 SHOULDER LAUNCHED MUNITIONS, ALL 0 74,878
TYPES..........................
Transfer back to base [74,878]
funding.....................
19 ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL TYPES..... 0 175,994
Transfer back to base [175,994]
funding.....................
OTHER AMMUNITION
20 CAD/PAD, ALL TYPES.............. 0 7,595
Transfer back to base [7,595]
funding.....................
21 DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES. 0 51,651
Transfer back to base [51,651]
funding.....................
22 GRENADES, ALL TYPES............. 0 40,592
Transfer back to base [40,592]
funding.....................
23 SIGNALS, ALL TYPES.............. 0 18,609
Transfer back to base [18,609]
funding.....................
24 SIMULATORS, ALL TYPES........... 0 16,054
Transfer back to base [16,054]
funding.....................
MISCELLANEOUS
25 AMMO COMPONENTS, ALL TYPES...... 0 5,261
Transfer back to base [5,261]
funding.....................
26 NON-LETHAL AMMUNITION, ALL TYPES 0 715
Transfer back to base [715]
funding.....................
27 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION 0 9,213
(AMMO).........................
Transfer back to base [9,213]
funding.....................
28 AMMUNITION PECULIAR EQUIPMENT... 0 10,044
Transfer back to base [10,044]
funding.....................
29 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 0 18,492
(AMMO).........................
Transfer back to base [18,492]
funding.....................
30 CLOSEOUT LIABILITIES............ 0 99
Transfer back to base [99]
funding.....................
PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT
31 INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES........... 0 474,511
Transfer back to base [474,511]
funding.....................
32 CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS 0 202,512
DEMILITARIZATION...............
Transfer back to base [202,512]
funding.....................
33 ARMS INITIATIVE................. 0 3,833
Transfer back to base [3,833]
funding.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 0 2,694,548
ARMY...........................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY
TACTICAL VEHICLES
1 TACTICAL TRAILERS/DOLLY SETS.... 12,993 12,993
2 SEMITRAILERS, FLATBED:.......... 102,386 102,386
3 AMBULANCE, 4 LITTER, 5/4 TON, 127,271 127,271
4X4............................
4 GROUND MOBILITY VEHICLES (GMV).. 37,038 37,038
6 JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE.... 996,007 956,507
Army requested realignment.. [-4,500]
Early to need............... [-35,000]
7 TRUCK, DUMP, 20T (CCE).......... 10,838 10,838
8 FAMILY OF MEDIUM TACTICAL VEH 72,057 72,057
(FMTV).........................
9 FIRETRUCKS & ASSOCIATED 28,048 28,048
FIREFIGHTING EQUIP.............
10 FAMILY OF HEAVY TACTICAL 9,969 9,969
VEHICLES (FHTV)................
11 PLS ESP......................... 6,280 6,280
12 HVY EXPANDED MOBILE TACTICAL 30,841 30,841
TRUCK EXT SERV.................
13 HMMWV RECAPITALIZATION PROGRAM.. 5,734 5,734
14 TACTICAL WHEELED VEHICLE 45,113 45,113
PROTECTION KITS................
15 MODIFICATION OF IN SVC EQUIP.... 58,946 58,946
NON-TACTICAL VEHICLES
17 HEAVY ARMORED VEHICLE........... 791 791
18 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 1,416 1,416
19 NONTACTICAL VEHICLES, OTHER..... 29,891 29,891
COMM--JOINT COMMUNICATIONS
21 SIGNAL MODERNIZATION PROGRAM.... 153,933 153,933
22 TACTICAL NETWORK TECHNOLOGY MOD 387,439 387,439
IN SVC.........................
23 SITUATION INFORMATION TRANSPORT. 46,693 46,693
25 JCSE EQUIPMENT (USRDECOM)....... 5,075 5,075
COMM--SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
28 DEFENSE ENTERPRISE WIDEBAND 101,189 101,189
SATCOM SYSTEMS.................
29 TRANSPORTABLE TACTICAL COMMAND 77,141 77,141
COMMUNICATIONS.................
30 SHF TERM........................ 16,054 16,054
31 ASSURED POSITIONING, NAVIGATION 41,074 41,074
AND TIMING.....................
32 SMART-T (SPACE)................. 10,515 10,515
33 GLOBAL BRDCST SVC--GBS.......... 11,800 11,800
34 ENROUTE MISSION COMMAND (EMC)... 8,609 8,609
COMM--C3 SYSTEM
38 COE TACTICAL SERVER 77,533 77,533
INFRASTRUCTURE (TSI)...........
COMM--COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS
39 HANDHELD MANPACK SMALL FORM FIT 468,026 468,026
(HMS)..........................
40 RADIO TERMINAL SET, MIDS LVT(2). 23,778 23,778
44 SPIDER FAMILY OF NETWORKED 10,930 10,930
MUNITIONS INCR.................
46 UNIFIED COMMAND SUITE........... 9,291 9,291
47 COTS COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT... 55,630 55,630
48 FAMILY OF MED COMM FOR COMBAT 16,590 16,590
CASUALTY CARE..................
49 ARMY COMMUNICATIONS & 43,457 43,457
ELECTRONICS....................
COMM--INTELLIGENCE COMM
51 CI AUTOMATION ARCHITECTURE (MIP) 10,470 10,470
52 DEFENSE MILITARY DECEPTION 3,704 3,704
INITIATIVE.....................
INFORMATION SECURITY
53 FAMILY OF BIOMETRICS............ 1,000 1,000
54 INFORMATION SYSTEM SECURITY 3,600 3,600
PROGRAM-ISSP...................
55 COMMUNICATIONS SECURITY (COMSEC) 160,899 160,899
56 DEFENSIVE CYBER OPERATIONS...... 61,962 61,962
57 INSIDER THREAT PROGRAM--UNIT 756 756
ACTIVITY MONITO................
58 PERSISTENT CYBER TRAINING 3,000 3,000
ENVIRONMENT....................
COMM--LONG HAUL COMMUNICATIONS
59 BASE SUPPORT COMMUNICATIONS..... 31,770 31,770
COMM--BASE COMMUNICATIONS
60 INFORMATION SYSTEMS............. 159,009 159,009
61 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT 4,854 4,854
MODERNIZATION PROGRAM..........
62 HOME STATION MISSION COMMAND 47,174 47,174
CENTERS (HSMCC)................
63 INSTALLATION INFO INFRASTRUCTURE 297,994 297,994
MOD PROGRAM....................
ELECT EQUIP--TACT INT REL ACT
(TIARA)
66 JTT/CIBS-M (MIP)................ 7,686 7,686
68 DCGS-A (MIP).................... 180,350 180,350
70 TROJAN (MIP).................... 17,368 17,368
71 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (INTEL SPT) 59,052 59,052
(MIP)..........................
ELECT EQUIP--ELECTRONIC WARFARE
(EW)
77 LIGHTWEIGHT COUNTER MORTAR RADAR 5,400 5,400
78 EW PLANNING & MANAGEMENT TOOLS 7,568 7,568
(EWPMT)........................
79 AIR VIGILANCE (AV) (MIP)........ 8,953 8,953
81 MULTI-FUNCTION ELECTRONIC 6,420 6,420
WARFARE (MFEW) SYST............
83 COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/SECURITY 501 501
COUNTERMEASURES................
84 CI MODERNIZATION (MIP).......... 121 121
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL SURV. (TAC
SURV)
85 SENTINEL MODS................... 115,210 115,210
86 NIGHT VISION DEVICES............ 236,604 236,604
88 SMALL TACTICAL OPTICAL RIFLE 22,623 22,623
MOUNTED MLRF...................
90 INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION FAMILY 29,127 29,127
OF SYSTEMS.....................
91 FAMILY OF WEAPON SIGHTS (FWS)... 120,883 120,883
94 JOINT BATTLE COMMAND--PLATFORM 265,667 265,667
(JBC-P)........................
95 JOINT EFFECTS TARGETING SYSTEM 69,720 69,720
(JETS).........................
96 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (LLDR)...... 6,044 6,044
97 COMPUTER BALLISTICS: LHMBC XM32. 3,268 3,268
98 MORTAR FIRE CONTROL SYSTEM...... 13,199 13,199
99 MORTAR FIRE CONTROL SYSTEMS 10,000 10,000
MODIFICATIONS..................
100 COUNTERFIRE RADARS.............. 16,416 78,916
UPL Retrofits systems with [62,500]
GaN tech for ER.............
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL C2 SYSTEMS
102 FIRE SUPPORT C2 FAMILY.......... 13,197 13,197
103 AIR & MSL DEFENSE PLANNING & 24,730 24,730
CONTROL SYS....................
104 IAMD BATTLE COMMAND SYSTEM...... 29,629 29,629
105 LIFE CYCLE SOFTWARE SUPPORT 6,774 6,774
(LCSS).........................
106 NETWORK MANAGEMENT 24,448 24,448
INITIALIZATION AND SERVICE.....
107 MANEUVER CONTROL SYSTEM (MCS)... 260 260
108 GLOBAL COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM- 17,962 17,962
ARMY (GCSS-A)..................
109 INTEGRATED PERSONNEL AND PAY 18,674 0
SYSTEM-ARMY (IPP...............
Poor business process [-18,674]
reengineering...............
110 RECONNAISSANCE AND SURVEYING 11,000 11,000
INSTRUMENT SET.................
111 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIPMENT (ENFIRE) 7,317 7,317
ELECT EQUIP--AUTOMATION
112 ARMY TRAINING MODERNIZATION..... 14,578 14,578
113 AUTOMATED DATA PROCESSING EQUIP. 139,342 147,342
JIOCEUR at RAF Molesworth... [8,000]
114 GENERAL FUND ENTERPRISE BUSINESS 15,802 15,802
SYSTEMS FAM....................
115 HIGH PERF COMPUTING MOD PGM 67,610 67,610
(HPCMP)........................
116 CONTRACT WRITING SYSTEM......... 15,000 0
Program duplication......... [-15,000]
117 CSS COMMUNICATIONS.............. 24,700 24,700
118 RESERVE COMPONENT AUTOMATION SYS 27,879 27,879
(RCAS).........................
ELECT EQUIP--AUDIO VISUAL SYS (A/
V)
120 ITEMS LESS THAN $5M (SURVEYING 5,000 5,000
EQUIPMENT).....................
ELECT EQUIP--SUPPORT
122 BCT EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES....... 22,302 22,302
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 3,710 11,910
Transfer back to base [8,200]
funding.....................
CHEMICAL DEFENSIVE EQUIPMENT
126 CBRN DEFENSE.................... 25,828 25,828
127 SMOKE & OBSCURANT FAMILY: SOF 5,050 5,050
(NON AAO ITEM).................
BRIDGING EQUIPMENT
128 TACTICAL BRIDGING............... 59,821 59,821
129 TACTICAL BRIDGE, FLOAT-RIBBON... 57,661 57,661
130 BRIDGE SUPPLEMENTAL SET......... 17,966 17,966
131 COMMON BRIDGE TRANSPORTER (CBT) 43,155 43,155
RECAP..........................
ENGINEER (NON-CONSTRUCTION)
EQUIPMENT
132 HANDHELD STANDOFF MINEFIELD 7,570 7,570
DETECTION SYS-HST..............
133 GRND STANDOFF MINE DETECTN SYSM 37,025 37,025
(GSTAMIDS).....................
135 HUSKY MOUNTED DETECTION SYSTEM 83,082 83,082
(HMDS).........................
136 ROBOTIC COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM 2,000 2,000
(RCSS).........................
137 EOD ROBOTICS SYSTEMS 23,115 23,115
RECAPITALIZATION...............
138 ROBOTICS AND APPLIQUE SYSTEMS... 101,056 113,856
Army requested realignment.. [12,800]
140 RENDER SAFE SETS KITS OUTFITS... 18,684 18,684
142 FAMILY OF BOATS AND MOTORS...... 8,245 8,245
COMBAT SERVICE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
143 HEATERS AND ECU'S............... 7,336 7,336
145 PERSONNEL RECOVERY SUPPORT 4,281 4,281
SYSTEM (PRSS)..................
146 GROUND SOLDIER SYSTEM........... 111,955 111,955
147 MOBILE SOLDIER POWER............ 31,364 31,364
149 FIELD FEEDING EQUIPMENT......... 1,673 1,673
150 CARGO AERIAL DEL & PERSONNEL 43,622 43,622
PARACHUTE SYSTEM...............
151 FAMILY OF ENGR COMBAT AND 11,451 11,451
CONSTRUCTION SETS..............
152 ITEMS LESS THAN $5M (ENG SPT)... 5,167 5,167
PETROLEUM EQUIPMENT
154 DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS, PETROLEUM 74,867 74,867
& WATER........................
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
155 COMBAT SUPPORT MEDICAL.......... 68,225 68,225
MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT
156 MOBILE MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT 55,053 55,053
SYSTEMS........................
157 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (MAINT EQ) 5,608 5,608
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
161 HYDRAULIC EXCAVATOR............. 500 500
162 TRACTOR, FULL TRACKED........... 4,835 4,835
163 ALL TERRAIN CRANES.............. 23,936 23,936
164 HIGH MOBILITY ENGINEER EXCAVATOR 27,188 27,188
(HMEE).........................
166 CONST EQUIP ESP................. 34,790 34,790
167 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (CONST 4,381 4,381
EQUIP).........................
RAIL FLOAT CONTAINERIZATION
EQUIPMENT
168 ARMY WATERCRAFT ESP............. 35,194 35,194
169 MANEUVER SUPPORT VESSEL (MSV)... 14,185 14,185
170 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (FLOAT/ 6,920 6,920
RAIL)..........................
GENERATORS
171 GENERATORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIP. 58,566 58,566
172 TACTICAL ELECTRIC POWER 14,814 14,814
RECAPITALIZATION...............
MATERIAL HANDLING EQUIPMENT
173 FAMILY OF FORKLIFTS............. 14,864 14,864
TRAINING EQUIPMENT
174 COMBAT TRAINING CENTERS SUPPORT. 123,411 123,411
175 TRAINING DEVICES, NONSYSTEM..... 220,707 220,707
176 SYNTHETIC TRAINING ENVIRONMENT 20,749 20,749
(STE)..........................
178 AVIATION COMBINED ARMS TACTICAL 4,840 4,840
TRAINER........................
179 GAMING TECHNOLOGY IN SUPPORT OF 15,463 15,463
ARMY TRAINING..................
TEST MEASURE AND DIG EQUIPMENT
(TMD)
180 CALIBRATION SETS EQUIPMENT...... 3,030 3,030
181 INTEGRATED FAMILY OF TEST 76,980 76,980
EQUIPMENT (IFTE)...............
182 TEST EQUIPMENT MODERNIZATION 16,415 16,415
(TEMOD)........................
OTHER SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
184 RAPID EQUIPPING SOLDIER SUPPORT 9,877 9,877
EQUIPMENT......................
185 PHYSICAL SECURITY SYSTEMS (OPA3) 82,158 82,158
186 BASE LEVEL COMMON EQUIPMENT..... 15,340 15,340
187 MODIFICATION OF IN-SVC EQUIPMENT 50,458 50,458
(OPA-3)........................
189 BUILDING, PRE-FAB, RELOCATABLE.. 14,400 14,400
190 SPECIAL EQUIPMENT FOR USER 9,821 9,821
TESTING........................
OPA2
192 INITIAL SPARES--C&E............. 9,757 9,757
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY... 7,443,101 7,461,427
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY
COMBAT AIRCRAFT
1 F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER) HORNET...... 1,748,934 1,748,934
2 F/A-18E/F (FIGHTER) HORNET AP... 55,128 55,128
3 JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER CV......... 2,272,301 2,487,301
UPL USMC additional [215,000]
quantities..................
4 JOINT STRIKE FIGHTER CV AP...... 339,053 339,053
5 JSF STOVL....................... 1,342,035 1,591,135
UPL USMC additional [249,100]
quantities..................
6 JSF STOVL AP.................... 291,804 291,804
7 CH-53K (HEAVY LIFT)............. 807,876 807,876
8 CH-53K (HEAVY LIFT) AP.......... 215,014 215,014
9 V-22 (MEDIUM LIFT).............. 966,666 966,666
10 V-22 (MEDIUM LIFT) AP........... 27,104 27,104
11 H-1 UPGRADES (UH-1Y/AH-1Z)...... 62,003 62,003
13 MH-60R (MYP).................... 894 894
14 P-8A POSEIDON................... 1,206,701 1,206,701
16 E-2D ADV HAWKEYE................ 744,484 744,484
17 E-2D ADV HAWKEYE AP............. 190,204 190,204
TRAINER AIRCRAFT
19 ADVANCED HELICOPTER TRAINING 261,160 261,160
SYSTEM.........................
OTHER AIRCRAFT
20 KC-130J......................... 240,840 240,840
21 KC-130J AP...................... 66,061 66,061
22 F-5............................. 39,676 0
Program cancellation........ [-39,676]
23 MQ-4 TRITON..................... 473,134 473,134
24 MQ-4 TRITON AP.................. 20,139 20,139
25 MQ-8 UAV........................ 44,957 44,957
26 STUASL0 UAV..................... 43,819 43,819
28 VH-92A EXECUTIVE HELO........... 658,067 658,067
MODIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT
29 AEA SYSTEMS..................... 44,470 44,470
30 AV-8 SERIES..................... 39,472 39,472
31 ADVERSARY....................... 3,415 3,415
32 F-18 SERIES..................... 1,207,089 1,207,089
33 H-53 SERIES..................... 68,385 68,385
34 MH-60 SERIES.................... 149,797 149,797
35 H-1 SERIES...................... 114,059 114,059
36 EP-3 SERIES..................... 8,655 8,655
38 E-2 SERIES...................... 117,059 117,059
39 TRAINER A/C SERIES.............. 5,616 5,616
40 C-2A............................ 15,747 15,747
41 C-130 SERIES.................... 122,671 122,671
42 FEWSG........................... 509 509
43 CARGO/TRANSPORT A/C SERIES...... 8,767 8,767
44 E-6 SERIES...................... 169,827 169,827
45 EXECUTIVE HELICOPTERS SERIES.... 8,933 8,933
47 T-45 SERIES..................... 186,022 186,022
48 POWER PLANT CHANGES............. 16,136 16,136
49 JPATS SERIES.................... 21,824 21,824
50 AVIATION LIFE SUPPORT MODS...... 39,762 39,762
51 COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT............ 162,839 162,839
52 COMMON AVIONICS CHANGES......... 102,107 102,107
53 COMMON DEFENSIVE WEAPON SYSTEM.. 2,100 2,100
54 ID SYSTEMS...................... 41,437 41,437
55 P-8 SERIES...................... 107,539 107,539
56 MAGTF EW FOR AVIATION........... 26,536 26,536
57 MQ-8 SERIES..................... 34,686 34,686
58 V-22 (TILT/ROTOR ACFT) OSPREY... 325,367 325,367
59 NEXT GENERATION JAMMER (NGJ).... 6,223 6,223
60 F-35 STOVL SERIES............... 65,585 65,585
61 F-35 CV SERIES.................. 15,358 15,358
62 QRC............................. 165,016 165,016
63 MQ-4 SERIES..................... 27,994 27,994
64 RQ-21 SERIES.................... 66,282 66,282
AIRCRAFT SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
67 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 2,166,788 2,235,088
F-35B spares................ [14,900]
F-35C spares................ [24,600]
UPL F-35B engine............ [28,800]
AIRCRAFT SUPPORT EQUIP &
FACILITIES
68 COMMON GROUND EQUIPMENT......... 491,025 491,025
69 AIRCRAFT INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES.. 71,335 71,335
70 WAR CONSUMABLES................. 41,086 41,086
72 SPECIAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 135,740 135,740
73 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 892 892
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY 18,522,204 19,014,928
WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY
MODIFICATION OF MISSILES
1 TRIDENT II MODS................. 0 1,177,251
Transfer back to base [1,177,251]
funding.....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
2 MISSILE INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES... 0 7,142
Transfer back to base [7,142]
funding.....................
STRATEGIC MISSILES
3 TOMAHAWK........................ 0 330,430
Transfer back to base [386,730]
funding.....................
Unjustified tooling and [-56,300]
facilitization costs........
TACTICAL MISSILES
4 AMRAAM.......................... 0 224,502
Transfer back to base [224,502]
funding.....................
5 SIDEWINDER...................... 0 119,456
Transfer back to base [119,456]
funding.....................
7 STANDARD MISSILE................ 0 404,523
Transfer back to base [404,523]
funding.....................
8 STANDARD MISSILE AP............. 0 96,085
Transfer back to base [96,085]
funding.....................
9 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB II.......... 0 118,466
Transfer back to base [118,466]
funding.....................
10 RAM............................. 0 106,765
Transfer back to base [106,765]
funding.....................
12 HELLFIRE........................ 0 1,525
Transfer back to base [1,525]
funding.....................
15 AERIAL TARGETS.................. 0 145,880
Transfer back to base [145,880]
funding.....................
16 DRONES AND DECOYS............... 0 20,000
Transfer back to base [20,000]
funding.....................
17 OTHER MISSILE SUPPORT........... 0 3,388
Transfer back to base [3,388]
funding.....................
18 LRASM........................... 0 143,200
Transfer back to base [143,200]
funding.....................
19 LCS OTH MISSILE................. 0 18,137
Transfer back to base [38,137]
funding.....................
Unjustified accelerated [-20,000]
acquisition strategy........
MODIFICATION OF MISSILES
20 ESSM............................ 0 128,059
Transfer back to base [128,059]
funding.....................
21 HARPOON MODS.................... 0 25,447
Transfer back to base [25,447]
funding.....................
22 HARM MODS....................... 0 183,740
Transfer back to base [183,740]
funding.....................
23 STANDARD MISSILES MODS.......... 0 22,500
Transfer back to base [22,500]
funding.....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
24 WEAPONS INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES... 0 1,958
Transfer back to base [1,958]
funding.....................
25 FLEET SATELLITE COMM FOLLOW-ON.. 0 67,380
Transfer back to base [67,380]
funding.....................
ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
27 ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 0 109,427
Transfer back to base [109,427]
funding.....................
TORPEDOES AND RELATED EQUIP
28 SSTD............................ 0 5,561
Transfer back to base [5,561]
funding.....................
29 MK-48 TORPEDO................... 0 130,000
Transfer back to base [114,000]
funding.....................
UPL additional quantites.... [16,000]
30 ASW TARGETS..................... 0 15,095
Transfer back to base [15,095]
funding.....................
MOD OF TORPEDOES AND RELATED
EQUIP
31 MK-54 TORPEDO MODS.............. 0 119,453
Transfer back to base [119,453]
funding.....................
32 MK-48 TORPEDO ADCAP MODS........ 0 39,508
Transfer back to base [39,508]
funding.....................
33 QUICKSTRIKE MINE................ 0 5,183
Transfer back to base [5,183]
funding.....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
34 TORPEDO SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 0 79,028
Transfer back to base [79,028]
funding.....................
35 ASW RANGE SUPPORT............... 0 3,890
Transfer back to base [3,890]
funding.....................
DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION
36 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 0 3,803
Transfer back to base [3,803]
funding.....................
GUNS AND GUN MOUNTS
37 SMALL ARMS AND WEAPONS.......... 0 14,797
Transfer back to base [14,797]
funding.....................
MODIFICATION OF GUNS AND GUN
MOUNTS
38 CIWS MODS....................... 0 44,126
Transfer back to base [44,126]
funding.....................
39 COAST GUARD WEAPONS............. 0 44,980
Transfer back to base [44,980]
funding.....................
40 GUN MOUNT MODS.................. 0 66,376
Transfer back to base [66,376]
funding.....................
41 LCS MODULE WEAPONS.............. 0 14,585
Transfer back to base [14,585]
funding.....................
43 AIRBORNE MINE NEUTRALIZATION 0 7,160
SYSTEMS........................
Transfer back to base [7,160]
funding.....................
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
45 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 0 126,138
Transfer back to base [126,138]
funding.....................
TOTAL WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY. 0 4,174,944
PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY & MC
NAVY AMMUNITION
1 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS........... 0 36,028
Transfer back to base [36,028]
funding.....................
2 JDAM............................ 0 70,413
Transfer back to base [70,413]
funding.....................
3 AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL TYPES..... 0 31,756
Transfer back to base [31,756]
funding.....................
4 MACHINE GUN AMMUNITION.......... 0 4,793
Transfer back to base [4,793]
funding.....................
5 PRACTICE BOMBS.................. 0 34,708
Transfer back to base [34,708]
funding.....................
6 CARTRIDGES & CART ACTUATED 0 45,738
DEVICES........................
Transfer back to base [45,738]
funding.....................
7 AIR EXPENDABLE COUNTERMEASURES.. 0 77,301
Transfer back to base [77,301]
funding.....................
8 JATOS........................... 0 7,262
Transfer back to base [7,262]
funding.....................
9 5 INCH/54 GUN AMMUNITION........ 0 22,594
Transfer back to base [22,594]
funding.....................
10 INTERMEDIATE CALIBER GUN 0 37,193
AMMUNITION.....................
Transfer back to base [37,193]
funding.....................
11 OTHER SHIP GUN AMMUNITION....... 0 39,491
Transfer back to base [39,491]
funding.....................
12 SMALL ARMS & LANDING PARTY AMMO. 0 47,896
Transfer back to base [47,896]
funding.....................
13 PYROTECHNIC AND DEMOLITION...... 0 10,621
Transfer back to base [10,621]
funding.....................
15 AMMUNITION LESS THAN $5 MILLION. 0 2,386
Transfer back to base [2,386]
funding.....................
MARINE CORPS AMMUNITION
16 MORTARS......................... 0 55,543
Transfer back to base [55,543]
funding.....................
17 DIRECT SUPPORT MUNITIONS........ 0 131,765
Transfer back to base [131,765]
funding.....................
18 INFANTRY WEAPONS AMMUNITION..... 0 78,056
Transfer back to base [78,056]
funding.....................
19 COMBAT SUPPORT MUNITIONS........ 0 40,048
Transfer back to base [40,048]
funding.....................
20 AMMO MODERNIZATION.............. 0 14,325
Transfer back to base [14,325]
funding.....................
21 ARTILLERY MUNITIONS............. 0 188,876
Transfer back to base [188,876]
funding.....................
22 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 0 4,521
Transfer back to base [4,521]
funding.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY 0 981,314
& MC...........................
SHIPBUILDING AND CONVERSION,
NAVY
FLEET BALLISTIC MISSILE SHIPS
1 OHIO REPLACEMENT SUBMARINE AP... 1,698,907 1,823,907
Submarine industrial base [125,000]
expansion...................
OTHER WARSHIPS
2 CARRIER REPLACEMENT PROGRAM..... 2,347,000 2,347,000
3 VIRGINIA CLASS SUBMARINE........ 7,155,946 4,691,946
Restore VPM on SSN-804...... [522,100]
SSN-812 full funding early [-2,986,100]
to need.....................
4 VIRGINIA CLASS SUBMARINE AP..... 2,769,552 4,269,552
Future Virginia-class [1,500,000]
submarine(s) with VPM.......
5 CVN REFUELING OVERHAULS......... 647,926 597,926
CVN-74 RCOH unjustified cost [-50,000]
growth......................
6 CVN REFUELING OVERHAULS AP...... 0 16,900
Restore CVN-75 RCOH......... [16,900]
7 DDG 1000........................ 155,944 155,944
8 DDG-51.......................... 5,099,295 5,079,295
Available prior year funds.. [-20,000]
9 DDG-51 AP....................... 224,028 484,028
Accelerate LLTM for FY21 [260,000]
Flight III destroyers.......
11 FFG-FRIGATE..................... 1,281,177 1,281,177
AMPHIBIOUS SHIPS
12 LPD FLIGHT II................... 0 525,000
LPD-31 program increase..... [277,900]
Transfer from SCN line 13... [247,100]
13 LPD FLIGHT II AP................ 247,100 0
Transfer to SCN line 12..... [-247,100]
15 LHA REPLACEMENT................. 0 650,000
LHA-9 program increase...... [650,000]
AUXILIARIES, CRAFT AND PRIOR YR
PROGRAM COST
18 TAO FLEET OILER................. 981,215 981,215
19 TAO FLEET OILER AP.............. 73,000 73,000
20 TOWING, SALVAGE, AND RESCUE SHIP 150,282 150,282
(ATS)..........................
22 LCU 1700........................ 85,670 85,670
23 OUTFITTING...................... 754,679 704,679
Early to need and [-50,000]
unjustified cost growth.....
25 SERVICE CRAFT................... 56,289 81,789
Accelerate YP-703 Flight II. [25,500]
28 COMPLETION OF PY SHIPBUILDING 55,700 104,700
PROGRAMS.......................
UPL EPF-14 conversion....... [49,000]
29 SHIP TO SHORE CONNECTOR AP...... 0 40,400
Program increase............ [40,400]
TOTAL SHIPBUILDING AND 23,783,710 24,144,410
CONVERSION, NAVY...............
OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY
SHIP PROPULSION EQUIPMENT
1 SURFACE POWER EQUIPMENT......... 14,490 14,490
GENERATORS
2 SURFACE COMBATANT HM&E.......... 31,583 50,583
UPL DDG-51 class HM&E [19,000]
upgrades....................
NAVIGATION EQUIPMENT
3 OTHER NAVIGATION EQUIPMENT...... 77,404 77,404
OTHER SHIPBOARD EQUIPMENT
4 SUB PERISCOPE, IMAGING AND SUPT 160,803 160,803
EQUIP PROG.....................
5 DDG MOD......................... 566,140 566,140
6 FIREFIGHTING EQUIPMENT.......... 18,223 18,223
7 COMMAND AND CONTROL SWITCHBOARD. 2,086 2,086
8 LHA/LHD MIDLIFE................. 95,651 95,651
9 POLLUTION CONTROL EQUIPMENT..... 23,910 23,910
10 SUBMARINE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 44,895 44,895
11 VIRGINIA CLASS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT 28,465 28,465
12 LCS CLASS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 19,426 19,426
13 SUBMARINE BATTERIES............. 26,290 26,290
14 LPD CLASS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 46,945 46,945
15 DDG 1000 CLASS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT 9,930 9,930
16 STRATEGIC PLATFORM SUPPORT EQUIP 14,331 14,331
17 DSSP EQUIPMENT.................. 2,909 2,909
18 CG MODERNIZATION................ 193,990 193,990
19 LCAC............................ 3,392 3,392
20 UNDERWATER EOD PROGRAMS......... 71,240 82,240
Program increase for four [11,000]
ExMCM companies.............
21 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 102,543 102,543
22 CHEMICAL WARFARE DETECTORS...... 2,961 2,961
23 SUBMARINE LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEM... 6,635 6,635
REACTOR PLANT EQUIPMENT
24 REACTOR POWER UNITS............. 5,340 5,340
25 REACTOR COMPONENTS.............. 465,726 465,726
OCEAN ENGINEERING
26 DIVING AND SALVAGE EQUIPMENT.... 11,854 11,854
SMALL BOATS
27 STANDARD BOATS.................. 79,102 79,102
PRODUCTION FACILITIES EQUIPMENT
28 OPERATING FORCES IPE............ 202,238 202,238
OTHER SHIP SUPPORT
29 LCS COMMON MISSION MODULES 51,553 51,553
EQUIPMENT......................
30 LCS MCM MISSION MODULES......... 197,129 67,329
Procurement ahead of [-129,800]
satisfactory testing........
31 LCS ASW MISSION MODULES......... 27,754 27,754
32 LCS SUW MISSION MODULES......... 26,566 26,566
33 LCS IN-SERVICE MODERNIZATION.... 84,972 84,972
34 SMALL & MEDIUM UUV.............. 40,547 10,647
Knifefish procurement ahead [-29,900]
of satisfactory testing.....
LOGISTIC SUPPORT
35 LSD MIDLIFE & MODERNIZATION..... 40,269 40,269
SHIP SONARS
36 SPQ-9B RADAR.................... 26,195 26,195
37 AN/SQQ-89 SURF ASW COMBAT SYSTEM 125,237 125,237
38 SSN ACOUSTIC EQUIPMENT.......... 366,968 366,968
39 UNDERSEA WARFARE SUPPORT 8,967 8,967
EQUIPMENT......................
ASW ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
40 SUBMARINE ACOUSTIC WARFARE 23,545 23,545
SYSTEM.........................
41 SSTD............................ 12,439 12,439
42 FIXED SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM....... 128,441 128,441
43 SURTASS......................... 21,923 21,923
ELECTRONIC WARFARE EQUIPMENT
44 AN/SLQ-32....................... 420,154 358,154
Early to need............... [-62,000]
RECONNAISSANCE EQUIPMENT
45 SHIPBOARD IW EXPLOIT............ 194,758 202,758
UPL SSEE expansion on Flight [8,000]
I DDGs......................
46 AUTOMATED IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM 5,368 5,368
(AIS)..........................
OTHER SHIP ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
47 COOPERATIVE ENGAGEMENT 35,128 35,128
CAPABILITY.....................
48 NAVAL TACTICAL COMMAND SUPPORT 15,154 15,154
SYSTEM (NTCSS).................
49 ATDLS........................... 52,753 52,753
50 NAVY COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM 3,390 3,390
(NCCS).........................
51 MINESWEEPING SYSTEM REPLACEMENT. 19,448 19,448
52 SHALLOW WATER MCM............... 8,730 8,730
53 NAVSTAR GPS RECEIVERS (SPACE)... 32,674 32,674
54 AMERICAN FORCES RADIO AND TV 2,617 2,617
SERVICE........................
55 STRATEGIC PLATFORM SUPPORT EQUIP 7,973 7,973
AVIATION ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
56 ASHORE ATC EQUIPMENT............ 72,406 72,406
57 AFLOAT ATC EQUIPMENT............ 67,410 67,410
58 ID SYSTEMS...................... 26,059 26,059
59 JOINT PRECISION APPROACH AND 92,695 92,695
LANDING SYSTEM (...............
60 NAVAL MISSION PLANNING SYSTEMS.. 15,296 15,296
OTHER SHORE ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
61 TACTICAL/MOBILE C4I SYSTEMS..... 36,226 36,226
62 DCGS-N.......................... 21,788 21,788
63 CANES........................... 426,654 426,654
64 RADIAC.......................... 6,450 6,450
65 CANES-INTELL.................... 52,713 52,713
66 GPETE........................... 13,028 13,028
67 MASF............................ 5,193 5,193
68 INTEG COMBAT SYSTEM TEST 6,028 6,028
FACILITY.......................
69 EMI CONTROL INSTRUMENTATION..... 4,209 4,209
70 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 168,436 144,636
NGSSR early to need......... [-23,800]
SHIPBOARD COMMUNICATIONS
71 SHIPBOARD TACTICAL 55,853 55,853
COMMUNICATIONS.................
72 SHIP COMMUNICATIONS AUTOMATION.. 137,861 137,861
73 COMMUNICATIONS ITEMS UNDER $5M.. 35,093 35,093
SUBMARINE COMMUNICATIONS
74 SUBMARINE BROADCAST SUPPORT..... 50,833 50,833
75 SUBMARINE COMMUNICATION 69,643 69,643
EQUIPMENT......................
SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
76 SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS 45,841 45,841
77 NAVY MULTIBAND TERMINAL (NMT)... 88,021 88,021
SHORE COMMUNICATIONS
78 JOINT COMMUNICATIONS SUPPORT 4,293 4,293
ELEMENT (JCSE).................
CRYPTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT
79 INFO SYSTEMS SECURITY PROGRAM 166,540 166,540
(ISSP).........................
80 MIO INTEL EXPLOITATION TEAM..... 968 968
CRYPTOLOGIC EQUIPMENT
81 CRYPTOLOGIC COMMUNICATIONS EQUIP 13,090 13,090
OTHER ELECTRONIC SUPPORT
83 COAST GUARD EQUIPMENT........... 61,370 61,370
SONOBUOYS
85 SONOBUOYS--ALL TYPES............ 260,644 310,644
UPL Sonobuoy increase....... [50,000]
AIRCRAFT SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
86 MINOTAUR........................ 5,000 5,000
87 WEAPONS RANGE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT. 101,843 101,843
88 AIRCRAFT SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 145,601 145,601
89 ADVANCED ARRESTING GEAR (AAG)... 4,725 4,725
90 METEOROLOGICAL EQUIPMENT........ 14,687 14,687
92 LEGACY AIRBORNE MCM............. 19,250 19,250
93 LAMPS EQUIPMENT................. 792 792
94 AVIATION SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 55,415 55,415
95 UMCS-UNMAN CARRIER 32,668 32,668
AVIATION(UCA)MISSION CNTRL.....
SHIP GUN SYSTEM EQUIPMENT
96 SHIP GUN SYSTEMS EQUIPMENT...... 5,451 5,451
SHIP MISSILE SYSTEMS EQUIPMENT
97 HARPOON SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 1,100 1,100
98 SHIP MISSILE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.. 228,104 228,104
99 TOMAHAWK SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 78,593 78,593
FBM SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
100 STRATEGIC MISSILE SYSTEMS EQUIP. 280,510 280,510
ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
101 SSN COMBAT CONTROL SYSTEMS...... 148,547 148,547
102 ASW SUPPORT EQUIPMENT........... 21,130 21,130
OTHER ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
103 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL 15,244 15,244
EQUIP..........................
104 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 5,071 5,071
OTHER EXPENDABLE ORDNANCE
105 ANTI-SHIP MISSILE DECOY SYSTEM.. 41,962 41,962
106 SUBMARINE TRAINING DEVICE MODS.. 75,057 75,057
107 SURFACE TRAINING EQUIPMENT...... 233,175 233,175
CIVIL ENGINEERING SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
108 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 4,562 4,562
109 GENERAL PURPOSE TRUCKS.......... 10,974 10,974
110 CONSTRUCTION & MAINTENANCE EQUIP 43,191 43,191
111 FIRE FIGHTING EQUIPMENT......... 21,142 21,142
112 TACTICAL VEHICLES............... 33,432 33,432
114 POLLUTION CONTROL EQUIPMENT..... 2,633 2,633
115 ITEMS UNDER $5 MILLION.......... 53,467 53,467
116 PHYSICAL SECURITY VEHICLES...... 1,173 1,173
SUPPLY SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
117 SUPPLY EQUIPMENT................ 16,730 16,730
118 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 5,389 5,389
119 SPECIAL PURPOSE SUPPLY SYSTEMS.. 654,674 654,674
TRAINING DEVICES
120 TRAINING SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 3,633 3,633
121 TRAINING AND EDUCATION EQUIPMENT 97,636 97,636
COMMAND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
122 COMMAND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 66,102 59,779
Program duplication......... [-6,323]
123 MEDICAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 3,633 3,633
125 NAVAL MIP SUPPORT EQUIPMENT..... 6,097 6,097
126 OPERATING FORCES SUPPORT 16,905 16,905
EQUIPMENT......................
127 C4ISR EQUIPMENT................. 30,146 30,146
128 ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT. 21,986 21,986
129 PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT..... 160,046 160,046
130 ENTERPRISE INFORMATION 56,899 56,899
TECHNOLOGY.....................
OTHER
133 NEXT GENERATION ENTERPRISE 122,832 122,832
SERVICE........................
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 16,346 16,346
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
134 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 375,608 375,608
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY... 9,652,956 9,489,133
PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS
TRACKED COMBAT VEHICLES
1 AAV7A1 PIP...................... 39,495 39,495
2 AMPHIBIOUS COMBAT VEHICLE 1.1... 317,935 317,935
3 LAV PIP......................... 60,734 60,734
ARTILLERY AND OTHER WEAPONS
4 155MM LIGHTWEIGHT TOWED HOWITZER 25,065 25,065
5 ARTILLERY WEAPONS SYSTEM........ 100,002 100,002
6 WEAPONS AND COMBAT VEHICLES 31,945 31,945
UNDER $5 MILLION...............
OTHER SUPPORT
7 MODIFICATION KITS............... 22,760 22,760
GUIDED MISSILES
8 GROUND BASED AIR DEFENSE........ 175,998 175,998
9 ANTI-ARMOR MISSILE-JAVELIN...... 20,207 20,207
10 FAMILY ANTI-ARMOR WEAPON SYSTEMS 21,913 21,913
(FOAAWS).......................
11 ANTI-ARMOR MISSILE-TOW.......... 60,501 60,501
12 GUIDED MLRS ROCKET (GMLRS)...... 29,062 29,062
COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEMS
13 COMMON AVIATION COMMAND AND 37,203 37,203
CONTROL SYSTEM (C..............
REPAIR AND TEST EQUIPMENT
14 REPAIR AND TEST EQUIPMENT....... 55,156 55,156
OTHER SUPPORT (TEL)
15 MODIFICATION KITS............... 4,945 4,945
COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEM (NON-
TEL)
16 ITEMS UNDER $5 MILLION (COMM & 112,124 112,124
ELEC)..........................
17 AIR OPERATIONS C2 SYSTEMS....... 17,408 17,408
RADAR + EQUIPMENT (NON-TEL)
18 RADAR SYSTEMS................... 329 329
19 GROUND/AIR TASK ORIENTED RADAR 273,022 273,022
(G/ATOR).......................
INTELL/COMM EQUIPMENT (NON-TEL)
21 GCSS-MC......................... 4,484 4,484
22 FIRE SUPPORT SYSTEM............. 35,488 35,488
23 INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.. 56,896 56,896
25 UNMANNED AIR SYSTEMS (INTEL).... 34,711 34,711
26 DCGS-MC......................... 32,562 32,562
OTHER SUPPORT (NON-TEL)
30 NEXT GENERATION ENTERPRISE 114,901 114,901
NETWORK (NGEN).................
31 COMMON COMPUTER RESOURCES....... 51,094 51,094
32 COMMAND POST SYSTEMS............ 108,897 108,897
33 RADIO SYSTEMS................... 227,320 227,320
34 COMM SWITCHING & CONTROL SYSTEMS 31,685 31,685
35 COMM & ELEC INFRASTRUCTURE 21,140 21,140
SUPPORT........................
36 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES........... 27,632 27,632
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 5,535 5,535
ADMINISTRATIVE VEHICLES
37 COMMERCIAL CARGO VEHICLES....... 28,913 28,913
TACTICAL VEHICLES
38 MOTOR TRANSPORT MODIFICATIONS... 19,234 19,234
39 JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE.... 558,107 558,107
40 FAMILY OF TACTICAL TRAILERS..... 2,693 2,693
ENGINEER AND OTHER EQUIPMENT
41 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL EQUIP 495 495
ASSORT.........................
42 TACTICAL FUEL SYSTEMS........... 52 52
43 POWER EQUIPMENT ASSORTED........ 22,441 22,441
44 AMPHIBIOUS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT.... 7,101 7,101
45 EOD SYSTEMS..................... 44,700 44,700
MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT
46 PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT..... 15,404 15,404
GENERAL PROPERTY
47 FIELD MEDICAL EQUIPMENT......... 2,898 2,898
48 TRAINING DEVICES................ 149,567 149,567
49 FAMILY OF CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT 35,622 35,622
50 ULTRA-LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE 647 647
(ULTV).........................
OTHER SUPPORT
51 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 10,956 10,956
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
52 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 33,470 33,470
TOTAL PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS. 3,090,449 3,090,449
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
TACTICAL FORCES
1 F-35............................ 4,274,359 5,364,359
UPL additional quantities... [1,090,000]
2 F-35 AP......................... 655,500 811,500
UPL increase................ [156,000]
3 F-15E........................... 1,050,000 888,000
NRE cost on a non- [-162,000]
developmental A/C...........
TACTICAL AIRLIFT
5 KC-46A MDAP..................... 2,234,529 2,705,529
UPL additional quantities... [471,000]
OTHER AIRLIFT
6 C-130J.......................... 12,156 12,156
8 MC-130J......................... 871,207 871,207
9 MC-130J AP...................... 40,000 40,000
HELICOPTERS
10 COMBAT RESCUE HELICOPTER........ 884,235 884,235
MISSION SUPPORT AIRCRAFT
11 C-37A........................... 161,000 161,000
12 CIVIL AIR PATROL A/C............ 2,767 2,767
OTHER AIRCRAFT
14 TARGET DRONES................... 130,837 130,837
15 COMPASS CALL.................... 114,095 114,095
17 MQ-9............................ 189,205 189,205
STRATEGIC AIRCRAFT
19 B-2A............................ 9,582 9,582
20 B-1B............................ 22,111 22,111
21 B-52............................ 69,648 69,648
22 LARGE AIRCRAFT INFRARED 43,758 43,758
COUNTERMEASURES................
TACTICAL AIRCRAFT
23 A-10............................ 132,069 132,069
24 E-11 BACN/HAG................... 70,027 70,027
25 F-15............................ 481,073 328,073
ADCP unnecessary due to F- [-75,100]
15X.........................
IFF unnecessary due to F-15X [-29,600]
Longerons unnecessary due to [-24,600]
F-15X.......................
Radar unnecessary due to F- [-23,700]
15X.........................
26 F-16............................ 234,782 309,782
Additional radars........... [75,000]
28 F-22A........................... 323,597 323,597
30 F-35 MODIFICATIONS.............. 343,590 343,590
31 F-15 EPAW....................... 149,047 81,847
Not required because of F- [-67,200]
15X.........................
32 INCREMENT 3.2B.................. 20,213 20,213
33 KC-46A MDAP..................... 10,213 10,213
AIRLIFT AIRCRAFT
34 C-5............................. 73,550 73,550
36 C-17A........................... 60,244 60,244
37 C-21............................ 216 216
38 C-32A........................... 11,511 11,511
39 C-37A........................... 435 435
TRAINER AIRCRAFT
40 GLIDER MODS..................... 138 138
41 T-6............................. 11,826 11,826
42 T-1............................. 26,787 26,787
43 T-38............................ 37,341 37,341
OTHER AIRCRAFT
44 U-2 MODS........................ 86,896 86,896
45 KC-10A (ATCA)................... 2,108 2,108
46 C-12............................ 3,021 3,021
47 VC-25A MOD...................... 48,624 48,624
48 C-40............................ 256 256
49 C-130........................... 52,066 52,066
50 C-130J MODS..................... 141,686 141,686
51 C-135........................... 124,491 124,491
53 COMPASS CALL.................... 110,754 110,754
54 COMBAT FLIGHT INSPECTION--CFIN.. 508 508
55 RC-135.......................... 227,673 227,673
56 E-3............................. 216,299 216,299
57 E-4............................. 58,477 58,477
58 E-8............................. 28,778 58,778
SATCOM radios............... [30,000]
59 AIRBORNE WARNING AND CNTRL SYS 36,000 36,000
(AWACS) 40/45..................
60 FAMILY OF BEYOND LINE-OF-SIGHT 7,910 7,910
TERMINALS......................
61 H-1............................. 3,817 3,817
62 H-60............................ 20,879 20,879
63 RQ-4 MODS....................... 1,704 1,704
64 HC/MC-130 MODIFICATIONS......... 51,482 51,482
65 OTHER AIRCRAFT.................. 50,098 50,098
66 MQ-9 MODS....................... 383,594 383,594
68 CV-22 MODS...................... 65,348 65,348
AIRCRAFT SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
69 INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR PARTS..... 708,230 970,230
F-35 spares................. [96,000]
KC-46 spares................ [141,000]
RQ-4........................ [25,000]
COMMON SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
72 AIRCRAFT REPLACEMENT SUPPORT 84,938 84,938
EQUIP..........................
POST PRODUCTION SUPPORT
73 B-2A............................ 1,403 1,403
74 B-2B............................ 42,234 42,234
75 B-52............................ 4,641 4,641
76 C-17A........................... 124,805 124,805
79 F-15............................ 2,589 2,589
81 F-16............................ 15,348 15,348
84 RQ-4 POST PRODUCTION CHARGES.... 47,246 47,246
INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS
86 INDUSTRIAL RESPONSIVENESS....... 17,705 17,705
WAR CONSUMABLES
87 WAR CONSUMABLES................. 32,102 32,102
OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES
88 OTHER PRODUCTION CHARGES........ 1,194,728 1,194,728
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 34,193 34,193
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR 16,784,279 18,486,079
FORCE..........................
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
MISSILE REPLACEMENT EQUIPMENT--
BALLISTIC
1 MISSILE REPLACEMENT EQ-BALLISTIC 55,888 55,888
TACTICAL
2 REPLAC EQUIP & WAR CONSUMABLES.. 9,100 9,100
3 JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND MUNITION.... 15,000 15,000
4 JOINT AIR-SURFACE STANDOFF 482,525 482,525
MISSILE........................
6 SIDEWINDER (AIM-9X)............. 160,408 160,408
7 AMRAAM.......................... 332,250 332,250
8 PREDATOR HELLFIRE MISSILE....... 118,860 118,860
9 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB............. 275,438 275,438
10 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB II.......... 212,434 212,434
INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES
11 INDUSTR'L PREPAREDNS/POL 801 801
PREVENTION.....................
CLASS IV
12 ICBM FUZE MOD................... 5,000 5,000
13 ICBM FUZE MOD AP................ 14,497 14,497
14 MM III MODIFICATIONS............ 50,831 59,731
Air Force requested transfer [8,900]
15 AGM-65D MAVERICK................ 294 294
16 AIR LAUNCH CRUISE MISSILE (ALCM) 77,387 68,487
Air Force requested transfer [-8,900]
MISSILE SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
18 MSL SPRS/REPAIR PARTS (INITIAL). 1,910 1,910
19 REPLEN SPARES/REPAIR PARTS...... 82,490 82,490
SPECIAL PROGRAMS
23 SPECIAL UPDATE PROGRAMS......... 144,553 144,553
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 849,521 849,521
TOTAL MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR 2,889,187 2,889,187
FORCE..........................
SPACE PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
SPACE PROGRAMS
1 ADVANCED EHF.................... 31,894 31,894
2 AF SATELLITE COMM SYSTEM........ 56,298 56,298
4 COUNTERSPACE SYSTEMS............ 5,700 5,700
5 FAMILY OF BEYOND LINE-OF-SIGHT 34,020 34,020
TERMINALS......................
7 GENERAL INFORMATION TECH--SPACE. 3,244 3,244
8 GPSIII FOLLOW ON................ 414,625 414,625
9 GPS III SPACE SEGMENT........... 31,466 31,466
12 SPACEBORNE EQUIP (COMSEC)....... 32,031 32,031
13 MILSATCOM....................... 11,096 11,096
15 EVOLVED EXPENDABLE LAUNCH 1,237,635 1,237,635
VEH(SPACE).....................
16 SBIR HIGH (SPACE)............... 233,952 233,952
17 NUDET DETECTION SYSTEM.......... 7,432 7,432
18 ROCKET SYSTEMS LAUNCH PROGRAM... 11,473 11,473
19 SPACE FENCE..................... 71,784 71,784
20 SPACE MODS...................... 106,330 106,330
21 SPACELIFT RANGE SYSTEM SPACE.... 118,140 118,140
SPARES
22 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 7,263 7,263
TOTAL SPACE PROCUREMENT, AIR 2,414,383 2,414,383
FORCE..........................
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, AIR
FORCE
ROCKETS
1 ROCKETS......................... 0 133,268
Transfer back to base [133,268]
funding.....................
CARTRIDGES
2 CARTRIDGES...................... 0 140,449
Transfer back to base [140,449]
funding.....................
BOMBS
3 PRACTICE BOMBS.................. 0 29,313
Transfer back to base [29,313]
funding.....................
4 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS........... 0 85,885
Transfer back to base [85,885]
funding.....................
6 JOINT DIRECT ATTACK MUNITION.... 0 1,066,224
Transfer back to base [1,066,224]
funding.....................
7 B61............................. 0 80,773
Transfer back to base [80,773]
funding.....................
OTHER ITEMS
9 CAD/PAD......................... 0 47,069
Transfer back to base [47,069]
funding.....................
10 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL 0 6,133
(EOD)..........................
Transfer back to base [6,133]
funding.....................
11 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 0 533
Transfer back to base [533]
funding.....................
12 MODIFICATIONS................... 0 1,291
Transfer back to base [1,291]
funding.....................
13 ITEMS LESS THAN $5,000,000...... 0 1,677
Transfer back to base [1,677]
funding.....................
FLARES
15 FLARES.......................... 0 36,116
Transfer back to base [36,116]
funding.....................
FUZES
16 FUZES........................... 0 1,734
Transfer back to base [1,734]
funding.....................
SMALL ARMS
17 SMALL ARMS...................... 0 37,496
Transfer back to base [37,496]
funding.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 0 1,667,961
AIR FORCE......................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES
1 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 15,238 15,238
CARGO AND UTILITY VEHICLES
2 MEDIUM TACTICAL VEHICLE......... 34,616 34,616
3 CAP VEHICLES.................... 1,040 1,040
4 CARGO AND UTILITY VEHICLES...... 23,133 23,133
SPECIAL PURPOSE VEHICLES
5 JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE.... 32,027 32,027
6 SECURITY AND TACTICAL VEHICLES.. 1,315 1,315
7 SPECIAL PURPOSE VEHICLES........ 14,593 14,593
FIRE FIGHTING EQUIPMENT
8 FIRE FIGHTING/CRASH RESCUE 28,604 28,604
VEHICLES.......................
MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT
9 MATERIALS HANDLING VEHICLES..... 21,848 21,848
BASE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT
10 RUNWAY SNOW REMOV AND CLEANING 2,925 2,925
EQU............................
11 BASE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT 55,776 55,776
VEHICLES.......................
COMM SECURITY EQUIPMENT(COMSEC)
13 COMSEC EQUIPMENT................ 91,461 91,461
INTELLIGENCE PROGRAMS
14 INTERNATIONAL INTEL TECH & 11,386 11,386
ARCHITECTURES..................
15 INTELLIGENCE TRAINING EQUIPMENT. 7,619 7,619
16 INTELLIGENCE COMM EQUIPMENT..... 35,558 35,558
ELECTRONICS PROGRAMS
17 AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL & LANDING 17,939 17,939
SYS............................
19 BATTLE CONTROL SYSTEM--FIXED.... 3,063 3,063
21 WEATHER OBSERVATION FORECAST.... 31,447 31,447
22 STRATEGIC COMMAND AND CONTROL... 5,090 5,090
23 CHEYENNE MOUNTAIN COMPLEX....... 10,145 10,145
24 MISSION PLANNING SYSTEMS........ 14,508 14,508
26 INTEGRATED STRAT PLAN & ANALY 9,901 9,901
NETWORK (ISPAN)................
SPCL COMM-ELECTRONICS PROJECTS
27 GENERAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.. 26,933 26,933
28 AF GLOBAL COMMAND & CONTROL SYS. 2,756 2,756
29 BATTLEFIELD AIRBORNE CONTROL 48,478 48,478
NODE (BACN)....................
30 MOBILITY COMMAND AND CONTROL.... 21,186 21,186
31 AIR FORCE PHYSICAL SECURITY 178,361 178,361
SYSTEM.........................
32 COMBAT TRAINING RANGES.......... 233,993 261,993
Joint threat emitters....... [28,000]
33 MINIMUM ESSENTIAL EMERGENCY COMM 132,648 132,648
N..............................
34 WIDE AREA SURVEILLANCE (WAS).... 80,818 80,818
35 C3 COUNTERMEASURES.............. 25,036 25,036
36 INTEGRATED PERSONNEL AND PAY 20,900 0
SYSTEM.........................
Poor agile implementation... [-20,900]
37 GCSS-AF FOS..................... 11,226 11,226
38 DEFENSE ENTERPRISE ACCOUNTING & 1,905 1,905
MGT SYS........................
39 MAINTENANCE REPAIR & OVERHAUL 1,912 1,912
INITIATIVE.....................
40 THEATER BATTLE MGT C2 SYSTEM.... 6,337 6,337
41 AIR & SPACE OPERATIONS CENTER 33,243 33,243
(AOC)..........................
AIR FORCE COMMUNICATIONS
43 BASE INFORMATION TRANSPT INFRAST 69,530 69,530
(BITI) WIRED...................
44 AFNET........................... 147,063 147,063
45 JOINT COMMUNICATIONS SUPPORT 6,505 6,505
ELEMENT (JCSE).................
46 USCENTCOM....................... 20,190 20,190
47 USSTRATCOM...................... 11,244 11,244
ORGANIZATION AND BASE
48 TACTICAL C-E EQUIPMENT.......... 143,757 143,757
50 RADIO EQUIPMENT................. 15,402 15,402
51 CCTV/AUDIOVISUAL EQUIPMENT...... 3,211 3,211
52 BASE COMM INFRASTRUCTURE........ 43,123 43,123
MODIFICATIONS
53 COMM ELECT MODS................. 14,500 14,500
PERSONAL SAFETY & RESCUE EQUIP
54 PERSONAL SAFETY AND RESCUE 50,634 50,634
EQUIPMENT......................
DEPOT PLANT+MTRLS HANDLING EQ
55 POWER CONDITIONING EQUIPMENT.... 11,000 11,000
56 MECHANIZED MATERIAL HANDLING 11,901 11,901
EQUIP..........................
BASE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
57 BASE PROCURED EQUIPMENT......... 23,963 23,963
58 ENGINEERING AND EOD EQUIPMENT... 34,124 34,124
59 MOBILITY EQUIPMENT.............. 26,439 26,439
60 FUELS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT (FSE)... 24,255 24,255
61 BASE MAINTENANCE AND SUPPORT 38,986 38,986
EQUIPMENT......................
SPECIAL SUPPORT PROJECTS
63 DARP RC135...................... 26,716 26,716
64 DCGS-AF......................... 116,055 116,055
66 SPECIAL UPDATE PROGRAM.......... 835,148 835,148
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 17,637,807 18,292,807
Transfer back to base [655,000]
funding.....................
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
67 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 81,340 81,340
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR 20,687,857 21,349,957
FORCE..........................
PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DCMA
2 MAJOR EQUIPMENT................. 2,432 2,432
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DHRA
3 PERSONNEL ADMINISTRATION........ 5,030 5,030
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DISA
8 INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY.... 3,318 4,718
Sharkseer transfer.......... [1,400]
9 TELEPORT PROGRAM................ 25,103 25,103
10 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 26,416 26,416
12 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEM 17,574 17,574
NETWORK........................
14 WHITE HOUSE COMMUNICATION AGENCY 45,079 45,079
15 SENIOR LEADERSHIP ENTERPRISE.... 78,669 78,669
16 JOINT REGIONAL SECURITY STACKS 88,000 88,000
(JRSS).........................
17 JOINT SERVICE PROVIDER.......... 107,907 107,907
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DLA
19 MAJOR EQUIPMENT................. 8,122 8,122
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DMACT
20 MAJOR EQUIPMENT................. 10,961 10,961
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DODEA
21 AUTOMATION/EDUCATIONAL SUPPORT & 1,320 1,320
LOGISTICS......................
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DPAA
22 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DPAA........... 1,504 1,504
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DSS
23 MAJOR EQUIPMENT................. 496 496
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DEFENSE THREAT
REDUCTION AGENCY
25 VEHICLES........................ 211 211
26 OTHER MAJOR EQUIPMENT........... 11,521 11,521
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, MISSILE DEFENSE
AGENCY
28 THAAD........................... 425,863 0
THAAD program transfer to [-425,863]
Army........................
29 GROUND BASED MIDCOURSE.......... 9,471 9,471
31 AEGIS BMD....................... 600,773 600,773
32 AEGIS BMD AP.................... 96,995 96,995
33 BMDS AN/TPY-2 RADARS............ 10,046 10,046
34 ARROW 3 UPPER TIER SYSTEMS...... 55,000 55,000
35 SHORT RANGE BALLISTIC MISSILE 50,000 50,000
DEFENSE (SRBMD)................
36 AEGIS ASHORE PHASE III.......... 25,659 25,659
37 IRON DOME....................... 95,000 95,000
38 AEGIS BMD HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE. 124,986 124,986
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, NSA
44 INFORMATION SYSTEMS SECURITY 1,533 133
PROGRAM (ISSP).................
Sharkseer transfer.......... [-1,400]
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD
45 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, OSD............ 43,705 43,705
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS
46 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, TJS............ 6,905 6,905
47 MAJOR EQUIPMENT--TJS CYBER...... 1,458 1,458
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS
49 MAJOR EQUIPMENT, WHS............ 507 507
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 584,366 589,366
Transfer back to base [5,000]
funding.....................
AVIATION PROGRAMS
53 ROTARY WING UPGRADES AND 172,020 172,020
SUSTAINMENT....................
54 UNMANNED ISR.................... 15,208 15,208
55 NON-STANDARD AVIATION........... 32,310 32,310
56 U-28............................ 10,898 10,898
57 MH-47 CHINOOK................... 173,812 173,812
58 CV-22 MODIFICATION.............. 17,256 17,256
59 MQ-9 UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLE.... 5,338 5,338
60 PRECISION STRIKE PACKAGE........ 232,930 232,930
61 AC/MC-130J...................... 173,419 164,619
RFCM schedule delay......... [-8,800]
62 C-130 MODIFICATIONS............. 15,582 15,582
SHIPBUILDING
63 UNDERWATER SYSTEMS.............. 58,991 58,991
AMMUNITION PROGRAMS
64 ORDNANCE ITEMS <$5M............. 279,992 279,992
OTHER PROCUREMENT PROGRAMS
65 INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS............ 100,641 100,641
66 DISTRIBUTED COMMON GROUND/ 12,522 12,522
SURFACE SYSTEMS................
67 OTHER ITEMS <$5M................ 103,910 103,910
68 COMBATANT CRAFT SYSTEMS......... 33,088 33,088
69 SPECIAL PROGRAMS................ 63,467 63,467
70 TACTICAL VEHICLES............... 77,832 77,832
71 WARRIOR SYSTEMS <$5M............ 298,480 298,480
72 COMBAT MISSION REQUIREMENTS..... 19,702 19,702
73 GLOBAL VIDEO SURVEILLANCE 4,787 4,787
ACTIVITIES.....................
74 OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS 8,175 8,175
INTELLIGENCE...................
75 OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS........ 282,532 282,532
CBDP
76 CHEMICAL BIOLOGICAL SITUATIONAL 162,406 162,406
AWARENESS......................
77 CB PROTECTION & HAZARD 188,188 188,188
MITIGATION.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE. 5,109,416 4,679,753
JOINT URGENT OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND
JOINT URGENT OPERATIONAL NEEDS
FUND
1 JOINT URGENT OPERATIONAL NEEDS 99,200 99,200
FUND...........................
TOTAL JOINT URGENT OPERATIONAL 99,200 99,200
NEEDS FUND.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT............... 118,888,737 135,071,365
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4102. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4102. PROCUREMENT FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands
of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2020 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY
FIXED WING
3 MQ-1 UAV........................ 54,000 54,000
ROTARY
15 CH-47 HELICOPTER................ 25,000 25,000
MODIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT
21 MULTI SENSOR ABN RECON (MIP).... 80,260 80,260
24 GRCS SEMA MODS (MIP)............ 750 750
26 EMARSS SEMA MODS (MIP).......... 22,180 22,180
27 UTILITY/CARGO AIRPLANE MODS..... 8,362 8,362
29 NETWORK AND MISSION PLAN........ 10 10
31 DEGRADED VISUAL ENVIRONMENT..... 49,450 49,450
GROUND SUPPORT AVIONICS
37 CMWS............................ 130,219 130,219
38 COMMON INFRARED COUNTERMEASURES 9,310 9,310
(CIRCM)........................
OTHER SUPPORT
45 LAUNCHER GUIDED MISSILE: LONGBOW 2,000 2,000
HELLFIRE XM2...................
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, ARMY 381,541 381,541
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY
SURFACE-TO-AIR MISSILE SYSTEM
1 SYSTEM INTEGRATION AND TEST 113,857 0
PROCUREMENT....................
Transfer back to base [-113,857]
funding.....................
2 M-SHORAD--PROCUREMENT........... 262,100 158,300
Transfer back to base [-103,800]
funding.....................
3 MSE MISSILE..................... 736,541 37,938
Transfer back to base [-698,603]
funding.....................
4 INDIRECT FIRE PROTECTION 9,337 0
CAPABILITY INC 2-I.............
Transfer back to base [-9,337]
funding.....................
AIR-TO-SURFACE MISSILE SYSTEM
6 HELLFIRE SYS SUMMARY............ 429,549 236,265
Transfer back to base [-193,284]
funding.....................
7 JOINT AIR-TO-GROUND MSLS (JAGM). 233,353 0
Transfer back to base [-233,353]
funding.....................
ANTI-TANK/ASSAULT MISSILE SYS
8 JAVELIN (AAWS-M) SYSTEM SUMMARY. 142,794 4,389
Transfer back to base [-138,405]
funding.....................
9 TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY............ 114,340 0
Transfer back to base [-114,340]
funding.....................
10 TOW 2 SYSTEM SUMMARY AP......... 10,500 0
Transfer back to base [-10,500]
funding.....................
11 GUIDED MLRS ROCKET (GMLRS)...... 1,228,809 431,596
Transfer back to base [-797,213]
funding.....................
12 MLRS REDUCED RANGE PRACTICE 27,555 0
ROCKETS (RRPR).................
Transfer back to base [-27,555]
funding.....................
14 ARMY TACTICAL MSL SYS (ATACMS)-- 340,612 130,770
SYS SUM........................
Transfer back to base [-209,842]
funding.....................
15 LETHAL MINIATURE AERIAL MISSILE 83,300 83,300
SYSTEM (LMAMS..................
MODIFICATIONS
16 PATRIOT MODS.................... 279,464 0
Transfer back to base [-279,464]
funding.....................
17 ATACMS MODS..................... 85,320 0
Transfer back to base [-85,320]
funding.....................
18 GMLRS MOD....................... 5,094 0
Transfer back to base [-5,094]
funding.....................
19 STINGER MODS.................... 89,115 7,500
Transfer back to base [-81,615]
funding.....................
20 AVENGER MODS.................... 14,107 0
Transfer back to base [-14,107]
funding.....................
21 ITAS/TOW MODS................... 3,469 0
Transfer back to base [-3,469]
funding.....................
22 MLRS MODS....................... 387,019 348,000
Transfer back to base [-39,019]
funding.....................
23 HIMARS MODIFICATIONS............ 12,483 0
Transfer back to base [-12,483]
funding.....................
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
24 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 26,444 0
Transfer back to base [-26,444]
funding.....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
25 AIR DEFENSE TARGETS............. 10,593 0
Transfer back to base [-10,593]
funding.....................
TOTAL MISSILE PROCUREMENT, ARMY. 4,645,755 1,438,058
PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY
TRACKED COMBAT VEHICLES
2 ARMORED MULTI PURPOSE VEHICLE 221,638 221,638
(AMPV).........................
MODIFICATION OF TRACKED COMBAT
VEHICLES
3 STRYKER (MOD)................... 4,100 4,100
8 IMPROVED RECOVERY VEHICLE (M88A2 80,146 80,146
HERCULES)......................
13 M1 ABRAMS TANK (MOD)............ 13,100 13,100
WEAPONS & OTHER COMBAT VEHICLES
15 M240 MEDIUM MACHINE GUN (7.62MM) 900 900
16 MULTI-ROLE ANTI-ARMOR ANTI- 2,400 2,400
PERSONNEL WEAPON S.............
19 MORTAR SYSTEMS.................. 18,941 18,941
20 XM320 GRENADE LAUNCHER MODULE 526 526
(GLM)..........................
23 CARBINE......................... 1,183 1,183
25 COMMON REMOTELY OPERATED WEAPONS 4,182 4,182
STATION........................
26 HANDGUN......................... 248 248
MOD OF WEAPONS AND OTHER COMBAT
VEH
31 M2 50 CAL MACHINE GUN MODS...... 6,090 6,090
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF W&TCV, ARMY 353,454 353,454
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, ARMY
SMALL/MEDIUM CAL AMMUNITION
1 CTG, 5.56MM, ALL TYPES.......... 69,516 567
Transfer back to base [-68,949]
funding.....................
2 CTG, 7.62MM, ALL TYPES.......... 114,268 40
Transfer back to base [-114,228]
funding.....................
3 CTG, HANDGUN, ALL TYPES......... 17,824 17
Transfer back to base [-17,807]
funding.....................
4 CTG, .50 CAL, ALL TYPES......... 64,155 189
Transfer back to base [-63,966]
funding.....................
5 CTG, 20MM, ALL TYPES............ 35,920 0
Transfer back to base [-35,920]
funding.....................
6 CTG, 25MM, ALL TYPES............ 8,990 0
Transfer back to base [-8,990]
funding.....................
7 CTG, 30MM, ALL TYPES............ 93,713 24,900
Transfer back to base [-68,813]
funding.....................
8 CTG, 40MM, ALL TYPES............ 103,952 0
Transfer back to base [-103,952]
funding.....................
MORTAR AMMUNITION
9 60MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES.......... 50,580 0
Transfer back to base [-50,580]
funding.....................
10 81MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES.......... 59,373 0
Transfer back to base [-59,373]
funding.....................
11 120MM MORTAR, ALL TYPES......... 125,452 0
Transfer back to base [-125,452]
funding.....................
TANK AMMUNITION
12 CARTRIDGES, TANK, 105MM AND 171,284 0
120MM, ALL TYPES...............
Transfer back to base [-171,284]
funding.....................
ARTILLERY AMMUNITION
13 ARTILLERY CARTRIDGES, 75MM & 44,675 0
105MM, ALL TYPES...............
Transfer back to base [-44,675]
funding.....................
14 ARTILLERY PROJECTILE, 155MM, ALL 266,037 0
TYPES..........................
Transfer back to base [-266,037]
funding.....................
15 PROJ 155MM EXTENDED RANGE M982.. 93,486 36,052
Transfer back to base [-57,434]
funding.....................
16 ARTILLERY PROPELLANTS, FUZES AND 278,873 7,271
PRIMERS, ALL...................
Transfer back to base [-271,602]
funding.....................
MINES
17 MINES & CLEARING CHARGES, ALL 55,433 0
TYPES..........................
Transfer back to base [-55,433]
funding.....................
ROCKETS
18 SHOULDER LAUNCHED MUNITIONS, ALL 75,054 176
TYPES..........................
Transfer back to base [-74,878]
funding.....................
19 ROCKET, HYDRA 70, ALL TYPES..... 255,453 79,459
Transfer back to base [-175,994]
funding.....................
OTHER AMMUNITION
20 CAD/PAD, ALL TYPES.............. 7,595 0
Transfer back to base [-7,595]
funding.....................
21 DEMOLITION MUNITIONS, ALL TYPES. 51,651 0
Transfer back to base [-51,651]
funding.....................
22 GRENADES, ALL TYPES............. 40,592 0
Transfer back to base [-40,592]
funding.....................
23 SIGNALS, ALL TYPES.............. 18,609 0
Transfer back to base [-18,609]
funding.....................
24 SIMULATORS, ALL TYPES........... 16,054 0
Transfer back to base [-16,054]
funding.....................
MISCELLANEOUS
25 AMMO COMPONENTS, ALL TYPES...... 5,261 0
Transfer back to base [-5,261]
funding.....................
26 NON-LETHAL AMMUNITION, ALL TYPES 715 0
Transfer back to base [-715]
funding.....................
27 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION 9,224 11
(AMMO).........................
Transfer back to base [-9,213]
funding.....................
28 AMMUNITION PECULIAR EQUIPMENT... 10,044 0
Transfer back to base [-10,044]
funding.....................
29 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 18,492 0
(AMMO).........................
Transfer back to base [-18,492]
funding.....................
30 CLOSEOUT LIABILITIES............ 99 0
Transfer back to base [-99]
funding.....................
PRODUCTION BASE SUPPORT
31 INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES........... 474,511 0
Transfer back to base [-474,511]
funding.....................
32 CONVENTIONAL MUNITIONS 202,512 0
DEMILITARIZATION...............
Transfer back to base [-202,512]
funding.....................
33 ARMS INITIATIVE................. 3,833 0
Transfer back to base [-3,833]
funding.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 2,843,230 148,682
ARMY...........................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY
TACTICAL VEHICLES
10 FAMILY OF HEAVY TACTICAL 26,917 26,917
VEHICLES (FHTV)................
11 PLS ESP......................... 16,941 16,941
12 HVY EXPANDED MOBILE TACTICAL 62,734 62,734
TRUCK EXT SERV.................
14 TACTICAL WHEELED VEHICLE 50,000 50,000
PROTECTION KITS................
15 MODIFICATION OF IN SVC EQUIP.... 28,000 28,000
COMM--JOINT COMMUNICATIONS
22 TACTICAL NETWORK TECHNOLOGY MOD 40,000 40,000
IN SVC.........................
COMM--SATELLITE COMMUNICATIONS
29 TRANSPORTABLE TACTICAL COMMAND 6,930 6,930
COMMUNICATIONS.................
31 ASSURED POSITIONING, NAVIGATION 11,778 11,778
AND TIMING.....................
32 SMART-T (SPACE)................. 825 825
COMM--COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS
40 RADIO TERMINAL SET, MIDS LVT(2). 350 350
47 COTS COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT... 20,400 20,400
48 FAMILY OF MED COMM FOR COMBAT 1,231 1,231
CASUALTY CARE..................
COMM--INTELLIGENCE COMM
51 CI AUTOMATION ARCHITECTURE (MIP) 6,200 6,200
COMM--LONG HAUL COMMUNICATIONS
59 BASE SUPPORT COMMUNICATIONS..... 20,482 20,482
COMM--BASE COMMUNICATIONS
60 INFORMATION SYSTEMS............. 55,800 55,800
63 INSTALLATION INFO INFRASTRUCTURE 75,820 75,820
MOD PROGRAM....................
ELECT EQUIP--TACT INT REL ACT
(TIARA)
68 DCGS-A (MIP).................... 38,613 38,613
70 TROJAN (MIP).................... 1,337 1,337
71 MOD OF IN-SVC EQUIP (INTEL SPT) 2,051 2,051
(MIP)..........................
75 BIOMETRIC TACTICAL COLLECTION 1,800 1,800
DEVICES (MIP)..................
ELECT EQUIP--ELECTRONIC WARFARE
(EW)
82 FAMILY OF PERSISTENT 71,493 71,493
SURVEILLANCE CAP. (MIP)........
83 COUNTERINTELLIGENCE/SECURITY 6,917 6,917
COUNTERMEASURES................
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL SURV. (TAC
SURV)
85 SENTINEL MODS................... 20,000 20,000
86 NIGHT VISION DEVICES............ 3,676 3,676
94 JOINT BATTLE COMMAND--PLATFORM 25,568 25,568
(JBC-P)........................
97 COMPUTER BALLISTICS: LHMBC XM32. 570 570
98 MORTAR FIRE CONTROL SYSTEM...... 15,975 15,975
ELECT EQUIP--TACTICAL C2 SYSTEMS
103 AIR & MSL DEFENSE PLANNING & 14,331 14,331
CONTROL SYS....................
ELECT EQUIP--AUTOMATION
112 ARMY TRAINING MODERNIZATION..... 6,014 6,014
113 AUTOMATED DATA PROCESSING EQUIP. 32,700 32,700
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 8,200 0
Transfer back to base [-8,200]
funding.....................
CHEMICAL DEFENSIVE EQUIPMENT
124 FAMILY OF NON-LETHAL EQUIPMENT 25,480 25,480
(FNLE).........................
125 BASE DEFENSE SYSTEMS (BDS)...... 47,110 47,110
126 CBRN DEFENSE.................... 18,711 18,711
BRIDGING EQUIPMENT
128 TACTICAL BRIDGING............... 4,884 4,884
ENGINEER (NON-CONSTRUCTION)
EQUIPMENT
133 GRND STANDOFF MINE DETECTN SYSM 4,500 4,500
(GSTAMIDS).....................
135 HUSKY MOUNTED DETECTION SYSTEM 34,253 34,253
(HMDS).........................
136 ROBOTIC COMBAT SUPPORT SYSTEM 3,300 3,300
(RCSS).........................
140 RENDER SAFE SETS KITS OUTFITS... 84,000 84,000
COMBAT SERVICE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
143 HEATERS AND ECU'S............... 8 8
145 PERSONNEL RECOVERY SUPPORT 5,101 5,101
SYSTEM (PRSS)..................
146 GROUND SOLDIER SYSTEM........... 1,760 1,760
148 FORCE PROVIDER.................. 56,400 56,400
150 CARGO AERIAL DEL & PERSONNEL 2,040 2,040
PARACHUTE SYSTEM...............
PETROLEUM EQUIPMENT
154 DISTRIBUTION SYSTEMS, PETROLEUM 13,986 13,986
& WATER........................
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
155 COMBAT SUPPORT MEDICAL.......... 2,735 2,735
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
159 SCRAPERS, EARTHMOVING........... 4,669 4,669
160 LOADERS......................... 380 380
162 TRACTOR, FULL TRACKED........... 8,225 8,225
164 HIGH MOBILITY ENGINEER EXCAVATOR 3,000 3,000
(HMEE).........................
166 CONST EQUIP ESP................. 3,870 3,870
167 ITEMS LESS THAN $5.0M (CONST 350 350
EQUIP).........................
GENERATORS
171 GENERATORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIP. 2,436 2,436
MATERIAL HANDLING EQUIPMENT
173 FAMILY OF FORKLIFTS............. 5,152 5,152
TRAINING EQUIPMENT
175 TRAINING DEVICES, NONSYSTEM..... 2,106 2,106
TEST MEASURE AND DIG EQUIPMENT
(TMD)
181 INTEGRATED FAMILY OF TEST 1,395 1,395
EQUIPMENT (IFTE)...............
OTHER SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
184 RAPID EQUIPPING SOLDIER SUPPORT 24,122 24,122
EQUIPMENT......................
185 PHYSICAL SECURITY SYSTEMS (OPA3) 10,016 10,016
187 MODIFICATION OF IN-SVC EQUIPMENT 33,354 33,354
(OPA-3)........................
189 BUILDING, PRE-FAB, RELOCATABLE.. 62,654 62,654
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, ARMY... 1,139,650 1,131,450
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY
OTHER AIRCRAFT
26 STUASL0 UAV..................... 7,921 7,921
27 MQ-9A REAPER.................... 77,000 77,000
MODIFICATION OF AIRCRAFT
36 EP-3 SERIES..................... 5,488 5,488
46 SPECIAL PROJECT AIRCRAFT........ 3,498 3,498
51 COMMON ECM EQUIPMENT............ 3,406 3,406
53 COMMON DEFENSIVE WEAPON SYSTEM.. 3,274 3,274
62 QRC............................. 18,458 18,458
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, NAVY 119,045 119,045
WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY
MODIFICATION OF MISSILES
1 TRIDENT II MODS................. 1,177,251 0
Transfer back to base [-1,177,251]
funding.....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
2 MISSILE INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES... 7,142 0
Transfer back to base [-7,142]
funding.....................
STRATEGIC MISSILES
3 TOMAHAWK........................ 386,730 0
Transfer back to base [-386,730]
funding.....................
TACTICAL MISSILES
4 AMRAAM.......................... 224,502 0
Transfer back to base [-224,502]
funding.....................
5 SIDEWINDER...................... 119,456 0
Transfer back to base [-119,456]
funding.....................
7 STANDARD MISSILE................ 404,523 0
Transfer back to base [-404,523]
funding.....................
8 STANDARD MISSILE AP............. 96,085 0
Transfer back to base [-96,085]
funding.....................
9 SMALL DIAMETER BOMB II.......... 118,466 0
Transfer back to base [-118,466]
funding.....................
10 RAM............................. 106,765 0
Transfer back to base [-106,765]
funding.....................
11 JOINT AIR GROUND MISSILE (JAGM). 90,966 90,966
12 HELLFIRE........................ 1,525 0
Transfer back to base [-1,525]
funding.....................
15 AERIAL TARGETS.................. 152,380 6,500
Transfer back to base [-145,880]
funding.....................
16 DRONES AND DECOYS............... 20,000 0
Transfer back to base [-20,000]
funding.....................
17 OTHER MISSILE SUPPORT........... 3,388 0
Transfer back to base [-3,388]
funding.....................
18 LRASM........................... 143,200 0
Transfer back to base [-143,200]
funding.....................
19 LCS OTH MISSILE................. 38,137 0
Transfer back to base [-38,137]
funding.....................
MODIFICATION OF MISSILES
20 ESSM............................ 128,059 0
Transfer back to base [-128,059]
funding.....................
21 HARPOON MODS.................... 25,447 0
Transfer back to base [-25,447]
funding.....................
22 HARM MODS....................... 183,740 0
Transfer back to base [-183,740]
funding.....................
23 STANDARD MISSILES MODS.......... 22,500 0
Transfer back to base [-22,500]
funding.....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT & FACILITIES
24 WEAPONS INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES... 1,958 0
Transfer back to base [-1,958]
funding.....................
25 FLEET SATELLITE COMM FOLLOW-ON.. 67,380 0
Transfer back to base [-67,380]
funding.....................
ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
27 ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 109,427 0
Transfer back to base [-109,427]
funding.....................
TORPEDOES AND RELATED EQUIP
28 SSTD............................ 5,561 0
Transfer back to base [-5,561]
funding.....................
29 MK-48 TORPEDO................... 114,000 0
Transfer back to base [-114,000]
funding.....................
30 ASW TARGETS..................... 15,095 0
Transfer back to base [-15,095]
funding.....................
MOD OF TORPEDOES AND RELATED
EQUIP
31 MK-54 TORPEDO MODS.............. 119,453 0
Transfer back to base [-119,453]
funding.....................
32 MK-48 TORPEDO ADCAP MODS........ 39,508 0
Transfer back to base [-39,508]
funding.....................
33 QUICKSTRIKE MINE................ 5,183 0
Transfer back to base [-5,183]
funding.....................
SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
34 TORPEDO SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 79,028 0
Transfer back to base [-79,028]
funding.....................
35 ASW RANGE SUPPORT............... 3,890 0
Transfer back to base [-3,890]
funding.....................
DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION
36 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 3,803 0
Transfer back to base [-3,803]
funding.....................
GUNS AND GUN MOUNTS
37 SMALL ARMS AND WEAPONS.......... 14,797 0
Transfer back to base [-14,797]
funding.....................
MODIFICATION OF GUNS AND GUN
MOUNTS
38 CIWS MODS....................... 44,126 0
Transfer back to base [-44,126]
funding.....................
39 COAST GUARD WEAPONS............. 44,980 0
Transfer back to base [-44,980]
funding.....................
40 GUN MOUNT MODS.................. 66,376 0
Transfer back to base [-66,376]
funding.....................
41 LCS MODULE WEAPONS.............. 14,585 0
Transfer back to base [-14,585]
funding.....................
43 AIRBORNE MINE NEUTRALIZATION 7,160 0
SYSTEMS........................
Transfer back to base [-7,160]
funding.....................
SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
45 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 126,138 0
Transfer back to base [-126,138]
funding.....................
TOTAL WEAPONS PROCUREMENT, NAVY. 4,332,710 97,466
PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY & MC
NAVY AMMUNITION
1 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS........... 63,006 26,978
Transfer back to base [-36,028]
funding.....................
2 JDAM............................ 82,676 12,263
Transfer back to base [-70,413]
funding.....................
3 AIRBORNE ROCKETS, ALL TYPES..... 76,776 45,020
Transfer back to base [-31,756]
funding.....................
4 MACHINE GUN AMMUNITION.......... 38,370 33,577
Transfer back to base [-4,793]
funding.....................
5 PRACTICE BOMBS.................. 46,611 11,903
Transfer back to base [-34,708]
funding.....................
6 CARTRIDGES & CART ACTUATED 60,819 15,081
DEVICES........................
Transfer back to base [-45,738]
funding.....................
7 AIR EXPENDABLE COUNTERMEASURES.. 94,212 16,911
Transfer back to base [-77,301]
funding.....................
8 JATOS........................... 7,262 0
Transfer back to base [-7,262]
funding.....................
9 5 INCH/54 GUN AMMUNITION........ 22,594 0
Transfer back to base [-22,594]
funding.....................
10 INTERMEDIATE CALIBER GUN 37,193 0
AMMUNITION.....................
Transfer back to base [-37,193]
funding.....................
11 OTHER SHIP GUN AMMUNITION....... 42,753 3,262
Transfer back to base [-39,491]
funding.....................
12 SMALL ARMS & LANDING PARTY AMMO. 48,906 1,010
Transfer back to base [-47,896]
funding.....................
13 PYROTECHNIC AND DEMOLITION...... 11,158 537
Transfer back to base [-10,621]
funding.....................
15 AMMUNITION LESS THAN $5 MILLION. 2,386 0
Transfer back to base [-2,386]
funding.....................
MARINE CORPS AMMUNITION
16 MORTARS......................... 57,473 1,930
Transfer back to base [-55,543]
funding.....................
17 DIRECT SUPPORT MUNITIONS........ 132,937 1,172
Transfer back to base [-131,765]
funding.....................
18 INFANTRY WEAPONS AMMUNITION..... 80,214 2,158
Transfer back to base [-78,056]
funding.....................
19 COMBAT SUPPORT MUNITIONS........ 41,013 965
Transfer back to base [-40,048]
funding.....................
20 AMMO MODERNIZATION.............. 14,325 0
Transfer back to base [-14,325]
funding.....................
21 ARTILLERY MUNITIONS............. 220,923 32,047
Transfer back to base [-188,876]
funding.....................
22 ITEMS LESS THAN $5 MILLION...... 4,521 0
Transfer back to base [-4,521]
funding.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMO, NAVY 1,186,128 204,814
& MC...........................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY
OTHER SHIPBOARD EQUIPMENT
20 UNDERWATER EOD PROGRAMS......... 5,800 5,800
ASW ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
42 FIXED SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM....... 310,503 310,503
SONOBUOYS
85 SONOBUOYS--ALL TYPES............ 2,910 2,910
AIRCRAFT SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
88 AIRCRAFT SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 13,420 13,420
94 AVIATION SUPPORT EQUIPMENT...... 500 500
OTHER ORDNANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
103 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL 15,307 15,307
EQUIP..........................
CIVIL ENGINEERING SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT
108 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 173 173
109 GENERAL PURPOSE TRUCKS.......... 408 408
111 FIRE FIGHTING EQUIPMENT......... 785 785
SUPPLY SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
117 SUPPLY EQUIPMENT................ 100 100
118 FIRST DESTINATION TRANSPORTATION 510 510
COMMAND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
122 COMMAND SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 2,800 2,800
123 MEDICAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT....... 1,794 1,794
126 OPERATING FORCES SUPPORT 1,090 1,090
EQUIPMENT......................
128 ENVIRONMENTAL SUPPORT EQUIPMENT. 200 200
129 PHYSICAL SECURITY EQUIPMENT..... 1,300 1,300
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, NAVY... 357,600 357,600
PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS
GUIDED MISSILES
12 GUIDED MLRS ROCKET (GMLRS)...... 16,919 16,919
ENGINEER AND OTHER EQUIPMENT
45 EOD SYSTEMS..................... 3,670 3,670
TOTAL PROCUREMENT, MARINE CORPS. 20,589 20,589
AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
OTHER AIRCRAFT
17 MQ-9............................ 172,240 172,240
18 RQ-20B PUMA..................... 12,150 12,150
STRATEGIC AIRCRAFT
22 LARGE AIRCRAFT INFRARED 53,335 53,335
COUNTERMEASURES................
OTHER AIRCRAFT
67 MQ-9 UAS PAYLOADS............... 19,800 19,800
AIRCRAFT SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS
69 INITIAL SPARES/REPAIR PARTS..... 44,560 44,560
COMMON SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
72 AIRCRAFT REPLACEMENT SUPPORT 7,025 7,025
EQUIP..........................
TOTAL AIRCRAFT PROCUREMENT, AIR 309,110 309,110
FORCE..........................
MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
TACTICAL
4 JOINT AIR-SURFACE STANDOFF 20,900 20,900
MISSILE........................
8 PREDATOR HELLFIRE MISSILE....... 180,771 180,771
TOTAL MISSILE PROCUREMENT, AIR 201,671 201,671
FORCE..........................
PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, AIR
FORCE
ROCKETS
1 ROCKETS......................... 218,228 84,960
Transfer back to base [-133,268]
funding.....................
CARTRIDGES
2 CARTRIDGES...................... 193,091 52,642
Transfer back to base [-140,449]
funding.....................
BOMBS
3 PRACTICE BOMBS.................. 29,313 0
Transfer back to base [-29,313]
funding.....................
4 GENERAL PURPOSE BOMBS........... 631,194 545,309
Transfer back to base [-85,885]
funding.....................
6 JOINT DIRECT ATTACK MUNITION.... 1,066,224 0
Transfer back to base [-1,066,224]
funding.....................
7 B61............................. 80,773 0
Transfer back to base [-80,773]
funding.....................
OTHER ITEMS
9 CAD/PAD......................... 47,069 0
Transfer back to base [-47,069]
funding.....................
10 EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL 6,133 0
(EOD)..........................
Transfer back to base [-6,133]
funding.....................
11 SPARES AND REPAIR PARTS......... 533 0
Transfer back to base [-533]
funding.....................
12 MODIFICATIONS................... 1,291 0
Transfer back to base [-1,291]
funding.....................
13 ITEMS LESS THAN $5,000,000...... 1,677 0
Transfer back to base [-1,677]
funding.....................
FLARES
15 FLARES.......................... 129,388 93,272
Transfer back to base [-36,116]
funding.....................
FUZES
16 FUZES........................... 158,889 157,155
Transfer back to base [-1,734]
funding.....................
SMALL ARMS
17 SMALL ARMS...................... 43,591 6,095
Transfer back to base [-37,496]
funding.....................
TOTAL PROCUREMENT OF AMMUNITION, 2,607,394 939,433
AIR FORCE......................
OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR FORCE
PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES
1 PASSENGER CARRYING VEHICLES..... 1,276 1,276
CARGO AND UTILITY VEHICLES
4 CARGO AND UTILITY VEHICLES...... 9,702 9,702
SPECIAL PURPOSE VEHICLES
5 JOINT LIGHT TACTICAL VEHICLE.... 40,999 40,999
7 SPECIAL PURPOSE VEHICLES........ 52,502 52,502
FIRE FIGHTING EQUIPMENT
8 FIRE FIGHTING/CRASH RESCUE 16,652 16,652
VEHICLES.......................
MATERIALS HANDLING EQUIPMENT
9 MATERIALS HANDLING VEHICLES..... 2,944 2,944
BASE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT
10 RUNWAY SNOW REMOV AND CLEANING 3,753 3,753
EQU............................
11 BASE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT 11,837 11,837
VEHICLES.......................
SPCL COMM-ELECTRONICS PROJECTS
27 GENERAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY.. 5,000 5,000
31 AIR FORCE PHYSICAL SECURITY 106,919 106,919
SYSTEM.........................
ORGANIZATION AND BASE
48 TACTICAL C-E EQUIPMENT.......... 306 306
52 BASE COMM INFRASTRUCTURE........ 4,300 4,300
PERSONAL SAFETY & RESCUE EQUIP
54 PERSONAL SAFETY AND RESCUE 22,200 22,200
EQUIPMENT......................
BASE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT
59 MOBILITY EQUIPMENT.............. 26,535 26,535
60 FUELS SUPPORT EQUIPMENT (FSE)... 4,040 4,040
61 BASE MAINTENANCE AND SUPPORT 20,067 20,067
EQUIPMENT......................
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 3,864,066 3,209,066
Transfer back to base [-655,000]
funding.....................
TOTAL OTHER PROCUREMENT, AIR 4,193,098 3,538,098
FORCE..........................
PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DISA
9 TELEPORT PROGRAM................ 3,800 3,800
12 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEM 12,000 12,000
NETWORK........................
MAJOR EQUIPMENT, DEFENSE THREAT
REDUCTION AGENCY
27 COUNTER IED & IMPROVISED THREAT 4,590 4,590
TECHNOLOGIES...................
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS
CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............. 56,380 51,380
Transfer back to base [-5,000]
funding.....................
AVIATION PROGRAMS
50 MANNED ISR...................... 5,000 5,000
51 MC-12........................... 5,000 5,000
52 MH-60 BLACKHAWK................. 28,100 28,100
54 UNMANNED ISR.................... 8,207 8,207
56 U-28............................ 31,500 31,500
57 MH-47 CHINOOK................... 37,500 37,500
59 MQ-9 UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLE.... 1,900 1,900
AMMUNITION PROGRAMS
64 ORDNANCE ITEMS <$5M............. 138,252 138,252
OTHER PROCUREMENT PROGRAMS
65 INTELLIGENCE SYSTEMS............ 16,500 16,500
67 OTHER ITEMS <$5M................ 28 28
70 TACTICAL VEHICLES............... 2,990 2,990
71 WARRIOR SYSTEMS <$5M............ 37,512 37,512
72 COMBAT MISSION REQUIREMENTS..... 10,000 10,000
74 OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS 7,594 7,594
INTELLIGENCE...................
75 OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS........ 45,194 45,194
TOTAL PROCUREMENT, DEFENSE-WIDE. 452,047 447,047
TOTAL PROCUREMENT............... 23,143,022 9,688,058
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Program FY 2020 Senate
Line Element Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
.............. RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
ARMY
.............. BASIC RESEARCH
2 0601102A DEFENSE 297,976 302,976
RESEARCH
SCIENCES.
.............. Counter UAS [5,000]
University
Research.
3 0601103A UNIVERSITY 65,858 65,858
RESEARCH
INITIATIVES.
4 0601104A UNIVERSITY AND 86,164 88,164
INDUSTRY
RESEARCH
CENTERS.
.............. 3D printing [2,000]
5 0601121A CYBER 4,982 9,982
COLLABORATIVE
RESEARCH
ALLIANCE.
.............. Cyber basic [5,000]
research.
.............. SUBTOTAL BASIC 454,980 466,980
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. APPLIED
RESEARCH
10 0602141A LETHALITY 26,961 26,961
TECHNOLOGY.
11 0602142A ARMY APPLIED 25,319 25,319
RESEARCH.
12 0602143A SOLDIER 115,274 118,274
LETHALITY
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. UPL MDTF [3,000]
for
INDOPACOM.
13 0602144A GROUND 35,199 41,699
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Advanced [2,000]
materials
manufacturi
ng process.
.............. Biopolymer [2,000]
structural
materials.
.............. Cellulose [2,500]
structural
materials.
14 0602145A NEXT GENERATION 219,047 234,047
COMBAT VEHICLE
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Support [15,000]
operational
energy
development
and testing.
15 0602146A NETWORK C3I 114,516 114,516
TECHNOLOGY.
16 0602147A LONG RANGE 74,327 86,327
PRECISION
FIRES
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Composite [10,000]
tube and
propulsion
technology.
.............. Novel [2,000]
printed
armament
components.
17 0602148A FUTURE VERTICLE 93,601 93,601
LIFT
TECHNOLOGY.
18 0602150A AIR AND MISSILE 50,771 50,771
DEFENSE
TECHNOLOGY.
20 0602213A C3I APPLIED 18,947 23,947
CYBER.
.............. Cyber [5,000]
research.
38 0602785A MANPOWER/ 20,873 20,873
PERSONNEL/
TRAINING
TECHNOLOGY.
40 0602787A MEDICAL 99,155 102,155
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Female [3,000]
warfighter
performance
research.
.............. SUBTOTAL 893,990 938,490
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
42 0603002A MEDICAL 42,030 42,030
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
47 0603007A MANPOWER, 11,038 11,038
PERSONNEL AND
TRAINING
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
50 0603117A ARMY ADVANCED 63,338 63,338
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
51 0603118A SOLDIER 118,468 118,468
LETHALITY
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
52 0603119A GROUND ADVANCED 12,593 32,593
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. 100 hour [10,000]
battery.
.............. Computation [2,000]
al
manufacturi
ng
engineering.
.............. Lightweight [3,000]
protective
and
hardening
materials.
.............. Robotic [5,000]
constructio
n research.
59 0603457A C3I CYBER 13,769 13,769
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT.
60 0603461A HIGH 184,755 184,755
PERFORMANCE
COMPUTING
MODERNIZATION
PROGRAM.
61 0603462A NEXT GENERATION 160,035 185,035
COMBAT VEHICLE
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Ground [5,000]
vehicle
sustainment
research.
.............. Hydrogen [20,000]
fuel cell
propulsion
&
autonomous
driving
controls.
62 0603463A NETWORK C3I 106,899 106,899
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
63 0603464A LONG RANGE 174,386 178,386
PRECISION
FIRES ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Hypersonics [4,000]
research.
64 0603465A FUTURE VERTICAL 151,640 151,640
LIFT ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
65 0603466A AIR AND MISSILE 60,613 60,613
DEFENSE
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,099,564 1,148,564
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
73 0603305A ARMY MISSLE 10,987 10,987
DEFENSE
SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION.
74 0603327A AIR AND MISSILE 15,148 15,148
DEFENSE
SYSTEMS
ENGINEERING.
75 0603619A LANDMINE 92,915 92,915
WARFARE AND
BARRIER--ADV
DEV.
77 0603639A TANK AND MEDIUM 82,146 82,146
CALIBER
AMMUNITION.
78 0603645A ARMORED SYSTEM 157,656 157,656
MODERNIZATION-
-ADV DEV.
79 0603747A SOLDIER SUPPORT 6,514 6,514
AND
SURVIVABILITY.
80 0603766A TACTICAL 34,890 34,890
ELECTRONIC
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM--ADV
DEV.
81 0603774A NIGHT VISION 251,011 251,011
SYSTEMS
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT.
82 0603779A ENVIRONMENTAL 15,132 15,132
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY--DE
M/VAL.
83 0603790A NATO RESEARCH 5,406 5,406
AND
DEVELOPMENT.
84 0603801A AVIATION--ADV 459,290 534,890
DEV.
.............. UPL FVL CS3 [75,600]
program
increase.
85 0603804A LOGISTICS AND 6,254 6,254
ENGINEER
EQUIPMENT--ADV
DEV.
86 0603807A MEDICAL 31,175 31,175
SYSTEMS--ADV
DEV.
87 0603827A SOLDIER 22,113 22,113
SYSTEMS--ADVAN
CED
DEVELOPMENT.
88 0604017A ROBOTICS 115,222 115,222
DEVELOPMENT.
90 0604021A ELECTRONIC 18,043 18,043
WARFARE
TECHNOLOGY
MATURATION
(MIP).
91 0604100A ANALYSIS OF 10,023 10,023
ALTERNATIVES.
92 0604113A FUTURE TACTICAL 40,745 40,745
UNMANNED
AIRCRAFT
SYSTEM (FTUAS).
93 0604114A LOWER TIER AIR 427,772 427,772
MISSILE
DEFENSE
(LTAMD) SENSOR.
94 0604115A TECHNOLOGY 196,676 196,676
MATURATION
INITIATIVES.
95 0604117A MANEUVER--SHORT 33,100 33,100
RANGE AIR
DEFENSE (M-
SHORAD).
97 0604119A ARMY ADVANCED 115,116 115,116
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPING.
99 0604121A SYNTHETIC 136,761 136,761
TRAINING
ENVIRONMENT
REFINEMENT &
PROTOTYPING.
100 0604182A HYPERSONICS.... 228,000 358,610
.............. UPL [130,610]
accelerate
Hypersonic
Weapons
System.
102 0604403A FUTURE 8,000 8,000
INTERCEPTOR.
103 0604541A UNIFIED NETWORK 39,600 39,600
TRANSPORT.
104 0604644A MOBILE MEDIUM 20,000 20,000
RANGE MISSILE.
106 0305251A CYBERSPACE 52,102 52,102
OPERATIONS
FORCES AND
FORCE SUPPORT.
107 1206120A ASSURED 192,562 192,562
POSITIONING,
NAVIGATION AND
TIMING (PNT).
108 1206308A ARMY SPACE 104,996 104,996
SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION.
.............. SUBTOTAL 2,929,355 3,135,565
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.
..............
.............. SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
109 0604201A AIRCRAFT 29,164 29,164
AVIONICS.
110 0604270A ELECTRONIC 70,539 70,539
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
113 0604601A INFANTRY 106,121 126,021
SUPPORT
WEAPONS.
.............. UPL Next [19,900]
Generation
Squad
Weapon--Aut
omatic
Rifle.
114 0604604A MEDIUM TACTICAL 2,152 2,152
VEHICLES.
115 0604611A JAVELIN........ 17,897 17,897
116 0604622A FAMILY OF HEAVY 16,745 16,745
TACTICAL
VEHICLES.
117 0604633A AIR TRAFFIC 6,989 6,989
CONTROL.
118 0604642A LIGHT TACTICAL 10,465 10,465
WHEELED
VEHICLES.
119 0604645A ARMORED SYSTEMS 310,152 310,152
MODERNIZATION
(ASM)--ENG DEV.
120 0604710A NIGHT VISION 181,732 181,732
SYSTEMS--ENG
DEV.
121 0604713A COMBAT FEEDING, 2,393 2,393
CLOTHING, AND
EQUIPMENT.
122 0604715A NON-SYSTEM 27,412 27,412
TRAINING
DEVICES--ENG
DEV.
123 0604741A AIR DEFENSE 43,502 43,502
COMMAND,
CONTROL AND
INTELLIGENCE--
ENG DEV.
124 0604742A CONSTRUCTIVE 11,636 11,636
SIMULATION
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
125 0604746A AUTOMATIC TEST 10,915 10,915
EQUIPMENT
DEVELOPMENT.
126 0604760A DISTRIBUTIVE 7,801 7,801
INTERACTIVE
SIMULATIONS
(DIS)--ENG DEV.
127 0604768A BRILLIANT ANTI- 25,000 25,000
ARMOR
SUBMUNITION
(BAT).
128 0604780A COMBINED ARMS 9,241 9,241
TACTICAL
TRAINER (CATT)
CORE.
129 0604798A BRIGADE 42,634 42,634
ANALYSIS,
INTEGRATION
AND EVALUATION.
130 0604802A WEAPONS AND 181,023 181,023
MUNITIONS--ENG
DEV.
131 0604804A LOGISTICS AND 103,226 103,226
ENGINEER
EQUIPMENT--ENG
DEV.
132 0604805A COMMAND, 12,595 12,595
CONTROL,
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS--ENG
DEV.
133 0604807A MEDICAL 48,264 48,264
MATERIEL/
MEDICAL
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
EQUIPMENT--ENG
DEV.
134 0604808A LANDMINE 39,208 39,208
WARFARE/
BARRIER--ENG
DEV.
135 0604818A ARMY TACTICAL 140,637 140,637
COMMAND &
CONTROL
HARDWARE &
SOFTWARE.
136 0604820A RADAR 105,243 105,243
DEVELOPMENT.
137 0604822A GENERAL FUND 46,683 46,683
ENTERPRISE
BUSINESS
SYSTEM (GFEBS).
138 0604823A FIREFINDER..... 17,294 17,294
139 0604827A SOLDIER 5,803 5,803
SYSTEMS--WARRI
OR DEM/VAL.
140 0604852A SUITE OF 98,698 98,698
SURVIVABILITY
ENHANCEMENT
SYSTEMS--EMD.
141 0604854A ARTILLERY 15,832 15,832
SYSTEMS--EMD.
142 0605013A INFORMATION 126,537 126,537
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
143 0605018A INTEGRATED 142,773 0
PERSONNEL AND
PAY SYSTEM-
ARMY (IPPS-A).
.............. Poor [-142,773]
business
process
reengineeri
ng.
144 0605028A ARMORED MULTI- 96,730 96,730
PURPOSE
VEHICLE (AMPV).
145 0605029A INTEGRATED 6,699 6,699
GROUND
SECURITY
SURVEILLANCE
RESPONSE
CAPABILITY
(IGSSR-C).
146 0605030A JOINT TACTICAL 15,882 15,882
NETWORK CENTER
(JTNC).
147 0605031A JOINT TACTICAL 40,808 40,808
NETWORK (JTN).
149 0605033A GROUND-BASED 3,847 3,847
OPERATIONAL
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM--EXPEDI
TIONARY (GBOSS-
E).
150 0605034A TACTICAL 6,928 6,928
SECURITY
SYSTEM (TSS).
151 0605035A COMMON INFRARED 34,488 34,488
COUNTERMEASURE
S (CIRCM).
152 0605036A COMBATING 10,000 10,000
WEAPONS OF
MASS
DESTRUCTION
(CWMD).
154 0605038A NUCLEAR 6,054 6,054
BIOLOGICAL
CHEMICAL
RECONNAISSANCE
VEHICLE
(NBCRV) SENSOR
SUITE.
155 0605041A DEFENSIVE CYBER 62,262 62,262
TOOL
DEVELOPMENT.
156 0605042A TACTICAL 35,654 35,654
NETWORK RADIO
SYSTEMS (LOW-
TIER).
157 0605047A CONTRACT 19,682 0
WRITING SYSTEM.
.............. Program [-19,682]
duplication.
158 0605049A MISSILE WARNING 1,539 1,539
SYSTEM
MODERNIZATION
(MWSM).
159 0605051A AIRCRAFT 64,557 64,557
SURVIVABILITY
DEVELOPMENT.
160 0605052A INDIRECT FIRE 243,228 149,628
PROTECTION
CAPABILITY INC
2--BLOCK 1.
.............. EMAM [-124,200]
development
ahead of
need.
.............. Iron Dome [20,600]
testing and
delivery.
.............. UPL Multi- [10,000]
Domain
Artillery.
161 0605053A GROUND ROBOTICS 41,308 28,508
.............. Army [-12,800]
requested
realignment.
162 0605054A EMERGING 45,896 45,896
TECHNOLOGY
INITIATIVES.
163 0605203A ARMY SYSTEM 164,883 164,883
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
165 0605450A JOINT AIR-TO- 9,500 9,500
GROUND MISSILE
(JAGM).
166 0605457A ARMY INTEGRATED 208,938 208,938
AIR AND
MISSILE
DEFENSE
(AIAMD).
167 0605625A MANNED GROUND 378,400 418,400
VEHICLE.
.............. UPL NGCV [40,000]
50mm gun.
168 0605766A NATIONAL 7,835 7,835
CAPABILITIES
INTEGRATION
(MIP).
169 0605812A JOINT LIGHT 2,732 7,232
TACTICAL
VEHICLE (JLTV)
ENGINEERING
AND
MANUFACTURING
DEVELOPMENT PH.
.............. Army [4,500]
requested
realignment.
170 0605830A AVIATION GROUND 1,664 1,664
SUPPORT
EQUIPMENT.
172 0303032A TROJAN--RH12... 3,936 3,936
174 0304270A ELECTRONIC 19,675 19,675
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM 3,549,431 3,344,976
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
..............
.............. RDT&E
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
176 0604256A THREAT 14,117 16,117
SIMULATOR
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Cybersecuri [2,000]
ty threat
simulation.
177 0604258A TARGET SYSTEMS 8,327 8,327
DEVELOPMENT.
178 0604759A MAJOR T&E 136,565 136,565
INVESTMENT.
179 0605103A RAND ARROYO 13,113 13,113
CENTER.
180 0605301A ARMY KWAJALEIN 238,691 238,691
ATOLL.
181 0605326A CONCEPTS 42,922 42,922
EXPERIMENTATIO
N PROGRAM.
183 0605601A ARMY TEST 334,468 349,468
RANGES AND
FACILITIES.
.............. Directed [15,000]
energy test
capabilitie
s.
184 0605602A ARMY TECHNICAL 46,974 46,974
TEST
INSTRUMENTATIO
N AND TARGETS.
185 0605604A SURVIVABILITY/ 35,075 35,075
LETHALITY
ANALYSIS.
186 0605606A AIRCRAFT 3,461 3,461
CERTIFICATION.
187 0605702A METEOROLOGICAL 6,233 6,233
SUPPORT TO
RDT&E
ACTIVITIES.
188 0605706A MATERIEL 21,342 21,342
SYSTEMS
ANALYSIS.
189 0605709A EXPLOITATION OF 11,168 11,168
FOREIGN ITEMS.
190 0605712A SUPPORT OF 52,723 52,723
OPERATIONAL
TESTING.
191 0605716A ARMY EVALUATION 60,815 60,815
CENTER.
192 0605718A ARMY MODELING & 2,527 2,527
SIM X-CMD
COLLABORATION
& INTEG.
193 0605801A PROGRAMWIDE 58,175 58,175
ACTIVITIES.
194 0605803A TECHNICAL 25,060 25,060
INFORMATION
ACTIVITIES.
195 0605805A MUNITIONS 44,458 44,458
STANDARDIZATIO
N,
EFFECTIVENESS
AND SAFETY.
196 0605857A ENVIRONMENTAL 4,681 4,681
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY
MGMT SUPPORT.
197 0605898A ARMY DIRECT 53,820 53,820
REPORT
HEADQUARTERS--
R&D - MHA.
198 0606001A MILITARY GROUND- 4,291 4,291
BASED CREW
TECHNOLOGY.
199 0606002A RONALD REAGAN 62,069 62,069
BALLISTIC
MISSILE
DEFENSE TEST
SITE.
200 0606003A COUNTERINTEL 1,050 1,050
AND HUMAN
INTEL
MODERNIZATION.
201 0606942A ASSESSMENTS AND 4,500 4,500
EVALUATIONS
CYBER
VULNERABILITIE
S.
.............. SUBTOTAL RDT&E 1,286,625 1,303,625
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
.............. OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
204 0603778A MLRS PRODUCT 22,877 22,877
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
206 0605024A ANTI-TAMPER 8,491 8,491
TECHNOLOGY
SUPPORT.
207 0607131A WEAPONS AND 15,645 15,645
MUNITIONS
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.
209 0607134A LONG RANGE 164,182 164,182
PRECISION
FIRES (LRPF).
211 0607136A BLACKHAWK 13,039 13,039
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
212 0607137A CHINOOK PRODUCT 174,371 174,371
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
213 0607138A FIXED WING 4,545 4,545
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
214 0607139A IMPROVED 206,434 206,434
TURBINE ENGINE
PROGRAM.
216 0607142A AVIATION ROCKET 24,221 24,221
SYSTEM PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
AND
DEVELOPMENT.
217 0607143A UNMANNED 32,016 32,016
AIRCRAFT
SYSTEM
UNIVERSAL
PRODUCTS.
218 0607145A APACHE FUTURE 5,448 5,448
DEVELOPMENT.
219 0607312A ARMY 49,526 49,526
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
220 0607665A FAMILY OF 1,702 1,702
BIOMETRICS.
221 0607865A PATRIOT PRODUCT 96,430 96,430
IMPROVEMENT.
222 0203728A JOINT AUTOMATED 47,398 47,398
DEEP OPERATION
COORDINATION
SYSTEM
(JADOCS).
223 0203735A COMBAT VEHICLE 334,463 334,463
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.
225 0203743A 155MM SELF- 214,246 214,246
PROPELLED
HOWITZER
IMPROVEMENTS.
226 0203744A AIRCRAFT 16,486 16,486
MODIFICATIONS/
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.
227 0203752A AIRCRAFT ENGINE 144 144
COMPONENT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
228 0203758A DIGITIZATION... 5,270 5,270
229 0203801A MISSILE/AIR 1,287 1,287
DEFENSE
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
230 0203802A OTHER MISSILE 0 24,100
PRODUCT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAMS.
.............. UPL CD [24,100]
ATACMS.
234 0205412A ENVIRONMENTAL 732 732
QUALITY
TECHNOLOGY--OP
ERATIONAL
SYSTEM DEV.
235 0205456A LOWER TIER AIR 107,746 107,746
AND MISSILE
DEFENSE (AMD)
SYSTEM.
236 0205778A GUIDED MULTIPLE- 138,594 138,594
LAUNCH ROCKET
SYSTEM (GMLRS).
238 0303028A SECURITY AND 13,845 13,845
INTELLIGENCE
ACTIVITIES.
239 0303140A INFORMATION 29,185 29,185
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
240 0303141A GLOBAL COMBAT 68,976 68,976
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
241 0303150A WWMCCS/GLOBAL 2,073 2,073
COMMAND AND
CONTROL SYSTEM.
245 0305179A INTEGRATED 459 459
BROADCAST
SERVICE (IBS).
246 0305204A TACTICAL 5,097 5,097
UNMANNED
AERIAL
VEHICLES.
247 0305206A AIRBORNE 11,177 11,177
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS.
248 0305208A DISTRIBUTED 38,121 38,121
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
250 0305232A RQ-11 UAV...... 3,218 3,218
251 0305233A RQ-7 UAV....... 7,817 7,817
252 0307665A BIOMETRICS 2,000 2,000
ENABLED
INTELLIGENCE.
253 0708045A END ITEM 59,848 62,848
INDUSTRIAL
PREPAREDNESS
ACTIVITIES.
.............. Nanoscale [3,000]
materials
manufacturi
ng.
254 1203142A SATCOM GROUND 34,169 34,169
ENVIRONMENT
(SPACE).
255 1208053A JOINT TACTICAL 10,275 10,275
GROUND SYSTEM.
999 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 7,273 7,273
PROGRAMS.
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,978,826 2,005,926
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. TOTAL RESEARCH, 12,192,771 12,344,126
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
ARMY.
..............
.............. RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
NAVY
.............. BASIC RESEARCH
1 0601103N UNIVERSITY 116,850 126,850
RESEARCH
INITIATIVES.
.............. Cyber basic [10,000]
research.
2 0601152N IN-HOUSE 19,121 19,121
LABORATORY
INDEPENDENT
RESEARCH.
3 0601153N DEFENSE 470,007 470,007
RESEARCH
SCIENCES.
.............. SUBTOTAL BASIC 605,978 615,978
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. APPLIED
RESEARCH
4 0602114N POWER 18,546 18,546
PROJECTION
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
5 0602123N FORCE 119,517 136,017
PROTECTION
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
.............. Carbon [8,000]
capture.
.............. Electric [2,500]
propulsion
research.
.............. Energy [3,000]
resilience
research.
.............. Program [-5,000]
reduction.
.............. Test bed [8,000]
for
autonomous
ship
systems.
6 0602131M MARINE CORPS 56,604 59,604
LANDING FORCE
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Interdiscip [3,000]
linary
cybersecuri
ty.
7 0602235N COMMON PICTURE 49,297 44,297
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
.............. Coordinate [-5,000]
space
activities.
8 0602236N WARFIGHTER 63,825 65,825
SUSTAINMENT
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
.............. Warfighter [2,000]
safety and
performance
research.
9 0602271N ELECTROMAGNETIC 83,497 78,497
SYSTEMS
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
.............. Coordinate [-5,000]
EW
activities.
10 0602435N OCEAN 63,894 63,894
WARFIGHTING
ENVIRONMENT
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
11 0602651M JOINT NON- 6,346 6,346
LETHAL WEAPONS
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
12 0602747N UNDERSEA 57,075 64,575
WARFARE
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
.............. Undersea [7,500]
vehicle
technology
research.
13 0602750N FUTURE NAVAL 154,755 154,755
CAPABILITIES
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
14 0602782N MINE AND 36,074 36,074
EXPEDITIONARY
WARFARE
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
15 0602792N INNOVATIVE 153,062 153,062
NAVAL
PROTOTYPES
(INP) APPLIED
RESEARCH.
16 0602861N SCIENCE AND 73,961 73,961
TECHNOLOGY
MANAGEMENT--ON
R FIELD
ACITIVITIES.
.............. SUBTOTAL 936,453 955,453
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
17 0603123N FORCE 35,286 35,286
PROTECTION
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
18 0603271N ELECTROMAGNETIC 9,499 9,499
SYSTEMS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
19 0603640M USMC ADVANCED 172,847 176,847
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATION
(ATD).
.............. Consolidate [-5,000]
efforts in
AI/ML with
Joint Force.
.............. UPL MUDLAN [9,000]
program
increase.
20 0603651M JOINT NON- 13,307 13,307
LETHAL WEAPONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
21 0603673N FUTURE NAVAL 231,907 231,907
CAPABILITIES
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
22 0603680N MANUFACTURING 60,138 60,138
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
23 0603729N WARFIGHTER 4,849 4,849
PROTECTION
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
25 0603758N NAVY 67,739 67,739
WARFIGHTING
EXPERIMENTS
AND
DEMONSTRATIONS.
26 0603782N MINE AND 13,335 13,335
EXPEDITIONARY
WARFARE
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
27 0603801N INNOVATIVE 133,303 128,303
NAVAL
PROTOTYPES
(INP) ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Reduce [-5,000]
electronic
manuever.
.............. SUBTOTAL 742,210 741,210
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
28 0603207N AIR/OCEAN 32,643 38,643
TACTICAL
APPLICATIONS.
.............. Program [6,000]
increase
for 1 REMUS
600 vehicle.
29 0603216N AVIATION 11,919 11,919
SURVIVABILITY.
30 0603251N AIRCRAFT 1,473 1,473
SYSTEMS.
31 0603254N ASW SYSTEMS 7,172 7,172
DEVELOPMENT.
32 0603261N TACTICAL 3,419 3,419
AIRBORNE
RECONNAISSANCE.
33 0603382N ADVANCED COMBAT 64,694 64,694
SYSTEMS
TECHNOLOGY.
34 0603502N SURFACE AND 507,000 134,500
SHALLOW WATER
MINE
COUNTERMEASURE
S.
.............. Excess [-372,500]
procurement
ahead of
satisfactor
y testing.
35 0603506N SURFACE SHIP 15,800 15,800
TORPEDO
DEFENSE.
36 0603512N CARRIER SYSTEMS 4,997 4,997
DEVELOPMENT.
37 0603525N PILOT FISH..... 291,148 291,148
38 0603527N RETRACT LARCH.. 11,980 11,980
39 0603536N RETRACT JUNIPER 129,163 129,163
40 0603542N RADIOLOGICAL 689 689
CONTROL.
41 0603553N SURFACE ASW.... 1,137 1,137
42 0603561N ADVANCED 148,756 153,756
SUBMARINE
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Project [5,000]
2033: Test
site
emergent
repairs.
43 0603562N SUBMARINE 11,192 11,192
TACTICAL
WARFARE
SYSTEMS.
44 0603563N SHIP CONCEPT 81,846 57,846
ADVANCED
DESIGN.
.............. Early to [-24,000]
need.
45 0603564N SHIP 69,084 22,484
PRELIMINARY
DESIGN &
FEASIBILITY
STUDIES.
.............. Early to [-46,600]
need.
46 0603570N ADVANCED 181,652 181,652
NUCLEAR POWER
SYSTEMS.
47 0603573N ADVANCED 25,408 150,408
SURFACE
MACHINERY
SYSTEMS.
.............. Surface [125,000]
combatant
component-
level
prototyping.
48 0603576N CHALK EAGLE.... 64,877 64,877
49 0603581N LITTORAL COMBAT 9,934 9,934
SHIP (LCS).
50 0603582N COMBAT SYSTEM 17,251 17,251
INTEGRATION.
51 0603595N OHIO 419,051 434,051
REPLACEMENT.
.............. Accelerate [15,000]
advanced
propulsor
development.
52 0603596N LCS MISSION 108,505 103,505
MODULES.
.............. Availabe [-5,000]
prior year
funds due
to SUW MP
testing
delay.
53 0603597N AUTOMATED TEST 7,653 7,653
AND ANALYSIS.
54 0603599N FRIGATE 59,007 59,007
DEVELOPMENT.
55 0603609N CONVENTIONAL 9,988 9,988
MUNITIONS.
56 0603635M MARINE CORPS 86,464 86,464
GROUND COMBAT/
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
57 0603654N JOINT SERVICE 33,478 33,478
EXPLOSIVE
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT.
58 0603713N OCEAN 5,619 5,619
ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
59 0603721N ENVIRONMENTAL 20,564 20,564
PROTECTION.
60 0603724N NAVY ENERGY 26,514 26,514
PROGRAM.
61 0603725N FACILITIES 3,440 3,440
IMPROVEMENT.
62 0603734N CHALK CORAL.... 346,800 346,800
63 0603739N NAVY LOGISTIC 3,857 3,857
PRODUCTIVITY.
64 0603746N RETRACT MAPLE.. 258,519 258,519
65 0603748N LINK PLUMERIA.. 403,909 403,909
66 0603751N RETRACT ELM.... 63,434 63,434
67 0603764N LINK EVERGREEN. 184,110 184,110
68 0603790N NATO RESEARCH 7,697 7,697
AND
DEVELOPMENT.
69 0603795N LAND ATTACK 9,086 9,086
TECHNOLOGY.
70 0603851M JOINT NON- 28,466 28,466
LETHAL WEAPONS
TESTING.
71 0603860N JOINT PRECISION 51,341 51,341
APPROACH AND
LANDING
SYSTEMS--DEM/
VAL.
72 0603925N DIRECTED ENERGY 118,169 118,169
AND ELECTRIC
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
73 0604014N F/A -18 113,456 113,456
INFRARED
SEARCH AND
TRACK (IRST).
74 0604027N DIGITAL WARFARE 50,120 50,120
OFFICE.
75 0604028N SMALL AND 32,527 32,527
MEDIUM
UNMANNED
UNDERSEA
VEHICLES.
76 0604029N UNMANNED 54,376 54,376
UNDERSEA
VEHICLE CORE
TECHNOLOGIES.
77 0604030N RAPID 36,197 36,197
PROTOTYPING,
EXPERIMENTATIO
N AND
DEMONSTRATION..
78 0604031N LARGE UNMANNED 68,310 68,310
UNDERSEA
VEHICLES.
79 0604112N GERALD R. FORD 121,310 121,310
CLASS NUCLEAR
AIRCRAFT
CARRIER (CVN
78--80).
80 0604126N LITTORAL 17,248 17,248
AIRBORNE MCM.
81 0604127N SURFACE MINE 18,735 18,735
COUNTERMEASURE
S.
82 0604272N TACTICAL AIR 68,346 68,346
DIRECTIONAL
INFRARED
COUNTERMEASURE
S (TADIRCM).
84 0604289M NEXT GENERATION 4,420 13,420
LOGISTICS.
.............. Additive [9,000]
manufacturi
ng
logistics
software
pilot.
85 0604320M RAPID 4,558 4,558
TECHNOLOGY
CAPABILITY
PROTOTYPE.
86 0604454N LX (R)......... 12,500 12,500
87 0604536N ADVANCED 181,967 181,967
UNDERSEA
PROTOTYPING.
88 0604636N COUNTER 5,500 5,500
UNMANNED
AIRCRAFT
SYSTEMS (C-
UAS).
89 0604659N PRECISION 718,148 723,148
STRIKE WEAPONS
DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAM.
.............. Increase [5,000]
for SLCM-N
AOA.
90 0604707N SPACE AND 5,263 5,263
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE (SEW)
ARCHITECTURE/
ENGINEERING
SUPPORT.
91 0604786N OFFENSIVE ANTI- 65,419 65,419
SURFACE
WARFARE WEAPON
DEVELOPMENT.
92 0303354N ASW SYSTEMS 9,991 9,991
DEVELOPMENT--M
IP.
93 0304240M ADVANCED 21,157 21,157
TACTICAL
UNMANNED
AIRCRAFT
SYSTEM.
95 0304270N ELECTRONIC 609 609
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT--M
IP.
.............. SUBTOTAL 5,559,062 5,275,962
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.
..............
.............. SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
96 0603208N TRAINING SYSTEM 15,514 15,514
AIRCRAFT.
97 0604212N OTHER HELO 28,835 28,835
DEVELOPMENT.
98 0604214M AV-8B AIRCRAFT-- 27,441 27,441
ENG DEV.
100 0604215N STANDARDS 3,642 3,642
DEVELOPMENT.
101 0604216N MULTI-MISSION 19,196 19,196
HELICOPTER
UPGRADE
DEVELOPMENT.
104 0604230N WARFARE SUPPORT 8,601 8,601
SYSTEM.
105 0604231N TACTICAL 77,232 77,232
COMMAND SYSTEM.
106 0604234N ADVANCED 232,752 232,752
HAWKEYE.
107 0604245M H-1 UPGRADES... 65,359 65,359
109 0604261N ACOUSTIC SEARCH 47,013 47,013
SENSORS.
110 0604262N V-22A.......... 185,105 190,605
.............. Increase [5,500]
reliability
and reduce
vibrations
of V-22
Nacelles.
111 0604264N AIR CREW 21,172 21,172
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
112 0604269N EA-18.......... 143,585 143,585
113 0604270N ELECTRONIC 116,811 116,811
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
114 0604273M EXECUTIVE HELO 187,436 187,436
DEVELOPMENT.
116 0604274N NEXT GENERATION 524,261 524,261
JAMMER (NGJ).
117 0604280N JOINT TACTICAL 192,345 192,345
RADIO SYSTEM--
NAVY (JTRS-
NAVY).
118 0604282N NEXT GENERATION 111,068 111,068
JAMMER (NGJ)
INCREMENT II.
119 0604307N SURFACE 415,625 415,625
COMBATANT
COMBAT SYSTEM
ENGINEERING.
120 0604311N LPD-17 CLASS 640 640
SYSTEMS
INTEGRATION.
121 0604329N SMALL DIAMETER 50,096 50,096
BOMB (SDB).
122 0604366N STANDARD 232,391 232,391
MISSILE
IMPROVEMENTS.
123 0604373N AIRBORNE MCM... 10,916 10,916
124 0604378N NAVAL 33,379 33,379
INTEGRATED
FIRE CONTROL--
COUNTER AIR
SYSTEMS
ENGINEERING.
125 0604501N ADVANCED ABOVE 34,554 34,554
WATER SENSORS.
126 0604503N SSN-688 AND 84,663 84,663
TRIDENT
MODERNIZATION.
127 0604504N AIR CONTROL.... 44,923 44,923
128 0604512N SHIPBOARD 10,632 10,632
AVIATION
SYSTEMS.
129 0604518N COMBAT 16,094 16,094
INFORMATION
CENTER
CONVERSION.
130 0604522N AIR AND MISSILE 55,349 55,349
DEFENSE RADAR
(AMDR) SYSTEM.
131 0604530N ADVANCED 123,490 123,490
ARRESTING GEAR
(AAG).
132 0604558N NEW DESIGN SSN. 121,010 121,010
133 0604562N SUBMARINE 62,426 62,426
TACTICAL
WARFARE SYSTEM.
134 0604567N SHIP CONTRACT 46,809 46,809
DESIGN/ LIVE
FIRE T&E.
135 0604574N NAVY TACTICAL 3,692 3,692
COMPUTER
RESOURCES.
137 0604601N MINE 28,964 100,264
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. UPL [71,300]
Quickstrike
JDAM ER.
138 0604610N LIGHTWEIGHT 148,349 148,349
TORPEDO
DEVELOPMENT.
139 0604654N JOINT SERVICE 8,237 8,237
EXPLOSIVE
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT.
140 0604657M USMC GROUND 22,000 22,000
COMBAT/
SUPPORTING
ARMS SYSTEMS--
ENG DEV.
141 0604703N PERSONNEL, 5,500 5,500
TRAINING,
SIMULATION,
AND HUMAN
FACTORS.
142 0604727N JOINT STANDOFF 18,725 18,725
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
143 0604755N SHIP SELF 192,603 192,603
DEFENSE
(DETECT &
CONTROL).
144 0604756N SHIP SELF 137,268 137,268
DEFENSE
(ENGAGE: HARD
KILL).
145 0604757N SHIP SELF 97,363 97,363
DEFENSE
(ENGAGE: SOFT
KILL/EW).
146 0604761N INTELLIGENCE 26,710 26,710
ENGINEERING.
147 0604771N MEDICAL 8,181 8,181
DEVELOPMENT.
148 0604777N NAVIGATION/ID 40,755 40,755
SYSTEM.
149 0604800M JOINT STRIKE 1,710 1,710
FIGHTER (JSF)--
EMD.
150 0604800N JOINT STRIKE 1,490 1,490
FIGHTER (JSF)--
EMD.
153 0605013M INFORMATION 1,494 1,494
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
154 0605013N INFORMATION 384,162 328,722
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. eProcuremen [-55,440]
t program
duplication.
155 0605024N ANTI-TAMPER 4,882 4,882
TECHNOLOGY
SUPPORT.
156 0605212M CH-53K RDTE.... 516,955 506,955
.............. Early to [-10,000]
need.
158 0605215N MISSION 75,886 75,886
PLANNING.
159 0605217N COMMON AVIONICS 43,187 43,187
160 0605220N SHIP TO SHORE 4,909 19,909
CONNECTOR
(SSC).
.............. Expand [15,000]
development
and use of
composite
materials.
161 0605327N T-AO 205 CLASS. 1,682 1,682
162 0605414N UNMANNED 671,258 671,258
CARRIER
AVIATION (UCA).
163 0605450M JOINT AIR-TO- 18,393 18,393
GROUND MISSILE
(JAGM).
165 0605500N MULTI-MISSION 21,472 21,472
MARITIME
AIRCRAFT (MMA).
166 0605504N MULTI-MISSION 177,234 177,234
MARITIME (MMA)
INCREMENT III.
167 0605611M MARINE CORPS 77,322 77,322
ASSAULT
VEHICLES
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
168 0605813M JOINT LIGHT 2,105 2,105
TACTICAL
VEHICLE (JLTV)
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
169 0204202N DDG-1000....... 111,435 111,435
172 0304785N TACTICAL 101,339 101,339
CRYPTOLOGIC
SYSTEMS.
173 0306250M CYBER 26,406 26,406
OPERATIONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM 6,332,033 6,358,393
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
..............
.............. MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
174 0604256N THREAT 66,678 66,678
SIMULATOR
DEVELOPMENT.
175 0604258N TARGET SYSTEMS 12,027 12,027
DEVELOPMENT.
176 0604759N MAJOR T&E 85,348 85,348
INVESTMENT.
178 0605152N STUDIES AND 3,908 3,908
ANALYSIS
SUPPORT--NAVY.
179 0605154N CENTER FOR 47,669 47,669
NAVAL ANALYSES.
180 0605285N NEXT GENERATION 20,698 20,698
FIGHTER.
182 0605804N TECHNICAL 988 988
INFORMATION
SERVICES.
183 0605853N MANAGEMENT, 102,401 102,401
TECHNICAL &
INTERNATIONAL
SUPPORT.
184 0605856N STRATEGIC 3,742 3,742
TECHNICAL
SUPPORT.
186 0605863N RDT&E SHIP AND 93,872 93,872
AIRCRAFT
SUPPORT.
187 0605864N TEST AND 394,020 394,020
EVALUATION
SUPPORT.
188 0605865N OPERATIONAL 25,145 25,145
TEST AND
EVALUATION
CAPABILITY.
189 0605866N NAVY SPACE AND 15,773 15,773
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE (SEW)
SUPPORT.
190 0605867N SEW 8,402 8,402
SURVEILLANCE/
RECONNAISSANCE
SUPPORT.
191 0605873M MARINE CORPS 37,265 37,265
PROGRAM WIDE
SUPPORT.
192 0605898N MANAGEMENT HQ-- 39,673 39,673
R&D.
193 0606355N WARFARE 28,750 28,750
INNOVATION
MANAGEMENT.
196 0305327N INSIDER THREAT. 2,645 2,645
197 0902498N MANAGEMENT 1,460 1,460
HEADQUARTERS
(DEPARTMENTAL
SUPPORT
ACTIVITIES).
.............. SUBTOTAL 990,464 990,464
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
.............. OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
202 0604227N HARPOON 2,302 2,302
MODIFICATIONS.
203 0604840M F-35 C2D2...... 422,881 422,881
204 0604840N F-35 C2D2...... 383,741 383,741
205 0607658N COOPERATIVE 127,924 127,924
ENGAGEMENT
CAPABILITY
(CEC).
207 0101221N STRATEGIC SUB & 157,676 157,676
WEAPONS SYSTEM
SUPPORT.
208 0101224N SSBN SECURITY 43,354 43,354
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
209 0101226N SUBMARINE 6,815 6,815
ACOUSTIC
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
210 0101402N NAVY STRATEGIC 31,174 31,174
COMMUNICATIONS.
211 0204136N F/A-18 213,715 213,715
SQUADRONS.
213 0204228N SURFACE SUPPORT 36,389 36,389
214 0204229N TOMAHAWK AND 320,134 320,134
TOMAHAWK
MISSION
PLANNING
CENTER (TMPC).
215 0204311N INTEGRATED 88,382 103,382
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM.
.............. Additional [15,000]
TRAPS units.
216 0204313N SHIP-TOWED 14,449 14,449
ARRAY
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEMS.
217 0204413N AMPHIBIOUS 6,931 6,931
TACTICAL
SUPPORT UNITS
(DISPLACEMENT
CRAFT).
218 0204460M GROUND/AIR TASK 23,891 23,891
ORIENTED RADAR
(G/ATOR).
219 0204571N CONSOLIDATED 129,873 129,873
TRAINING
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
221 0204575N ELECTRONIC 82,325 82,325
WARFARE (EW)
READINESS
SUPPORT.
222 0205601N HARM 138,431 138,431
IMPROVEMENT.
224 0205620N SURFACE ASW 29,572 29,572
COMBAT SYSTEM
INTEGRATION.
225 0205632N MK-48 ADCAP.... 85,973 85,973
226 0205633N AVIATION 125,461 125,461
IMPROVEMENTS.
227 0205675N OPERATIONAL 106,192 106,192
NUCLEAR POWER
SYSTEMS.
228 0206313M MARINE CORPS 143,317 143,317
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS.
229 0206335M COMMON AVIATION 4,489 4,489
COMMAND AND
CONTROL SYSTEM
(CAC2S).
230 0206623M MARINE CORPS 51,788 51,788
GROUND COMBAT/
SUPPORTING
ARMS SYSTEMS.
231 0206624M MARINE CORPS 37,761 42,761
COMBAT
SERVICES
SUPPORT.
.............. Airborne [5,000]
Power
Generation
Tech
Development.
232 0206625M USMC 21,458 21,458
INTELLIGENCE/
ELECTRONIC
WARFARE
SYSTEMS (MIP).
233 0206629M AMPHIBIOUS 5,476 5,476
ASSAULT
VEHICLE.
234 0207161N TACTICAL AIM 19,488 19,488
MISSILES.
235 0207163N ADVANCED MEDIUM 39,029 39,029
RANGE AIR-TO-
AIR MISSILE
(AMRAAM).
239 0303109N SATELLITE 34,344 34,344
COMMUNICATIONS
(SPACE).
240 0303138N CONSOLIDATED 22,873 22,873
AFLOAT NETWORK
ENTERPRISE
SERVICES
(CANES).
241 0303140N INFORMATION 41,853 41,853
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
243 0305192N MILITARY 8,913 8,913
INTELLIGENCE
PROGRAM (MIP)
ACTIVITIES.
244 0305204N TACTICAL 9,451 9,451
UNMANNED
AERIAL
VEHICLES.
245 0305205N UAS INTEGRATION 42,315 42,315
AND
INTEROPERABILI
TY.
246 0305208M DISTRIBUTED 22,042 22,042
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
248 0305220N MQ-4C TRITON... 11,784 11,784
249 0305231N MQ-8 UAV....... 29,618 29,618
250 0305232M RQ-11 UAV...... 509 509
251 0305234N SMALL (LEVEL 0) 11,545 11,545
TACTICAL UAS
(STUASL0).
252 0305239M RQ-21A......... 10,914 10,914
253 0305241N MULTI- 70,612 70,612
INTELLIGENCE
SENSOR
DEVELOPMENT.
254 0305242M UNMANNED AERIAL 3,704 3,704
SYSTEMS (UAS)
PAYLOADS (MIP).
255 0305421N RQ-4 202,346 202,346
MODERNIZATION.
256 0308601N MODELING AND 7,119 7,119
SIMULATION
SUPPORT.
257 0702207N DEPOT 38,182 38,182
MAINTENANCE
(NON-IF).
258 0708730N MARITIME 6,779 6,779
TECHNOLOGY
(MARITECH).
259 1203109N SATELLITE 15,868 15,868
COMMUNICATIONS
(SPACE).
999 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 1,613,137 1,613,137
PROGRAMS.
.............. SUBTOTAL 5,104,299 5,124,299
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. TOTAL RESEARCH, 20,270,499 20,061,759
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
NAVY.
..............
.............. RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
AF
.............. BASIC RESEARCH
1 0601102F DEFENSE 356,107 356,107
RESEARCH
SCIENCES.
2 0601103F UNIVERSITY 158,859 158,859
RESEARCH
INITIATIVES.
3 0601108F HIGH ENERGY 14,795 14,795
LASER RESEARCH
INITIATIVES.
.............. SUBTOTAL BASIC 529,761 529,761
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. APPLIED
RESEARCH
4 0602102F MATERIALS...... 128,851 122,851
.............. Advanced [4,000]
materials
high energy
x-ray.
.............. Duplicative [-10,000]
material
research.
5 0602201F AEROSPACE 147,724 137,724
VEHICLE
TECHNOLOGIES.
.............. Reduce [-10,000]
program
growth.
6 0602202F HUMAN 131,795 131,795
EFFECTIVENESS
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
7 0602203F AEROSPACE 198,775 198,775
PROPULSION.
8 0602204F AEROSPACE 202,912 202,912
SENSORS.
10 0602298F SCIENCE AND 7,968 7,968
TECHNOLOGY
MANAGEMENT--
MAJOR
HEADQUARTERS
ACTIVITIES.
12 0602602F CONVENTIONAL 142,772 142,772
MUNITIONS.
13 0602605F DIRECTED ENERGY 124,379 124,379
TECHNOLOGY.
14 0602788F DOMINANT 181,562 199,062
INFORMATION
SCIENCES AND
METHODS.
.............. Counter UAS [2,500]
cyber.
.............. Cyberspace [10,000]
dominance
technology
research.
.............. Quantum [5,000]
science.
15 0602890F HIGH ENERGY 44,221 49,221
LASER RESEARCH.
.............. High power [5,000]
microwave
research.
16 1206601F SPACE 124,667 124,667
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,435,626 1,442,126
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
17 0603112F ADVANCED 36,586 38,586
MATERIALS FOR
WEAPON SYSTEMS.
.............. Metals [2,000]
affordabili
ty research.
18 0603199F SUSTAINMENT 16,249 16,249
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
(S&T).
19 0603203F ADVANCED 38,292 38,292
AEROSPACE
SENSORS.
20 0603211F AEROSPACE 102,949 307,949
TECHNOLOGY DEV/
DEMO.
.............. Accelerate [75,000]
air
breathing
hypersonic
program.
.............. Active [5,000]
winglets
development.
.............. Advanced [25,000]
Personnel
Recovery.
.............. LCAAT...... [100,000]
21 0603216F AEROSPACE 113,973 123,973
PROPULSION AND
POWER
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Advanced [10,000]
turbine
engine gas
generator.
22 0603270F ELECTRONIC 48,408 38,408
COMBAT
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Duplicative [-10,000]
EW & PNT
research.
23 0603401F ADVANCED 70,525 73,525
SPACECRAFT
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Strategic [3,000]
radiation
hardened
microelectr
onic
processors.
24 0603444F MAUI SPACE 11,878 11,878
SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM (MSSS).
25 0603456F HUMAN 37,542 37,542
EFFECTIVENESS
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
26 0603601F CONVENTIONAL 225,817 225,817
WEAPONS
TECHNOLOGY.
27 0603605F ADVANCED 37,404 37,404
WEAPONS
TECHNOLOGY.
28 0603680F MANUFACTURING 43,116 50,116
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
.............. Advanced [7,000]
materials
and
materials
manufacturi
ng.
29 0603788F BATTLESPACE 56,414 66,414
KNOWLEDGE
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION.
.............. Cyber [10,000]
applied
research.
.............. SUBTOTAL 839,153 1,066,153
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
31 0603260F INTELLIGENCE 5,672 5,672
ADVANCED
DEVELOPMENT.
32 0603742F COMBAT 27,085 27,085
IDENTIFICATION
TECHNOLOGY.
33 0603790F NATO RESEARCH 4,955 4,955
AND
DEVELOPMENT.
34 0603851F INTERCONTINENTA 44,109 44,109
L BALLISTIC
MISSILE--DEM/
VAL.
36 0604002F AIR FORCE 772 772
WEATHER
SERVICES
RESEARCH.
37 0604004F ADVANCED ENGINE 878,442 878,442
DEVELOPMENT.
38 0604015F LONG RANGE 3,003,899 3,003,899
STRIKE--BOMBER.
39 0604032F DIRECTED ENERGY 10,000 10,000
PROTOTYPING.
40 0604033F HYPERSONICS 576,000 576,000
PROTOTYPING.
41 0604201F PNT RESILIENCY, 92,600 124,600
MODS, AND
IMPROVEMENTS.
.............. UPL M-CODE [32,000]
acceleratio
n.
42 0604257F ADVANCED 23,145 23,145
TECHNOLOGY AND
SENSORS.
43 0604288F NATIONAL 16,669 16,669
AIRBORNE OPS
CENTER (NAOC)
RECAP.
44 0604317F TECHNOLOGY 23,614 23,614
TRANSFER.
45 0604327F HARD AND DEEPLY 113,121 113,121
BURIED TARGET
DEFEAT SYSTEM
(HDBTDS)
PROGRAM.
46 0604414F CYBER 56,325 56,325
RESILIENCY OF
WEAPON SYSTEMS-
ACS.
47 0604776F DEPLOYMENT & 28,034 28,034
DISTRIBUTION
ENTERPRISE R&D.
48 0604858F TECH TRANSITION 128,476 134,476
PROGRAM.
.............. Rapid [6,000]
repair.
49 0605230F GROUND BASED 570,373 592,373
STRATEGIC
DETERRENT.
.............. Program [22,000]
consolidati
on.
50 0207100F LIGHT ATTACK 35,000 85,000
ARMED
RECONNAISSANCE
(LAAR)
SQUADRONS.
.............. Light [50,000]
attack
experiment.
51 0207110F NEXT GENERATION 1,000,000 1,000,000
AIR DOMINANCE.
52 0207455F THREE 37,290 37,290
DIMENSIONAL
LONG-RANGE
RADAR (3DELRR).
53 0208099F UNIFIED 10,000 10,000
PLATFORM (UP).
54 0305236F COMMON DATA 36,910 36,910
LINK EXECUTIVE
AGENT (CDL EA).
55 0305251F CYBERSPACE 35,000 35,000
OPERATIONS
FORCES AND
FORCE SUPPORT.
56 0305601F MISSION PARTNER 8,550 8,550
ENVIRONMENTS.
57 0306250F CYBER 198,864 240,064
OPERATIONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Accelerate [13,600]
development
of Cyber
National
Mission
Force
capabilitie
s.
.............. ETERNALDARK [7,100]
NESS.
.............. Joint [20,500]
Common
Access
Platform.
58 0306415F ENABLED CYBER 16,632 16,632
ACTIVITIES.
60 0901410F CONTRACTING 20,830 20,830
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
SYSTEM.
61 1203164F NAVSTAR GLOBAL 329,948 329,948
POSITIONING
SYSTEM (USER
EQUIPMENT)
(SPACE).
62 1203710F EO/IR WEATHER 101,222 101,222
SYSTEMS.
63 1206422F WEATHER SYSTEM 225,660 225,660
FOLLOW-ON.
64 1206425F SPACE SITUATION 29,776 29,776
AWARENESS
SYSTEMS.
65 1206427F SPACE SYSTEMS 142,045 142,045
PROTOTYPE
TRANSITIONS
(SSPT).
67 1206438F SPACE CONTROL 64,231 64,231
TECHNOLOGY.
68 1206730F SPACE SECURITY 56,385 56,385
AND DEFENSE
PROGRAM.
69 1206760F PROTECTED 105,003 95,003
TACTICAL
ENTERPRISE
SERVICE (PTES).
.............. Unjustified [-10,000]
growth.
70 1206761F PROTECTED 173,694 163,694
TACTICAL
SERVICE (PTS).
.............. Unjustified [-10,000]
growth.
71 1206855F EVOLVED 172,206 172,206
STRATEGIC
SATCOM (ESS).
72 1206857F SPACE RAPID 33,742 33,742
CAPABILITIES
OFFICE.
.............. SUBTOTAL 8,436,279 8,567,479
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES.
..............
.............. SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION
73 0604200F FUTURE ADVANCED 246,200 97,120
WEAPON
ANALYSIS &
PROGRAMS.
.............. ERWn [-149,080]
contract
delay.
74 0604201F PNT RESILIENCY, 67,782 148,782
MODS, AND
IMPROVEMENTS.
.............. UPL M-Code [81,000]
Acceleratio
n.
75 0604222F NUCLEAR WEAPONS 4,406 4,406
SUPPORT.
76 0604270F ELECTRONIC 2,066 2,066
WARFARE
DEVELOPMENT.
77 0604281F TACTICAL DATA 229,631 229,631
NETWORKS
ENTERPRISE.
78 0604287F PHYSICAL 9,700 9,700
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT.
79 0604329F SMALL DIAMETER 31,241 31,241
BOMB (SDB)--
EMD.
80 0604429F AIRBORNE 2 2
ELECTRONIC
ATTACK.
81 0604602F ARMAMENT/ 28,043 28,043
ORDNANCE
DEVELOPMENT.
82 0604604F SUBMUNITIONS... 3,045 3,045
83 0604617F AGILE COMBAT 19,944 19,944
SUPPORT.
84 0604706F LIFE SUPPORT 8,624 8,624
SYSTEMS.
85 0604735F COMBAT TRAINING 37,365 37,365
RANGES.
86 0604800F F-35--EMD...... 7,628 7,628
87 0604932F LONG RANGE 712,539 712,539
STANDOFF
WEAPON.
88 0604933F ICBM FUZE 161,199 161,199
MODERNIZATION.
89 0605030F JOINT TACTICAL 2,414 2,414
NETWORK CENTER
(JTNC).
91 0605056F OPEN 30,000 30,000
ARCHITECTURE
MANAGEMENT.
93 0605221F KC-46.......... 59,561 59,561
94 0605223F ADVANCED PILOT 348,473 348,473
TRAINING.
95 0605229F COMBAT RESCUE 247,047 247,047
HELICOPTER.
98 0605931F B-2 DEFENSIVE 294,400 294,400
MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM.
99 0101125F NUCLEAR WEAPONS 27,564 27,564
MODERNIZATION.
100 0101213F MINUTEMAN 1 1
SQUADRONS.
101 0207171F F-15 EPAWSS.... 47,322 47,322
102 0207328F STAND IN ATTACK 162,840 162,840
WEAPON.
103 0207701F FULL COMBAT 9,797 9,797
MISSION
TRAINING.
106 0401310F C-32 EXECUTIVE 9,930 9,930
TRANSPORT
RECAPITALIZATI
ON.
107 0401319F VC-25B......... 757,923 757,923
108 0701212F AUTOMATED TEST 2,787 2,787
SYSTEMS.
109 1203176F COMBAT SURVIVOR 2,000 2,000
EVADER LOCATOR.
110 1203269F GPS III FOLLOW- 462,875 462,875
ON (GPS IIIF).
111 1203940F SPACE SITUATION 76,829 76,829
AWARENESS
OPERATIONS.
112 1206421F COUNTERSPACE 29,037 29,037
SYSTEMS.
113 1206422F WEATHER SYSTEM 2,237 2,237
FOLLOW-ON.
114 1206425F SPACE SITUATION 412,894 412,894
AWARENESS
SYSTEMS.
115 1206426F SPACE FENCE.... 0 20,000
.............. Space Fence [20,000]
116 1206431F ADVANCED EHF 117,290 117,290
MILSATCOM
(SPACE).
117 1206432F POLAR MILSATCOM 427,400 427,400
(SPACE).
118 1206433F WIDEBAND GLOBAL 1,920 1,920
SATCOM (SPACE).
119 1206441F SPACE BASED 1 1
INFRARED
SYSTEM (SBIRS)
HIGH EMD.
120 1206442F NEXT GENERATION 1,395,278 1,395,278
OPIR.
122 1206853F NATIONAL 432,009 432,009
SECURITY SPACE
LAUNCH PROGRAM
(SPACE)--EMD.
.............. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM 6,929,244 6,881,164
DEVELOPMENT &
DEMONSTRATION.
..............
.............. MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
123 0604256F THREAT 59,693 59,693
SIMULATOR
DEVELOPMENT.
124 0604759F MAJOR T&E 181,663 232,663
INVESTMENT.
.............. UPL M-Code [36,000]
Acceleratio
n.
.............. Utah [15,000]
training
range
instrumenta
tion.
125 0605101F RAND PROJECT 35,258 35,258
AIR FORCE.
127 0605712F INITIAL 13,793 13,793
OPERATIONAL
TEST &
EVALUATION.
128 0605807F TEST AND 717,895 771,895
EVALUATION
SUPPORT.
.............. Acelerate [5,000]
prototype
program.
.............. Facilitates [49,000]
5G test and
evaluation.
129 0605826F ACQ WORKFORCE- 258,667 258,667
GLOBAL POWER.
130 0605827F ACQ WORKFORCE- 251,992 251,992
GLOBAL VIG &
COMBAT SYS.
131 0605828F ACQ WORKFORCE- 149,191 149,191
GLOBAL REACH.
132 0605829F ACQ WORKFORCE- 235,360 235,360
CYBER,
NETWORK, & BUS
SYS.
133 0605830F ACQ WORKFORCE- 160,196 160,196
GLOBAL BATTLE
MGMT.
134 0605831F ACQ WORKFORCE- 220,255 220,255
CAPABILITY
INTEGRATION.
135 0605832F ACQ WORKFORCE- 42,392 42,392
ADVANCED PRGM
TECHNOLOGY.
136 0605833F ACQ WORKFORCE- 133,231 133,231
NUCLEAR
SYSTEMS.
137 0605898F MANAGEMENT HQ-- 5,590 5,590
R&D.
138 0605976F FACILITIES 88,445 88,445
RESTORATION
AND
MODERNIZATION-
-TEST AND
EVALUATION
SUPPORT.
139 0605978F FACILITIES 29,424 29,424
SUSTAINMENT--T
EST AND
EVALUATION
SUPPORT.
140 0606017F REQUIREMENTS 62,715 62,715
ANALYSIS AND
MATURATION.
141 0606398F MANAGEMENT HQ-- 5,013 5,013
T&E.
142 0308602F ENTEPRISE 17,128 17,128
INFORMATION
SERVICES (EIS).
143 0702806F ACQUISITION AND 5,913 5,913
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
144 0804731F GENERAL SKILL 1,475 1,475
TRAINING.
146 1001004F INTERNATIONAL 4,071 4,071
ACTIVITIES.
147 1206116F SPACE TEST AND 19,942 19,942
TRAINING RANGE
DEVELOPMENT.
148 1206392F SPACE AND 167,810 167,810
MISSILE CENTER
(SMC) CIVILIAN
WORKFORCE.
149 1206398F SPACE & MISSILE 10,170 10,170
SYSTEMS
CENTER--MHA.
150 1206860F ROCKET SYSTEMS 13,192 13,192
LAUNCH PROGRAM
(SPACE).
151 1206864F SPACE TEST 26,097 26,097
PROGRAM (STP).
.............. SUBTOTAL 2,916,571 3,021,571
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
.............. OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
152 0604003F ADVANCED BATTLE 35,611 84,611
MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM (ABMS).
.............. Accelerates [49,000]
5G military
use.
154 0604233F SPECIALIZED 2,584 2,584
UNDERGRADUATE
FLIGHT
TRAINING.
156 0604776F DEPLOYMENT & 903 903
DISTRIBUTION
ENTERPRISE R&D.
157 0604840F F-35 C2D2...... 694,455 694,455
158 0605018F AF INTEGRATED 40,567 0
PERSONNEL AND
PAY SYSTEM (AF-
IPPS).
.............. Poor agile [-40,567]
development.
159 0605024F ANTI-TAMPER 47,193 47,193
TECHNOLOGY
EXECUTIVE
AGENCY.
160 0605117F FOREIGN 70,083 70,083
MATERIEL
ACQUISITION
AND
EXPLOITATION.
161 0605278F HC/MC-130 RECAP 17,218 4,818
RDT&E.
.............. program [-12,400]
delay.
162 0606018F NC3 INTEGRATION 25,917 25,917
164 0101113F B-52 SQUADRONS. 325,974 325,974
165 0101122F AIR-LAUNCHED 10,217 10,217
CRUISE MISSILE
(ALCM).
166 0101126F B-1B SQUADRONS. 1,000 1,000
167 0101127F B-2 SQUADRONS.. 97,276 97,276
168 0101213F MINUTEMAN 128,961 106,961
SQUADRONS.
.............. Program [-22,000]
consolidati
on.
170 0101316F WORLDWIDE JOINT 18,177 18,177
STRATEGIC
COMMUNICATIONS.
171 0101324F INTEGRATED 24,261 24,261
STRATEGIC
PLANNING &
ANALYSIS
NETWORK.
172 0101328F ICBM REENTRY 75,571 75,571
VEHICLES.
174 0102110F UH-1N 170,975 170,975
REPLACEMENT
PROGRAM.
176 0205219F MQ-9 UAV....... 154,996 154,996
178 0207131F A-10 SQUADRONS. 36,816 36,816
179 0207133F F-16 SQUADRONS. 193,013 193,013
180 0207134F F-15E SQUADRONS 336,079 336,079
181 0207136F MANNED 15,521 15,521
DESTRUCTIVE
SUPPRESSION.
182 0207138F F-22A SQUADRONS 496,298 496,298
183 0207142F F-35 SQUADRONS. 99,943 99,943
184 0207161F TACTICAL AIM 10,314 10,314
MISSILES.
185 0207163F ADVANCED MEDIUM 55,384 55,384
RANGE AIR-TO-
AIR MISSILE
(AMRAAM).
186 0207227F COMBAT RESCUE-- 281 281
PARARESCUE.
187 0207247F AF TENCAP...... 21,365 21,365
188 0207249F PRECISION 10,696 10,696
ATTACK SYSTEMS
PROCUREMENT.
189 0207253F COMPASS CALL... 15,888 15,888
190 0207268F AIRCRAFT ENGINE 112,505 112,505
COMPONENT
IMPROVEMENT
PROGRAM.
191 0207325F JOINT AIR-TO- 78,498 78,498
SURFACE
STANDOFF
MISSILE
(JASSM).
192 0207410F AIR & SPACE 114,864 114,864
OPERATIONS
CENTER (AOC).
193 0207412F CONTROL AND 8,109 8,109
REPORTING
CENTER (CRC).
194 0207417F AIRBORNE 67,996 67,996
WARNING AND
CONTROL SYSTEM
(AWACS).
195 0207418F TACTICAL 2,462 2,462
AIRBORNE
CONTROL
SYSTEMS.
197 0207431F COMBAT AIR 13,668 13,668
INTELLIGENCE
SYSTEM
ACTIVITIES.
198 0207444F TACTICAL AIR 6,217 6,217
CONTROL PARTY-
MOD.
200 0207452F DCAPES......... 19,910 19,910
201 0207573F NATIONAL 1,788 1,788
TECHNICAL
NUCLEAR
FORENSICS.
202 0207590F SEEK EAGLE..... 28,237 28,237
203 0207601F USAF MODELING 15,725 15,725
AND SIMULATION.
204 0207605F WARGAMING AND 4,316 4,316
SIMULATION
CENTERS.
205 0207610F BATTLEFIELD ABN 26,946 26,946
COMM NODE
(BACN).
206 0207697F DISTRIBUTED 4,303 4,303
TRAINING AND
EXERCISES.
207 0208006F MISSION 71,465 71,465
PLANNING
SYSTEMS.
208 0208007F TACTICAL 7,446 7,446
DECEPTION.
209 0208064F OPERATIONAL HQ-- 7,602 7,602
CYBER.
210 0208087F DISTRIBUTED 35,178 35,178
CYBER WARFARE
OPERATIONS.
211 0208088F AF DEFENSIVE 16,609 16,609
CYBERSPACE
OPERATIONS.
212 0208097F JOINT CYBER 11,603 11,603
COMMAND AND
CONTROL (JCC2).
213 0208099F UNIFIED 84,702 84,702
PLATFORM (UP).
218 0301004F ADVANCED DATA 0 21,000
TRANSPORT
FLIGHT TEST.
.............. Accelerate [21,000]
prototype
test of 5G.
219 0301025F GEOBASE........ 2,723 2,723
220 0301112F NUCLEAR 44,190 44,190
PLANNING AND
EXECUTION
SYSTEM (NPES).
226 0301401F AIR FORCE SPACE 3,575 3,575
AND CYBER NON-
TRADITIONAL
ISR FOR
BATTLESPACE
AWARENESS.
227 0302015F E-4B NATIONAL 70,173 70,173
AIRBORNE
OPERATIONS
CENTER (NAOC).
228 0303131F MINIMUM 13,543 13,543
ESSENTIAL
EMERGENCY
COMMUNICATIONS
NETWORK
(MEECN).
229 0303133F HIGH FREQUENCY 15,881 15,881
RADIO SYSTEMS.
230 0303140F INFORMATION 27,726 27,726
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
232 0303142F GLOBAL FORCE 2,210 2,210
MANAGEMENT--DA
TA INITIATIVE.
234 0304115F MULTI DOMAIN 150,880 150,880
COMMAND AND
CONTROL (MDC2).
235 0304260F AIRBORNE SIGINT 102,667 102,667
ENTERPRISE.
236 0304310F COMMERCIAL 3,431 3,431
ECONOMIC
ANALYSIS.
239 0305015F C2 AIR 9,313 9,313
OPERATIONS
SUITE--C2 INFO
SERVICES.
240 0305020F CCMD 1,121 1,121
INTELLIGENCE
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY.
241 0305022F ISR 19,000 0
MODERNIZATION
& AUTOMATION
DVMT (IMAD).
.............. Not mature [-19,000]
plan.
242 0305099F GLOBAL AIR 4,544 4,544
TRAFFIC
MANAGEMENT
(GATM).
243 0305111F WEATHER SERVICE 25,461 25,461
244 0305114F AIR TRAFFIC 5,651 5,651
CONTROL,
APPROACH, AND
LANDING SYSTEM
(ATCALS).
245 0305116F AERIAL TARGETS. 7,448 7,448
248 0305128F SECURITY AND 425 425
INVESTIGATIVE
ACTIVITIES.
249 0305145F ARMS CONTROL 54,546 54,546
IMPLEMENTATION.
250 0305146F DEFENSE JOINT 6,858 6,858
COUNTERINTELLI
GENCE
ACTIVITIES.
252 0305179F INTEGRATED 8,728 8,728
BROADCAST
SERVICE (IBS).
253 0305202F DRAGON U-2..... 38,939 38,939
255 0305206F AIRBORNE 122,909 122,909
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS.
256 0305207F MANNED 11,787 11,787
RECONNAISSANCE
SYSTEMS.
257 0305208F DISTRIBUTED 25,009 25,009
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
258 0305220F RQ-4 UAV....... 191,733 191,733
259 0305221F NETWORK-CENTRIC 10,757 10,757
COLLABORATIVE
TARGETING.
260 0305238F NATO AGS....... 32,567 32,567
261 0305240F SUPPORT TO DCGS 37,774 37,774
ENTERPRISE.
262 0305600F INTERNATIONAL 13,515 13,515
INTELLIGENCE
TECHNOLOGY AND
ARCHITECTURES.
263 0305881F RAPID CYBER 4,383 4,383
ACQUISITION.
264 0305984F PERSONNEL 2,133 2,133
RECOVERY
COMMAND & CTRL
(PRC2).
265 0307577F INTELLIGENCE 8,614 8,614
MISSION DATA
(IMD).
266 0401115F C-130 AIRLIFT 140,425 140,425
SQUADRON.
267 0401119F C-5 AIRLIFT 10,223 10,223
SQUADRONS (IF).
268 0401130F C-17 AIRCRAFT 25,101 25,101
(IF).
269 0401132F C-130J PROGRAM. 8,640 8,640
270 0401134F LARGE AIRCRAFT 5,424 5,424
IR
COUNTERMEASURE
S (LAIRCM).
272 0401219F KC-10S......... 20 20
274 0401318F CV-22.......... 17,906 17,906
276 0408011F SPECIAL TACTICS 3,629 3,629
/ COMBAT
CONTROL.
277 0702207F DEPOT 1,890 1,890
MAINTENANCE
(NON-IF).
278 0708055F MAINTENANCE, 10,311 10,311
REPAIR &
OVERHAUL
SYSTEM.
279 0708610F LOGISTICS 16,065 16,065
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
(LOGIT).
280 0708611F SUPPORT SYSTEMS 539 539
DEVELOPMENT.
281 0804743F OTHER FLIGHT 2,057 2,057
TRAINING.
282 0808716F OTHER PERSONNEL 10 10
ACTIVITIES.
283 0901202F JOINT PERSONNEL 2,060 2,060
RECOVERY
AGENCY.
284 0901218F CIVILIAN 3,809 3,809
COMPENSATION
PROGRAM.
285 0901220F PERSONNEL 6,476 6,476
ADMINISTRATION.
286 0901226F AIR FORCE 1,443 1,443
STUDIES AND
ANALYSIS
AGENCY.
287 0901538F FINANCIAL 9,323 9,323
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
288 0901554F DEFENSE 46,789 46,789
ENTERPRISE
ACNTNG AND MGT
SYS (DEAMS).
289 1201017F GLOBAL SENSOR 3,647 3,647
INTEGRATED ON
NETWORK (GSIN).
290 1201921F SERVICE SUPPORT 988 988
TO STRATCOM--
SPACE
ACTIVITIES.
291 1202140F SERVICE SUPPORT 11,863 11,863
TO SPACECOM
ACTIVITIES.
293 1203001F FAMILY OF 197,388 197,388
ADVANCED BLOS
TERMINALS (FAB-
T).
294 1203110F SATELLITE 61,891 61,891
CONTROL
NETWORK
(SPACE).
297 1203173F SPACE AND 4,566 4,566
MISSILE TEST
AND EVALUATION
CENTER.
298 1203174F SPACE 43,292 43,292
INNOVATION,
INTEGRATION
AND RAPID
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
300 1203182F SPACELIFT RANGE 10,837 10,837
SYSTEM (SPACE).
301 1203265F GPS III SPACE 42,440 42,440
SEGMENT.
302 1203400F SPACE 14,428 14,428
SUPERIORITY
INTELLIGENCE.
303 1203614F JSPOC MISSION 72,762 72,762
SYSTEM.
304 1203620F NATIONAL SPACE 2,653 2,653
DEFENSE CENTER.
306 1203873F BALLISTIC 15,881 15,881
MISSILE
DEFENSE RADARS.
308 1203913F NUDET DETECTION 49,300 49,300
SYSTEM (SPACE).
309 1203940F SPACE SITUATION 17,834 17,834
AWARENESS
OPERATIONS.
310 1206423F GLOBAL 445,302 445,302
POSITIONING
SYSTEM III--
OPERATIONAL
CONTROL
SEGMENT.
311 1206770F ENTERPRISE 138,870 138,870
GROUND
SERVICES.
999 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 18,029,506 18,351,506
PROGRAMS.
.............. Transfer [322,000]
back to
base
funding.
.............. SUBTOTAL 24,529,488 24,827,521
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. TOTAL RESEARCH, 45,616,122 46,335,775
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
AF.
..............
.............. RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
DW
.............. BASIC RESEARCH
1 0601000BR DTRA BASIC 26,000 26,000
RESEARCH.
2 0601101E DEFENSE 432,284 432,284
RESEARCH
SCIENCES.
3 0601110D8Z BASIC RESEARCH 48,874 58,874
INITIATIVES.
.............. DEPSCOR.... [10,000]
4 0601117E BASIC 54,122 54,122
OPERATIONAL
MEDICAL
RESEARCH
SCIENCE.
5 0601120D8Z NATIONAL 92,074 102,074
DEFENSE
EDUCATION
PROGRAM.
.............. Submarine [10,000]
industrial
base
workforce
training
and
education.
6 0601228D8Z HISTORICALLY 30,708 32,708
BLACK COLLEGES
AND
UNIVERSITIES/
MINORITY
INSTITUTIONS.
.............. Aerospace [2,000]
research
and
education.
7 0601384BP CHEMICAL AND 45,238 45,238
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM.
.............. SUBTOTAL BASIC 729,300 751,300
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. APPLIED
RESEARCH
8 0602000D8Z JOINT MUNITIONS 19,306 19,306
TECHNOLOGY.
9 0602115E BIOMEDICAL 97,771 97,771
TECHNOLOGY.
11 0602234D8Z LINCOLN 52,317 52,317
LABORATORY
RESEARCH
PROGRAM.
12 0602251D8Z APPLIED 62,200 64,200
RESEARCH FOR
THE
ADVANCEMENT OF
S&T PRIORITIES.
.............. Computer [2,000]
modeling of
PFAS.
13 0602303E INFORMATION & 442,556 442,556
COMMUNICATIONS
TECHNOLOGY.
14 0602383E BIOLOGICAL 34,588 34,588
WARFARE
DEFENSE.
15 0602384BP CHEMICAL AND 202,587 202,587
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM.
16 0602668D8Z CYBER SECURITY 15,118 25,118
RESEARCH.
.............. Academic [10,000]
cyber
institutes.
17 0602702E TACTICAL 337,602 337,602
TECHNOLOGY.
18 0602715E MATERIALS AND 223,976 223,976
BIOLOGICAL
TECHNOLOGY.
19 0602716E ELECTRONICS 332,192 332,192
TECHNOLOGY.
20 0602718BR COUNTER WEAPONS 179,096 179,096
OF MASS
DESTRUCTION
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
21 0602751D8Z SOFTWARE 9,580 9,580
ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE
(SEI) APPLIED
RESEARCH.
22 1160401BB SOF TECHNOLOGY 40,569 40,569
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. SUBTOTAL 2,049,458 2,061,458
APPLIED
RESEARCH.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
23 0603000D8Z JOINT MUNITIONS 25,779 25,779
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
24 0603121D8Z SO/LIC ADVANCED 5,000 5,000
DEVELOPMENT.
25 0603122D8Z COMBATING 70,517 70,517
TERRORISM
TECHNOLOGY
SUPPORT.
26 0603133D8Z FOREIGN 24,970 24,970
COMPARATIVE
TESTING.
28 0603160BR COUNTER WEAPONS 340,065 340,065
OF MASS
DESTRUCTION
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
29 0603176C ADVANCED 14,208 14,208
CONCEPTS AND
PERFORMANCE
ASSESSMENT.
30 0603178C WEAPONS 10,000 10,000
TECHNOLOGY.
31 0603180C ADVANCED 20,674 20,674
RESEARCH.
32 0603225D8Z JOINT DOD-DOE 18,773 18,773
MUNITIONS
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
33 0603286E ADVANCED 279,741 279,741
AEROSPACE
SYSTEMS.
34 0603287E SPACE PROGRAMS 202,606 202,606
AND TECHNOLOGY.
35 0603288D8Z ANALYTIC 19,429 19,429
ASSESSMENTS.
36 0603289D8Z ADVANCED 37,645 37,645
INNOVATIVE
ANALYSIS AND
CONCEPTS.
37 0603291D8Z ADVANCED 14,668 14,668
INNOVATIVE
ANALYSIS AND
CONCEPTS--MHA.
38 0603294C COMMON KILL 13,600 13,600
VEHICLE
TECHNOLOGY.
40 0603342D8Z DEFENSE 29,398 36,898
INNOVATION
UNIT (DIU).
.............. Accelerate [7,500]
Artificial
Intelligenc
e solutions.
41 0603375D8Z TECHNOLOGY 60,000 60,000
INNOVATION.
42 0603384BP CHEMICAL AND 172,486 172,486
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM--ADVAN
CED
DEVELOPMENT.
43 0603527D8Z RETRACT LARCH.. 159,688 159,688
44 0603618D8Z JOINT 12,063 12,063
ELECTRONIC
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY.
45 0603648D8Z JOINT 107,359 89,859
CAPABILITY
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATIONS.
.............. Program [-17,500]
reduction.
46 0603662D8Z NETWORKED 2,858 2,858
COMMUNICATIONS
CAPABILITIES.
47 0603680D8Z DEFENSE-WIDE 96,397 96,397
MANUFACTURING
SCIENCE AND
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
48 0603680S MANUFACTURING 42,834 42,834
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
49 0603699D8Z EMERGING 80,911 70,911
CAPABILITIES
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. Program [-10,000]
reduction.
50 0603712S GENERIC 10,817 10,817
LOGISTICS R&D
TECHNOLOGY
DEMONSTRATIONS.
51 0603716D8Z STRATEGIC 66,157 76,157
ENVIRONMENTAL
RESEARCH
PROGRAM.
.............. SERDP...... [10,000]
52 0603720S MICROELECTRONIC 171,771 171,771
S TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
AND SUPPORT.
53 0603727D8Z JOINT 4,846 4,846
WARFIGHTING
PROGRAM.
54 0603739E ADVANCED 128,616 128,616
ELECTRONICS
TECHNOLOGIES.
55 0603760E COMMAND, 232,134 232,134
CONTROL AND
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS.
56 0603766E NETWORK-CENTRIC 512,424 512,424
WARFARE
TECHNOLOGY.
57 0603767E SENSOR 163,903 163,903
TECHNOLOGY.
58 0603769D8Z DISTRIBUTED 13,723 13,723
LEARNING
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
59 0603781D8Z SOFTWARE 15,111 15,111
ENGINEERING
INSTITUTE.
60 0603826D8Z QUICK REACTION 47,147 47,147
SPECIAL
PROJECTS.
61 0603833D8Z ENGINEERING 19,376 19,376
SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY.
62 0603924D8Z HIGH ENERGY 85,223 85,223
LASER ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
PROGRAM.
63 0603941D8Z TEST & 175,574 185,574
EVALUATION
SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY.
.............. Program [10,000]
increase to
support NDS
technologie
s.
64 0603950D8Z NATIONAL 25,000 25,000
SECURITY
INNOVATION
NETWORK.
65 0604055D8Z OPERATIONAL 70,536 70,536
ENERGY
CAPABILITY
IMPROVEMENT.
66 0303310D8Z CWMD SYSTEMS... 28,907 28,907
68 1160402BB SOF ADVANCED 89,154 89,154
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
69 1206310SDA SPACE SCIENCE 20,000 20,000
AND TECHNOLOGY
RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT.
.............. SUBTOTAL 3,742,088 3,742,088
ADVANCED
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT
AND PROTOTYPES
70 0603161D8Z NUCLEAR AND 42,695 42,695
CONVENTIONAL
PHYSICAL
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT
RDT&E ADC&P.
71 0603600D8Z WALKOFF........ 92,791 92,791
72 0603821D8Z ACQUISITION 5,659 5,659
ENTERPRISE
DATA &
INFORMATION
SERVICES.
73 0603851D8Z ENVIRONMENTAL 66,572 76,572
SECURITY
TECHNICAL
CERTIFICATION
PROGRAM.
.............. ESTCP...... [10,000]
74 0603881C BALLISTIC 302,761 302,761
MISSILE
DEFENSE
TERMINAL
DEFENSE
SEGMENT.
75 0603882C BALLISTIC 1,156,506 1,156,506
MISSILE
DEFENSE
MIDCOURSE
DEFENSE
SEGMENT.
76 0603884BP CHEMICAL AND 83,662 83,662
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM--DEM/
VAL.
77 0603884C BALLISTIC 283,487 283,487
MISSILE
DEFENSE
SENSORS.
78 0603890C BMD ENABLING 571,507 571,507
PROGRAMS.
79 0603891C SPECIAL 377,098 502,098
PROGRAMS--MDA.
.............. Classified. [125,000]
80 0603892C AEGIS BMD...... 727,479 727,479
81 0603896C BALLISTIC 564,206 564,206
MISSILE
DEFENSE
COMMAND AND
CONTROL,
BATTLE
MANAGEMENT AND
COMMUNICATI.
82 0603898C BALLISTIC 51,532 51,532
MISSILE
DEFENSE JOINT
WARFIGHTER
SUPPORT.
83 0603904C MISSILE DEFENSE 56,161 56,161
INTEGRATION &
OPERATIONS
CENTER (MDIOC).
84 0603906C REGARDING 22,424 22,424
TRENCH.
85 0603907C SEA BASED X- 128,156 128,156
BAND RADAR
(SBX).
86 0603913C ISRAELI 300,000 300,000
COOPERATIVE
PROGRAMS.
87 0603914C BALLISTIC 395,924 395,924
MISSILE
DEFENSE TEST.
88 0603915C BALLISTIC 554,171 554,171
MISSILE
DEFENSE
TARGETS.
89 0603920D8Z HUMANITARIAN 10,820 10,820
DEMINING.
90 0603923D8Z COALITION 11,316 11,316
WARFARE.
91 0604016D8Z DEPARTMENT OF 3,365 3,365
DEFENSE
CORROSION
PROGRAM.
92 0604115C TECHNOLOGY 303,458 269,458
MATURATION
INITIATIVES.
.............. Neutral [-34,000]
particle
beam.
93 0604132D8Z MISSILE DEFEAT 17,816 17,816
PROJECT.
95 0604181C HYPERSONIC 157,425 157,425
DEFENSE.
96 0604250D8Z ADVANCED 1,312,735 1,343,735
INNOVATIVE
TECHNOLOGIES.
.............. Hyperveloci [81,000]
ty Gun
Weapon
System.
.............. Unjustified [-50,000]
growth to
SCO.
97 0604294D8Z TRUSTED & 542,421 547,421
ASSURED
MICROELECTRONI
CS.
.............. Trusted and [5,000]
assured
microelectr
onics
research.
98 0604331D8Z RAPID 100,957 50,957
PROTOTYPING
PROGRAM.
.............. Uncoordinat [-50,000]
ed
prototyping
efforts.
99 0604341D8Z DEFENSE 92,000 92,000
INNOVATION
UNIT (DIU)
PROTOTYPING.
100 0604400D8Z DEPARTMENT OF 3,021 3,021
DEFENSE (DOD)
UNMANNED
SYSTEM COMMON
DEVELOPMENT.
102 0604672C HOMELAND 274,714 274,714
DEFENSE RADAR--
HAWAII (HDR-H).
103 0604673C PACIFIC 6,711 6,711
DISCRIMINATING
RADAR.
104 0604682D8Z WARGAMING AND 3,751 3,751
SUPPORT FOR
STRATEGIC
ANALYSIS (SSA).
105 0604775BR DEFENSE RAPID 14,021 14,021
INNOVATION
PROGRAM.
107 0604826J JOINT C5 20,062 20,062
CAPABILITY
DEVELOPMENT,
INTEGRATION
AND
INTEROPERABILI
TY ASSESSMENTS.
108 0604873C LONG RANGE 136,423 136,423
DISCRIMINATION
RADAR (LRDR).
109 0604874C IMPROVED 412,363 412,363
HOMELAND
DEFENSE
INTERCEPTORS.
110 0604876C BALLISTIC 25,137 25,137
MISSILE
DEFENSE
TERMINAL
DEFENSE
SEGMENT TEST.
111 0604878C AEGIS BMD TEST. 169,822 169,822
112 0604879C BALLISTIC 105,530 105,530
MISSILE
DEFENSE SENSOR
TEST.
113 0604880C LAND-BASED SM-3 38,352 38,352
(LBSM3).
115 0604887C BALLISTIC 98,139 98,139
MISSILE
DEFENSE
MIDCOURSE
SEGMENT TEST.
117 0300206R ENTERPRISE 1,600 1,600
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
SYSTEMS.
118 0303191D8Z JOINT 3,191 3,191
ELECTROMAGNETI
C TECHNOLOGY
(JET) PROGRAM.
119 0305103C CYBER SECURITY 1,138 1,138
INITIATIVE.
120 1206410SDA SPACE 85,000 55,000
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT
AND
PROTOTYPING.
.............. Missile [-30,000]
defense
studies
realignment.
121 1206893C SPACE TRACKING 35,849 35,849
& SURVEILLANCE
SYSTEM.
122 1206895C BALLISTIC 27,565 135,565
MISSILE
DEFENSE SYSTEM
SPACE PROGRAMS.
.............. HBTSS [108,000]
unfunded
requirement.
.............. SUBTOTAL 9,797,493 9,962,493
ADVANCED
COMPONENT
DEVELOPMENT
AND PROTOTYPES.
..............
.............. SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION
123 0604161D8Z NUCLEAR AND 11,276 11,276
CONVENTIONAL
PHYSICAL
SECURITY
EQUIPMENT
RDT&E SDD.
124 0604165D8Z PROMPT GLOBAL 107,000 107,000
STRIKE
CAPABILITY
DEVELOPMENT.
125 0604384BP CHEMICAL AND 384,047 384,047
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM--EMD.
126 0604771D8Z JOINT TACTICAL 40,102 40,102
INFORMATION
DISTRIBUTION
SYSTEM (JTIDS).
127 0605000BR COUNTER WEAPONS 13,100 13,100
OF MASS
DESTRUCTION
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
128 0605013BL INFORMATION 3,070 3,070
TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT.
129 0605021SE HOMELAND 7,295 7,295
PERSONNEL
SECURITY
INITIATIVE.
130 0605022D8Z DEFENSE 17,615 17,615
EXPORTABILITY
PROGRAM.
131 0605027D8Z OUSD(C) IT 15,653 15,653
DEVELOPMENT
INITIATIVES.
132 0605070S DOD ENTERPRISE 2,378 2,378
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION.
133 0605075D8Z CMO POLICY AND 1,618 1,618
INTEGRATION.
134 0605080S DEFENSE AGENCY 27,944 27,944
INITIATIVES
(DAI)--FINANCI
AL SYSTEM.
135 0605090S DEFENSE RETIRED 6,609 6,609
AND ANNUITANT
PAY SYSTEM
(DRAS).
136 0605210D8Z DEFENSE-WIDE 9,619 9,619
ELECTRONIC
PROCUREMENT
CAPABILITIES.
137 0605294D8Z TRUSTED & 175,032 175,032
ASSURED
MICROELECTRONI
CS.
138 0303140BL INFORMATION 425 425
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
139 0303141K GLOBAL COMBAT 1,578 1,578
SUPPORT SYSTEM.
140 0305304D8Z DOD ENTERPRISE 4,373 4,373
ENERGY
INFORMATION
MANAGEMENT
(EEIM).
141 0305310D8Z CWMD SYSTEMS: 12,854 12,854
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION.
.............. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM 841,588 841,588
DEVELOPMENT
AND
DEMONSTRATION.
..............
.............. MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
142 0603829J JOINT 13,000 13,000
CAPABILITY
EXPERIMENTATIO
N.
143 0604774D8Z DEFENSE 9,724 9,724
READINESS
REPORTING
SYSTEM (DRRS).
144 0604875D8Z JOINT SYSTEMS 9,593 9,593
ARCHITECTURE
DEVELOPMENT.
145 0604940D8Z CENTRAL TEST 260,267 260,267
AND EVALUATION
INVESTMENT
DEVELOPMENT
(CTEIP).
146 0604942D8Z ASSESSMENTS AND 30,834 30,834
EVALUATIONS.
147 0605001E MISSION SUPPORT 68,498 68,498
148 0605100D8Z JOINT MISSION 83,091 89,091
ENVIRONMENT
TEST
CAPABILITY
(JMETC).
.............. Cyber range [6,000]
development.
149 0605104D8Z TECHNICAL 18,079 13,079
STUDIES,
SUPPORT AND
ANALYSIS.
.............. Program [-5,000]
reduction.
150 0605126J JOINT 70,038 70,038
INTEGRATED AIR
AND MISSILE
DEFENSE
ORGANIZATION
(JIAMDO).
152 0605142D8Z SYSTEMS 37,140 32,140
ENGINEERING.
.............. Program [-5,000]
reduction.
153 0605151D8Z STUDIES AND 4,759 4,759
ANALYSIS
SUPPORT--OSD.
154 0605161D8Z NUCLEAR MATTERS- 8,307 8,307
PHYSICAL
SECURITY.
155 0605170D8Z SUPPORT TO 9,441 9,441
NETWORKS AND
INFORMATION
INTEGRATION.
156 0605200D8Z GENERAL SUPPORT 1,700 1,700
TO USD
(INTELLIGENCE).
157 0605384BP CHEMICAL AND 110,363 110,363
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
PROGRAM.
166 0605790D8Z SMALL BUSINESS 3,568 3,568
INNOVATION
RESEARCH
(SBIR)/ SMALL
BUSINESS
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSFER.
167 0605797D8Z MAINTAINING 19,936 19,936
TECHNOLOGY
ADVANTAGE.
168 0605798D8Z DEFENSE 16,875 16,875
TECHNOLOGY
ANALYSIS.
169 0605801KA DEFENSE 57,716 57,716
TECHNICAL
INFORMATION
CENTER (DTIC).
170 0605803SE R&D IN SUPPORT 34,448 34,448
OF DOD
ENLISTMENT,
TESTING AND
EVALUATION.
171 0605804D8Z DEVELOPMENT 22,203 22,203
TEST AND
EVALUATION.
172 0605898E MANAGEMENT HQ-- 13,208 13,208
R&D.
173 0605998KA MANAGEMENT HQ-- 3,027 3,027
DEFENSE
TECHNICAL
INFORMATION
CENTER (DTIC).
174 0606100D8Z BUDGET AND 8,017 8,017
PROGRAM
ASSESSMENTS.
175 0606225D8Z ODNA TECHNOLOGY 3,194 3,194
AND RESOURCE
ANALYSIS.
176 0606589D8W DEFENSE DIGITAL 1,000 6,000
SERVICE (DDS)
DEVELOPMENT
SUPPORT.
.............. Increase... [5,000]
179 0203345D8Z DEFENSE 3,037 3,037
OPERATIONS
SECURITY
INITIATIVE
(DOSI).
180 0204571J JOINT STAFF 9,216 9,216
ANALYTICAL
SUPPORT.
183 0303166J SUPPORT TO 553 553
INFORMATION
OPERATIONS
(IO)
CAPABILITIES.
184 0303260D8Z DEFENSE 1,014 1,014
MILITARY
DECEPTION
PROGRAM OFFICE
(DMDPO).
185 0305172K COMBINED 58,667 58,667
ADVANCED
APPLICATIONS.
187 0305245D8Z INTELLIGENCE 21,081 21,081
CAPABILITIES
AND INNOVATION
INVESTMENTS.
189 0307588D8Z ALGORITHMIC 221,235 221,235
WARFARE CROSS
FUNCTIONAL
TEAMS.
191 0804768J COCOM EXERCISE 40,073 40,073
ENGAGEMENT AND
TRAINING
TRANSFORMATION
(CE2T2)--NON-
MHA.
192 0808709SE DEFENSE EQUAL 100 100
OPPORTUNITY
MANAGEMENT
INSTITUTE
(DEOMI).
193 0901598C MANAGEMENT HQ-- 27,065 27,065
MDA.
194 0903235K JOINT SERVICE 3,090 3,090
PROVIDER (JSP).
999 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 51,471 51,471
PROGRAMS.
.............. SUBTOTAL 1,354,628 1,355,628
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
.............. OPERATIONAL
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT
195 0604130V ENTERPRISE 7,945 7,945
SECURITY
SYSTEM (ESS).
196 0604532K JOINT 208,834 208,834
ARTIFICIAL
INTELLIGENCE.
197 0605127T REGIONAL 1,947 1,947
INTERNATIONAL
OUTREACH (RIO)
AND
PARTNERSHIP
FOR PEACE
INFORMATION
MANA.
198 0605147T OVERSEAS 310 310
HUMANITARIAN
ASSISTANCE
SHARED
INFORMATION
SYSTEM
(OHASIS).
199 0607210D8Z INDUSTRIAL BASE 10,051 48,551
ANALYSIS AND
SUSTAINMENT
SUPPORT.
.............. Advanced [5,000]
systems
manufacturi
ng.
.............. Composite [15,000]
manufacturi
ng
technologie
s.
.............. Printed [15,000]
circuit
boards.
.............. Rare earth [3,500]
element
production.
200 0607310D8Z CWMD SYSTEMS: 12,734 12,734
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
201 0607327T GLOBAL THEATER 14,800 14,800
SECURITY
COOPERATION
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS (G-
TSCMIS).
202 0607384BP CHEMICAL AND 54,023 54,023
BIOLOGICAL
DEFENSE
(OPERATIONAL
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT).
203 0208043J PLANNING AND 4,537 4,537
DECISION AID
SYSTEM (PDAS).
204 0208045K C4I 64,122 64,122
INTEROPERABILI
TY.
210 0302019K DEFENSE INFO 15,798 15,798
INFRASTRUCTURE
ENGINEERING
AND
INTEGRATION.
211 0303126K LONG-HAUL 11,166 11,166
COMMUNICATIONS
-DCS.
212 0303131K MINIMUM 17,383 17,383
ESSENTIAL
EMERGENCY
COMMUNICATIONS
NETWORK
(MEECN).
214 0303136G KEY MANAGEMENT 54,516 54,516
INFRASTRUCTURE
(KMI).
215 0303140D8Z INFORMATION 67,631 67,631
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
216 0303140G INFORMATION 289,080 287,198
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
.............. Sharkseer [-1,882]
transfer.
217 0303140K INFORMATION 42,796 44,678
SYSTEMS
SECURITY
PROGRAM.
.............. Sharkseer [1,882]
transfer.
218 0303150K GLOBAL COMMAND 25,218 25,218
AND CONTROL
SYSTEM.
219 0303153K DEFENSE 21,698 21,698
SPECTRUM
ORGANIZATION.
220 0303228K JOINT REGIONAL 18,077 18,077
SECURITY
STACKS (JRSS).
222 0303430K FEDERAL 44,001 44,001
INVESTIGATIVE
SERVICES
INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY.
228 0305128V SECURITY AND 2,400 17,400
INVESTIGATIVE
ACTIVITIES.
.............. Local [15,000]
criminal
records
access.
232 0305186D8Z POLICY R&D 6,301 6,301
PROGRAMS.
233 0305199D8Z NET CENTRICITY. 21,384 21,384
235 0305208BB DISTRIBUTED 6,359 6,359
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
238 0305208K DISTRIBUTED 2,981 2,981
COMMON GROUND/
SURFACE
SYSTEMS.
241 0305327V INSIDER THREAT. 1,964 1,964
242 0305387D8Z HOMELAND 2,221 2,221
DEFENSE
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSFER
PROGRAM.
250 0708012K LOGISTICS 1,361 1,361
SUPPORT
ACTIVITIES.
251 0708012S PACIFIC 1,770 1,770
DISASTER
CENTERS.
252 0708047S DEFENSE 3,679 3,679
PROPERTY
ACCOUNTABILITY
SYSTEM.
254 1105219BB MQ-9 UAV....... 20,697 20,697
256 1160403BB AVIATION 245,795 254,595
SYSTEMS.
.............. UPL Future [8,800]
vertical
lift.
257 1160405BB INTELLIGENCE 15,484 15,484
SYSTEMS
DEVELOPMENT.
258 1160408BB OPERATIONAL 166,922 166,922
ENHANCEMENTS.
259 1160431BB WARRIOR SYSTEMS 62,332 62,332
260 1160432BB SPECIAL 21,805 21,805
PROGRAMS.
261 1160434BB UNMANNED ISR... 37,377 37,377
262 1160480BB SOF TACTICAL 11,150 11,150
VEHICLES.
263 1160483BB MARITIME 72,626 72,626
SYSTEMS.
264 1160489BB GLOBAL VIDEO 5,363 5,363
SURVEILLANCE
ACTIVITIES.
265 1160490BB OPERATIONAL 12,962 12,962
ENHANCEMENTS
INTELLIGENCE.
266 1203610K TELEPORT 6,158 6,158
PROGRAM.
300 0604011D8Z NEXT GENERATION 0 25,000
INFORMATION
COMMUNICATIONS
TECHNOLOGY
(5G).
.............. DOD [25,000]
Spectrum
Sharing
program.
999 9999999999 CLASSIFIED 4,116,640 4,542,640
PROGRAMS.
.............. Transfer [426,000]
back to
base
funding.
.............. SUBTOTAL 5,832,398 6,345,698
OPERATIONAL
SYSTEM
DEVELOPMENT.
..............
.............. TOTAL RESEARCH, 24,346,953 25,060,253
DEVELOPMENT,
TEST & EVAL,
DW.
..............
.............. OPERATIONAL
TEST & EVAL,
DEFENSE
.............. MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT
1 0605118OTE OPERATIONAL 93,291 93,291
TEST AND
EVALUATION.
2 0605131OTE LIVE FIRE TEST 69,172 69,172
AND EVALUATION.
3 0605814OTE OPERATIONAL 58,737 58,737
TEST
ACTIVITIES AND
ANALYSES.
.............. SUBTOTAL 221,200 221,200
MANAGEMENT
SUPPORT.
..............
.............. TOTAL 221,200 221,200
OPERATIONAL
TEST & EVAL,
DEFENSE.
..............
.............. TOTAL RDT&E.... 102,647,545 104,023,113
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 2020 Senate
Line Program Element Item Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.................................. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
EVAL, ARMY
.................................. ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
74 0603327A AIR AND MISSILE DEFENSE SYSTEMS 500 500
ENGINEERING.
79 0603747A SOLDIER SUPPORT AND SURVIVABILITY. 3,000 3,000
85 0603804A LOGISTICS AND ENGINEER EQUIPMENT-- 1,085 1,085
ADV DEV.
95 0604117A MANEUVER--SHORT RANGE AIR DEFENSE 6,000 6,000
(M-SHORAD).
97 0604119A ARMY ADVANCED COMPONENT 4,529 4,529
DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPING.
105 0604785A INTEGRATED BASE DEFENSE (BUDGET 2,000 2,000
ACTIVITY 4).
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT 17,114 17,114
DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPES.
..................................
.................................. SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & DEMONSTRATION
151 0605035A COMMON INFRARED COUNTERMEASURES 11,770 11,770
(CIRCM).
159 0605051A AIRCRAFT SURVIVABILITY DEVELOPMENT 77,420 77,420
163 0605203A ARMY SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & 19,527 19,527
DEMONSTRATION.
174 0304270A ELECTRONIC WARFARE DEVELOPMENT.... 3,200 3,200
.................................. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & 111,917 111,917
DEMONSTRATION.
..................................
.................................. RDT&E MANAGEMENT SUPPORT
200 0606003A COUNTERINTEL AND HUMAN INTEL 1,875 1,875
MODERNIZATION.
.................................. SUBTOTAL RDT&E MANAGEMENT SUPPORT. 1,875 1,875
..................................
.................................. OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
238 0303028A SECURITY AND INTELLIGENCE 22,904 22,904
ACTIVITIES.
246 0305204A TACTICAL UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES. 34,100 34,100
247 0305206A AIRBORNE RECONNAISSANCE SYSTEMS... 14,000 14,000
252 0307665A BIOMETRICS ENABLED INTELLIGENCE... 2,214 2,214
.................................. SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS 73,218 73,218
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST 204,124 204,124
& EVAL, ARMY.
..................................
.................................. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
EVAL, NAVY
.................................. ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
28 0603207N AIR/OCEAN TACTICAL APPLICATIONS... 2,400 2,400
38 0603527N RETRACT LARCH..................... 22,000 22,000
57 0603654N JOINT SERVICE EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE 14,178 14,178
DEVELOPMENT.
69 0603795N LAND ATTACK TECHNOLOGY............ 1,428 1,428
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT 40,006 40,006
DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPES.
..................................
.................................. SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & DEMONSTRATION
143 0604755N SHIP SELF DEFENSE (DETECT & 1,122 1,122
CONTROL).
.................................. SUBTOTAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT & 1,122 1,122
DEMONSTRATION.
..................................
.................................. OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
228 0206313M MARINE CORPS COMMUNICATIONS 15,000 15,000
SYSTEMS.
999 9999999999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............... 108,282 108,282
.................................. SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS 123,282 123,282
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST 164,410 164,410
& EVAL, NAVY.
..................................
.................................. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
EVAL, AF
.................................. ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT &
PROTOTYPES
48 0604858F TECH TRANSITION PROGRAM........... 26,450 26,450
72 1206857F SPACE RAPID CAPABILITIES OFFICE... 17,885 17,885
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT 44,335 44,335
DEVELOPMENT & PROTOTYPES.
..................................
.................................. OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS DEVELOPMENT
177 0205671F JOINT COUNTER RCIED ELECTRONIC 4,000 4,000
WARFARE.
217 0208288F INTEL DATA APPLICATIONS........... 1,200 1,200
999 9999999999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............... 400,713 78,713
.................................. Transfer back to base funding. [-322,000]
.................................. SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS 405,913 83,913
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST 450,248 128,248
& EVAL, AF.
..................................
.................................. RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST &
EVAL, DW
.................................. APPLIED RESEARCH
10 0602134BR COUNTER IMPROVISED-THREAT ADVANCED 1,677 1,677
STUDIES.
.................................. SUBTOTAL APPLIED RESEARCH......... 1,677 1,677
..................................
.................................. ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
25 0603122D8Z COMBATING TERRORISM TECHNOLOGY 25,230 25,230
SUPPORT.
27 0603134BR COUNTER IMPROVISED-THREAT 49,528 49,528
SIMULATION.
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY 74,758 74,758
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. ADVANCED COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT AND
PROTOTYPES
94 0604134BR COUNTER IMPROVISED-THREAT 113,590 113,590
DEMONSTRATION, PROTOTYPE
DEVELOPMENT, AND TESTING.
.................................. SUBTOTAL ADVANCED COMPONENT 113,590 113,590
DEVELOPMENT AND PROTOTYPES.
..................................
.................................. OPERATIONAL SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT
258 1160408BB OPERATIONAL ENHANCEMENTS.......... 726 726
259 1160431BB WARRIOR SYSTEMS................... 6,000 6,000
261 1160434BB UNMANNED ISR...................... 5,000 5,000
999 9999999999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS............... 626,199 200,199
.................................. Transfer back to base funding. [-426,000]
.................................. SUBTOTAL OPERATIONAL SYSTEM 637,925 211,925
DEVELOPMENT.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST 827,950 401,950
& EVAL, DW.
..................................
.................................. TOTAL RDT&E....................... 1,646,732 898,732
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLIII--OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE
SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4301. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2020 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS....................................................... 0 1,735,922
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [1,735,922]
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............................................. 0 127,815
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [127,815]
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................... 0 716,356
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [716,356]
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................................................. 0 890,891
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [890,891]
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................... 0 1,232,477
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [1,232,477]
060 AVIATION ASSETS...................................................... 0 1,355,606
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [1,355,606]
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................... 408,031 3,882,315
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [3,474,284]
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................ 417,069 446,269
UPL MDTF INDOPACOM............................................... [29,200]
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................ 0 1,633,327
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [1,633,327]
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............................................. 0 7,951,473
Historical underexecution........................................ [-46,000]
Revised MHPI cost share.......................................... [-50,460]
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [8,047,933]
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 4,326,840 4,326,840
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS.............................. 405,612 405,612
160 US AFRICA COMMAND.................................................... 251,511 251,511
170 US EUROPEAN COMMAND.................................................. 146,358 154,158
JIOCEUR JAC Molesworth........................................... [7,800]
180 US SOUTHERN COMMAND.................................................. 191,840 191,840
190 US FORCES KOREA...................................................... 57,603 57,603
200 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS......................... 423,156 423,156
210 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSECURITY................................. 551,185 551,185
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 7,179,205 26,334,356
MOBILIZATION
220 STRATEGIC MOBILITY................................................... 380,577 380,577
230 ARMY PREPOSITIONED STOCKS............................................ 362,942 362,942
240 INDUSTRIAL PREPAREDNESS.............................................. 4,637 4,637
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION................................................ 748,156 748,156
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
250 OFFICER ACQUISITION.................................................. 157,175 157,175
260 RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................... 55,739 55,739
270 ONE STATION UNIT TRAINING............................................ 62,300 62,300
280 SENIOR RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS............................... 538,357 538,357
290 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 969,813 969,813
300 FLIGHT TRAINING...................................................... 1,234,049 1,234,049
310 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 218,338 218,338
320 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 554,659 554,659
330 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 716,056 636,056
Unjustified growth for advertising............................... [-70,000]
Unjustified growth for recruiting................................ [-10,000]
340 EXAMINING............................................................ 185,034 185,034
350 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................... 214,275 214,275
360 CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...................................... 147,647 147,647
370 JUNIOR RESERVE OFFICER TRAINING CORPS................................ 173,812 173,812
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 5,227,254 5,147,254
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
390 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 559,229 559,229
400 CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES............................................ 929,944 929,944
410 LOGISTIC SUPPORT ACTIVITIES.......................................... 629,981 629,981
420 AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT................................................ 458,771 458,771
430 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 428,768 428,768
440 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 1,512,736 1,512,736
450 MANPOWER MANAGEMENT.................................................. 272,738 272,738
460 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.............................................. 391,869 363,869
Historical underexecution........................................ [-28,000]
470 OTHER SERVICE SUPPORT................................................ 1,901,165 1,901,165
480 ARMY CLAIMS ACTIVITIES............................................... 198,765 183,765
Historical underexecution........................................ [-15,000]
490 REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............................................... 226,248 226,248
500 FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND AUDIT READINESS............................. 315,489 315,489
510 INTERNATIONAL MILITARY HEADQUARTERS.................................. 427,254 427,254
520 MISC. SUPPORT OF OTHER NATIONS....................................... 43,248 43,248
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 1,347,053 1,347,053
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES.................................. 9,643,258 9,600,258
UNDISTRIBUTED
999 UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................ 0 103,800
Cyber operations-peculiar capability development projects........ [3,000]
Single family home pilot program................................. [1,000]
THAAD sustainment program transfer from MDA...................... [99,800]
SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED............................................... 0 103,800
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY.................................. 22,797,873 41,933,824
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES
OPERATING FORCES
010 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............................................. 0 11,927
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [11,927]
020 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................... 0 533,015
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [533,015]
030 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................................................. 0 119,517
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [119,517]
040 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................... 0 550,468
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [550,468]
050 AVIATION ASSETS...................................................... 0 86,670
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [86,670]
060 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................... 390,061 390,061
070 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................ 101,890 101,890
080 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................ 0 48,503
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [48,503]
090 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............................................. 0 598,907
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [598,907]
100 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 444,376 444,376
110 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS.............................. 22,095 22,095
120 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS......................... 3,288 3,288
130 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSECURITY................................. 7,655 7,655
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 969,365 2,918,372
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
140 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 14,533 14,533
150 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 17,231 17,231
160 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 14,304 14,304
170 MANPOWER MANAGEMENT.................................................. 6,129 6,129
180 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 58,541 58,541
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 110,738 110,738
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES.............................. 1,080,103 3,029,110
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS....................................................... 0 805,671
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [805,671]
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............................................. 0 195,334
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [195,334]
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................... 0 771,048
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [771,048]
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................................................. 0 94,726
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [94,726]
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................... 0 33,696
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [33,696]
060 AVIATION ASSETS...................................................... 0 981,819
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [981,819]
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................... 743,206 743,206
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................ 50,963 50,963
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................ 0 258,278
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [258,278]
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............................................. 0 1,153,076
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [1,153,076]
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 1,113,475 1,120,675
Damage assessment................................................ [7,200]
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS.............................. 1,001,042 1,001,042
130 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS......................... 8,448 8,448
140 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSECURITY................................. 7,768 7,768
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 2,924,902 7,225,750
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
150 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 9,890 9,890
160 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 71,070 71,070
170 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 68,213 68,213
180 MANPOWER MANAGEMENT.................................................. 8,628 8,628
190 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.............................................. 250,376 247,376
Unjustified growth for marketing................................. [-1,500]
Unjustified growth for recruiting................................ [-1,500]
200 REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............................................... 2,676 2,676
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 410,853 407,853
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG.................................. 3,335,755 7,633,603
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.................................. 0 2,877,800
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [2,877,800]
020 FLEET AIR TRAINING................................................... 2,284,828 2,284,828
030 AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA & ENGINEERING SERVICES....................... 0 59,299
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [59,299]
040 AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT.................................... 155,896 155,896
050 AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT.................................................. 719,107 719,107
060 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................... 0 1,154,181
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [1,154,181]
070 AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.................................... 60,402 60,402
080 AVIATION LOGISTICS................................................... 1,241,421 1,241,421
090 MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.................................... 0 4,097,262
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [4,097,262]
100 SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING................................... 1,031,792 1,031,792
110 SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............................................... 0 8,875,298
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [8,061,298]
UPL SSN and Ship maintenance increase............................ [814,000]
120 SHIP DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT........................................ 0 2,073,641
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [2,073,641]
130 COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE......................... 1,378,856 1,378,856
140 SPACE SYSTEMS AND SURVEILLANCE....................................... 276,245 276,245
150 WARFARE TACTICS...................................................... 675,209 675,209
160 OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY............................. 389,516 389,516
170 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................................................ 1,536,310 1,536,310
180 EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE AND DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT................... 161,579 161,579
190 COMBATANT COMMANDERS CORE OPERATIONS................................. 59,521 59,521
200 COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION SUPPORT.......................... 93,978 98,978
Posture site assessments INDOPACOM............................... [5,000]
210 MILITARY INFORMATION SUPPORT OPERATIONS.............................. 8,641 8,641
220 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 496,385 496,385
230 FLEET BALLISTIC MISSILE.............................................. 1,423,339 1,423,339
240 WEAPONS MAINTENANCE.................................................. 924,069 924,069
250 OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT......................................... 540,210 540,210
260 ENTERPRISE INFORMATION............................................... 1,131,627 1,131,627
270 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................... 3,029,634 3,029,634
280 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 0 4,433,783
Revised MHPI cost share.......................................... [18,840]
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [4,414,943]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 17,618,565 41,194,829
MOBILIZATION
290 SHIP PREPOSITIONING AND SURGE........................................ 942,902 942,902
300 READY RESERVE FORCE.................................................. 352,044 352,044
310 SHIP ACTIVATIONS/INACTIVATIONS....................................... 427,555 427,555
320 EXPEDITIONARY HEALTH SERVICES SYSTEMS................................ 137,597 137,597
330 COAST GUARD SUPPORT.................................................. 24,604 24,604
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION................................................ 1,884,702 1,884,702
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
340 OFFICER ACQUISITION.................................................. 150,765 150,765
350 RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................... 11,584 11,584
360 RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS...................................... 159,133 159,133
370 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 911,316 911,316
380 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 185,211 185,211
390 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 267,224 267,224
400 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 209,252 189,252
Unjustified growth............................................... [-20,000]
410 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................... 88,902 88,902
420 CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...................................... 67,492 67,492
430 JUNIOR ROTC.......................................................... 55,164 55,164
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 2,106,043 2,086,043
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
440 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 1,143,358 1,092,358
Decrease......................................................... [-1,000]
Unjustified audit growth......................................... [-50,000]
450 CIVILIAN MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................... 178,342 178,342
460 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................... 418,413 418,413
490 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 157,465 157,465
510 PLANNING, ENGINEERING, AND PROGRAM SUPPORT........................... 485,397 490,397
REPO............................................................. [5,000]
520 ACQUISITION, LOGISTICS, AND OVERSIGHT................................ 654,137 654,137
530 INVESTIGATIVE AND SECURITY SERVICES.................................. 718,061 718,061
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 588,235 591,535
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [3,300]
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 4,343,408 4,300,708
UNDISTRIBUTED
999 UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................ 0 3,000
Cyber operations-peculiar capability development projects........ [3,000]
SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED............................................... 0 3,000
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY.................................. 25,952,718 49,469,282
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATIONAL FORCES................................................... 0 968,224
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [968,224]
020 FIELD LOGISTICS...................................................... 1,278,533 1,278,533
030 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................... 0 232,991
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [232,991]
040 MARITIME PREPOSITIONING.............................................. 0 100,396
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [100,396]
050 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 203,580 203,580
060 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION............................. 1,115,742 1,559,034
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [443,292]
070 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 0 2,253,776
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [2,253,776]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 2,597,855 6,596,534
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
080 RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................... 21,240 21,240
090 OFFICER ACQUISITION.................................................. 1,168 1,168
100 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 106,601 106,601
110 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 49,095 49,095
120 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 407,315 407,315
130 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 210,475 210,475
140 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................... 42,810 42,810
150 JUNIOR ROTC.......................................................... 25,183 25,183
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 863,887 863,887
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
160 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 29,894 29,894
170 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 384,352 384,352
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 52,057 52,057
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 466,303 466,303
UNDISTRIBUTED
999 UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................ 0 3,000
Cyber operations-peculiar capability development................. [3,000]
SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED............................................... 0 3,000
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS.......................... 3,928,045 7,929,724
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.................................. 0 654,220
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [654,220]
020 INTERMEDIATE MAINTENANCE............................................. 8,767 8,767
030 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................... 0 108,236
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [108,236]
040 AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.................................... 463 463
050 AVIATION LOGISTICS................................................... 26,014 26,014
060 SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING................................... 583 583
070 COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS................................................ 17,883 17,883
080 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................................................ 128,079 128,079
090 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 356 356
100 ENTERPRISE INFORMATION............................................... 26,133 26,133
110 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................... 35,397 35,397
120 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 0 101,376
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [101,376]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 243,675 1,107,507
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
130 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 1,888 1,888
140 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................... 12,778 12,778
150 ACQUISITION AND PROGRAM MANAGEMENT................................... 2,943 2,943
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 17,609 17,609
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES.............................. 261,284 1,125,116
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATING FORCES..................................................... 0 106,484
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [106,484]
020 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................... 0 18,429
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [18,429]
030 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................... 47,516 47,516
040 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 0 106,073
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [106,073]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 47,516 278,502
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
050 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 13,574 13,574
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 13,574 13,574
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE............................ 61,090 292,076
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................................................ 729,127 729,127
020 COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES............................................ 1,318,770 1,318,770
030 AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING (OJT, MAINTAIN SKILLS)....................... 1,486,790 1,486,790
040 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................................. 0 3,334,792
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [3,334,792]
050 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 3,675,824 4,142,435
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [466,611]
060 CYBERSPACE SUSTAINMENT............................................... 0 228,811
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [228,811]
070 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................... 0 8,329,364
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [8,329,364]
080 FLYING HOUR PROGRAM.................................................. 0 4,048,773
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [4,048,773]
090 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 0 7,191,582
Revised MHPI cost share.......................................... [-32,400]
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [7,223,982]
100 GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING......................................... 964,553 964,553
110 OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS........................................ 1,032,307 1,032,307
120 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 670,076 670,076
140 LAUNCH FACILITIES.................................................... 179,980 179,980
150 SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS................................................ 467,990 467,990
160 US NORTHCOM/NORAD.................................................... 184,655 184,655
170 US STRATCOM.......................................................... 478,357 478,357
180 US CYBERCOM.......................................................... 323,121 347,921
Accelerate development Cyber National Mission Force capabilities. [1,500]
Cyber National Mission Force Mobile & Modular Hunt Forward Kit... [5,300]
ETERNALDARKNESS.................................................. [18,000]
190 US CENTCOM........................................................... 160,989 160,989
200 US SOCOM............................................................. 6,225 6,225
210 US TRANSCOM.......................................................... 544 544
220 CENTCOM CYBERSPACE SUSTAINMENT....................................... 2,073 2,073
230 USSPACECOM........................................................... 70,588 70,588
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 1,322,944 1,322,944
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 13,074,913 36,699,646
MOBILIZATION
240 AIRLIFT OPERATIONS................................................... 1,158,142 1,158,142
250 MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS............................................ 138,672 138,672
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION................................................ 1,296,814 1,296,814
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
260 OFFICER ACQUISITION.................................................. 130,835 130,835
270 RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................... 26,021 26,021
280 RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CORPS (ROTC)............................... 121,391 121,391
290 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 454,539 454,539
300 FLIGHT TRAINING...................................................... 600,565 600,565
310 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 282,788 282,788
320 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 123,988 123,988
330 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 167,731 161,731
Unjustified growth............................................... [-6,000]
340 EXAMINING............................................................ 4,576 4,576
350 OFF-DUTY AND VOLUNTARY EDUCATION..................................... 211,911 211,911
360 CIVILIAN EDUCATION AND TRAINING...................................... 219,021 219,021
370 JUNIOR ROTC.......................................................... 62,092 62,092
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 2,405,458 2,399,458
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
380 LOGISTICS OPERATIONS................................................. 664,926 664,926
390 TECHNICAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES......................................... 101,483 101,483
400 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 892,480 892,480
410 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 152,532 152,532
420 OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES......................................... 1,254,089 1,254,089
430 CIVIL AIR PATROL..................................................... 30,070 30,070
460 INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT................................................ 136,110 136,110
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 1,269,624 1,269,624
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 4,501,314 4,501,314
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, SPACE FORCE
OPERATING FORCES
010 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 72,436 72,436
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 72,436 72,436
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, SPACE FORCE........................... 72,436 72,436
UNDISTRIBUTED
999 UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................ 0 3,000
Cyber operations-peculiar capability development projects........ [3,000]
SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED............................................... 0 3,000
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE............................. 21,278,499 44,900,232
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................................................ 1,781,413 1,781,413
020 MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........................................... 209,650 209,650
030 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................................. 0 494,235
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [494,235]
040 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 128,746 128,746
050 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................... 0 256,512
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [256,512]
060 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 0 414,626
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [414,626]
070 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 1,673 1,673
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 2,121,482 3,286,855
ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES
080 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 69,436 69,436
090 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 22,124 22,124
100 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERS MGMT (ARPC)............................... 10,946 10,946
110 OTHER PERS SUPPORT (DISABILITY COMP)................................. 7,009 7,009
120 AUDIOVISUAL.......................................................... 448 448
SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES................... 109,963 109,963
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE............................ 2,231,445 3,396,818
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG
OPERATING FORCES
010 AIRCRAFT OPERATIONS.................................................. 2,497,967 2,497,967
020 MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........................................... 600,377 600,377
030 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................................. 0 879,467
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [879,467]
040 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 400,734 400,734
050 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................... 0 1,299,089
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [1,299,089]
060 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 0 911,775
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [911,775]
070 CYBERSPACE SUSTAINMENT............................................... 0 24,742
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [24,742]
080 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 25,507 25,507
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 3,524,585 6,639,658
ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES
090 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 47,215 47,215
100 RECRUITING AND ADVERTISING........................................... 40,356 40,356
SUBTOTAL ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE-WIDE ACTIVITIES.................. 87,571 87,571
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG................................... 3,612,156 6,727,229
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
OPERATING FORCES
010 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF................................................ 409,542 409,542
020 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF--CE2T2......................................... 579,179 579,179
030 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF--CYBER......................................... 24,598 24,598
040 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND COMBAT DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES............. 1,075,762 1,075,762
050 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES..................... 14,409 14,409
060 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND INTELLIGENCE.............................. 501,747 501,747
070 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND MAINTENANCE............................... 559,300 559,300
080 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND MANAGEMENT/OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS....... 177,928 177,928
090 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND OPERATIONAL SUPPORT....................... 925,262 925,262
100 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND THEATER FORCES............................ 2,764,738 2,764,738
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 7,032,465 7,032,465
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
120 DEFENSE ACQUISITION UNIVERSITY....................................... 180,250 180,250
130 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF................................................ 100,610 100,610
140 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 33,967 33,967
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 314,827 314,827
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
160 CIVIL MILITARY PROGRAMS.............................................. 165,707 195,007
IRT Increase..................................................... [14,300]
Starbase......................................................... [15,000]
180 DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY........................................ 627,467 627,467
190 DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY--CYBER................................. 3,362 3,362
200 DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY................................... 1,438,068 1,438,068
210 DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY--CYBER............................ 24,391 24,391
220 DEFENSE HUMAN RESOURCES ACTIVITY..................................... 892,438 892,438
230 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY................................... 2,012,885 2,007,885
MilCloud......................................................... [-5,000]
240 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY--CYBER............................ 601,223 636,360
Sharkseer transfer............................................... [35,137]
270 DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY........................................ 34,632 34,632
280 DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY............................................. 415,699 415,699
290 DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY............................................... 202,792 202,792
300 DEFENSE PERSONNEL ACCOUNTING AGENCY.................................. 144,881 144,881
310 DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION AGENCY.................................. 696,884 696,884
Assessment, monitoring, and evaluation........................... [11,000]
Security cooperation account..................................... [-11,000]
320 DEFENSE SECURITY SERVICE............................................. 889,664 899,664
Consolidated Adjudication Facility............................... [10,000]
340 DEFENSE SECURITY SERVICE--CYBER...................................... 9,220 9,220
360 DEFENSE TECHNICAL INFORMATION CENTER................................. 3,000 3,000
370 DEFENSE TECHNOLOGY SECURITY ADMINISTRATION........................... 35,626 35,626
380 DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY...................................... 568,133 568,133
400 DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY--CYBER............................... 13,339 13,339
410 DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EDUCATION ACTIVITY............................. 2,932,226 2,982,226
Impact aid for children with severe disabilities................. [10,000]
Impact aid for schools with military dependent students.......... [40,000]
420 MISSILE DEFENSE AGENCY............................................... 522,529 422,729
THAAD program transfer to Army................................... [-99,800]
450 OFFICE OF ECONOMIC ADJUSTMENT........................................ 59,513 59,513
460 OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE................................... 1,604,738 1,678,738
Bien Hoa dioxin cleanup.......................................... [15,000]
CDC study........................................................ [10,000]
Emerging contaminants............................................ [1,000]
Industrial policy implementation of EO13806...................... [15,000]
Interstate compacts for licensure and credentialing.............. [4,000]
National Commission on Military Aviation Safety.................. [3,000]
National Commission on Military, National, and Public Service.... [1,000]
Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration............... [25,000]
470 OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE--CYBER............................ 48,783 48,783
480 SPACE DEVELOPMENT AGENCY............................................. 44,750 44,750
500 WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS SERVICES..................................... 324,001 329,001
Defense Digital Service Hires.................................... [5,000]
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 15,736,098 15,781,461
Sharkseer transfer............................................... [-35,137]
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [80,500]
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES.................................. 30,052,049 30,196,049
TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE........................ 37,399,341 37,543,341
MISCELLANEOUS APPROPRIATIONS
US COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES, DEFENSE
010 US COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES, DEFENSE.................... 14,771 14,771
SUBTOTAL US COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ARMED FORCES, DEFENSE........... 14,771 14,771
OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER AND CIVIC AID
010 OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER AND CIVIC AID........................ 108,600 108,600
SUBTOTAL OVERSEAS HUMANITARIAN, DISASTER AND CIVIC AID............... 108,600 108,600
COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION
010 COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION......................................... 338,700 338,700
SUBTOTAL COOPERATIVE THREAT REDUCTION................................ 338,700 338,700
ACQ WORKFORCE DEV FD
010 ACQ WORKFORCE DEV FD................................................. 400,000 400,000
SUBTOTAL ACQ WORKFORCE DEV FD........................................ 400,000 400,000
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY
050 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY...................................... 207,518 207,518
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, ARMY............................. 207,518 207,518
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY
060 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY...................................... 335,932 335,932
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, NAVY............................. 335,932 335,932
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE
070 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE................................. 302,744 302,744
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, AIR FORCE........................ 302,744 302,744
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE
080 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE................................... 9,105 9,105
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION, DEFENSE.......................... 9,105 9,105
ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION FORMERLY USED SITES
090 ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION FORMERLY USED SITES........................ 216,499 216,499
SUBTOTAL ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATION FORMERLY USED SITES............... 216,499 216,499
TOTAL MISCELLANEOUS APPROPRIATIONS................................... 1,933,869 1,933,869
UNDISTRIBUTED
UNDISTRIBUTED
999 UNDISTRIBUTED........................................................ 0 -590,000
Foreign currency fluctuation fund reduction...................... [-607,000]
JROTC............................................................ [25,000]
Printing inefficiencies.......................................... [-8,000]
SUBTOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED............................................... 0 -590,000
TOTAL UNDISTRIBUTED.................................................. 0 -590,000
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE........................................ 123,944,614 205,396,660
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4302. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY
OPERATIONS.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4302. OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2020 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS....................................................... 3,146,796 1,410,874
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-1,735,922]
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............................................. 127,815 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-127,815]
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................... 742,858 26,502
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-716,356]
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................................................. 3,165,381 2,274,490
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-890,891]
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................... 1,368,765 136,288
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-1,232,477]
060 AVIATION ASSETS...................................................... 1,655,846 300,240
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-1,355,606]
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................... 6,889,293 3,415,009
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-3,474,284]
080 LAND FORCES SYSTEMS READINESS........................................ 29,985 29,985
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................ 1,720,258 86,931
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-1,633,327]
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............................................. 8,163,639 115,706
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-8,047,933]
110 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 72,657 72,657
130 ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES................................................ 6,397,586 6,397,586
140 COMMANDER'S EMERGENCY RESPONSE PROGRAM............................... 5,000 5,000
150 RESET................................................................ 1,048,896 1,048,896
160 US AFRICA COMMAND.................................................... 203,174 203,174
170 US EUROPEAN COMMAND.................................................. 173,676 173,676
200 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSPACE OPERATIONS......................... 188,529 188,529
210 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES--CYBERSECURITY................................. 5,682 5,682
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 35,105,836 15,891,225
MOBILIZATION
230 ARMY PREPOSITIONED STOCKS............................................ 131,954 131,954
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION................................................ 131,954 131,954
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
390 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 721,014 721,014
400 CENTRAL SUPPLY ACTIVITIES............................................ 66,845 66,845
410 LOGISTIC SUPPORT ACTIVITIES.......................................... 9,309 9,309
420 AMMUNITION MANAGEMENT................................................ 23,653 23,653
460 OTHER PERSONNEL SUPPORT.............................................. 109,019 109,019
490 REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT............................................... 251,355 251,355
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 1,568,564 1,568,564
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES.................................. 2,749,759 2,749,759
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY.................................. 37,987,549 18,772,938
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES
OPERATING FORCES
010 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............................................. 11,927 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-11,927]
020 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................... 553,455 20,440
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-533,015]
030 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................................................. 119,517 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-119,517]
040 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................... 550,468 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-550,468]
050 AVIATION ASSETS...................................................... 86,670 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-86,670]
060 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................... 689 689
080 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................ 48,503 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-48,503]
090 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............................................. 615,370 16,463
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-598,907]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 1,986,599 37,592
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARMY RES.............................. 1,986,599 37,592
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG
OPERATING FORCES
010 MANEUVER UNITS....................................................... 851,567 45,896
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-805,671]
020 MODULAR SUPPORT BRIGADES............................................. 195,514 180
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-195,334]
030 ECHELONS ABOVE BRIGADE............................................... 774,030 2,982
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-771,048]
040 THEATER LEVEL ASSETS................................................. 95,274 548
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-94,726]
050 LAND FORCES OPERATIONS SUPPORT....................................... 33,696 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-33,696]
060 AVIATION ASSETS...................................................... 991,048 9,229
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-981,819]
070 FORCE READINESS OPERATIONS SUPPORT................................... 1,584 1,584
090 LAND FORCES DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................ 258,278 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-258,278]
100 BASE OPERATIONS SUPPORT.............................................. 1,175,139 22,063
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-1,153,076]
120 MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONAL HEADQUARTERS.............................. 606 606
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 4,376,736 83,088
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
170 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 203 203
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 203 203
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ARNG.................................. 4,376,939 83,291
AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES FUND
AFGHAN NATIONAL ARMY
090 SUSTAINMENT.......................................................... 1,313,047 1,313,047
100 INFRASTRUCTURE....................................................... 37,152 37,152
110 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION......................................... 120,868 120,868
120 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS.............................................. 118,591 118,591
SUBTOTAL AFGHAN NATIONAL ARMY........................................ 1,589,658 1,589,658
AFGHAN NATIONAL POLICE
130 SUSTAINMENT.......................................................... 422,806 422,806
140 INFRASTRUCTURE....................................................... 2,358 2,358
150 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION......................................... 127,081 127,081
160 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS.............................................. 108,112 108,112
SUBTOTAL AFGHAN NATIONAL POLICE...................................... 660,357 660,357
AFGHAN AIR FORCE
170 SUSTAINMENT.......................................................... 893,829 893,829
180 INFRASTRUCTURE....................................................... 8,611 8,611
190 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION......................................... 566,967 566,967
200 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS.............................................. 356,108 356,108
SUBTOTAL AFGHAN AIR FORCE............................................ 1,825,515 1,825,515
AFGHAN SPECIAL SECURITY FORCES
210 SUSTAINMENT.......................................................... 437,909 437,909
220 INFRASTRUCTURE....................................................... 21,131 21,131
230 EQUIPMENT AND TRANSPORTATION......................................... 153,806 153,806
240 TRAINING AND OPERATIONS.............................................. 115,602 115,602
SUBTOTAL AFGHAN SPECIAL SECURITY FORCES.............................. 728,448 728,448
TOTAL AFGHANISTAN SECURITY FORCES FUND............................... 4,803,978 4,803,978
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.................................. 5,682,156 2,804,356
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-2,877,800]
030 AVIATION TECHNICAL DATA & ENGINEERING SERVICES....................... 60,115 816
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-59,299]
040 AIR OPERATIONS AND SAFETY SUPPORT.................................... 9,582 9,582
050 AIR SYSTEMS SUPPORT.................................................. 197,262 197,262
060 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................... 1,322,427 168,246
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-1,154,181]
070 AIRCRAFT DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT.................................... 3,594 3,594
080 AVIATION LOGISTICS................................................... 10,618 10,618
090 MISSION AND OTHER SHIP OPERATIONS.................................... 5,582,370 1,485,108
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-4,097,262]
100 SHIP OPERATIONS SUPPORT & TRAINING................................... 20,334 20,334
110 SHIP DEPOT MAINTENANCE............................................... 10,426,913 2,365,615
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-8,061,298]
120 SHIP DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT........................................ 2,073,641 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-2,073,641]
130 COMBAT COMMUNICATIONS AND ELECTRONIC WARFARE......................... 58,092 58,092
140 SPACE SYSTEMS AND SURVEILLANCE....................................... 18,000 18,000
150 WARFARE TACTICS...................................................... 16,984 16,984
160 OPERATIONAL METEOROLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY............................. 29,382 29,382
170 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................................................ 608,870 608,870
180 EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE AND DEPOT OPERATIONS SUPPORT................... 7,799 7,799
200 COMBATANT COMMANDERS DIRECT MISSION SUPPORT.......................... 24,800 24,800
220 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 363 363
240 WEAPONS MAINTENANCE.................................................. 486,188 486,188
250 OTHER WEAPON SYSTEMS SUPPORT......................................... 12,189 12,189
270 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION AND MODERNIZATION........................... 68,667 68,667
280 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 4,634,042 219,099
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-4,414,943]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 31,354,388 8,615,964
MOBILIZATION
320 EXPEDITIONARY HEALTH SERVICES SYSTEMS................................ 17,580 17,580
330 COAST GUARD SUPPORT.................................................. 190,000 190,000
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION................................................ 207,580 207,580
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
370 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 52,161 52,161
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 52,161 52,161
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
440 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 8,475 8,475
460 MILITARY MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT........................... 7,653 7,653
490 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 70,683 70,683
520 ACQUISITION, LOGISTICS, AND OVERSIGHT................................ 11,130 11,130
530 INVESTIGATIVE AND SECURITY SERVICES.................................. 1,559 1,559
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 21,054 17,754
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-3,300]
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 120,554 117,254
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY.................................. 31,734,683 8,992,959
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATIONAL FORCES................................................... 1,682,877 714,653
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-968,224]
020 FIELD LOGISTICS...................................................... 232,508 232,508
030 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................... 287,092 54,101
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-232,991]
040 MARITIME PREPOSITIONING.............................................. 100,396 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-100,396]
050 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 2,000 2,000
060 SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION............................. 443,292 340,000
Disaster recovery increase....................................... [340,000]
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-443,292]
070 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 2,278,346 24,570
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-2,253,776]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 5,026,511 1,367,832
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
120 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 30,459 30,459
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 30,459 30,459
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
160 SERVICEWIDE TRANSPORTATION........................................... 61,400 61,400
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 5,100 5,100
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 66,500 66,500
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MARINE CORPS.......................... 5,123,470 1,464,791
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES
OPERATING FORCES
010 MISSION AND OTHER FLIGHT OPERATIONS.................................. 654,220 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-654,220]
020 INTERMEDIATE MAINTENANCE............................................. 510 510
030 AIRCRAFT DEPOT MAINTENANCE........................................... 119,864 11,628
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-108,236]
080 COMBAT SUPPORT FORCES................................................ 10,898 10,898
120 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 101,376 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-101,376]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 886,868 23,036
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, NAVY RES.............................. 886,868 23,036
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
010 OPERATING FORCES..................................................... 114,111 7,627
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-106,484]
020 DEPOT MAINTENANCE.................................................... 18,429 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-18,429]
040 BASE OPERATING SUPPORT............................................... 107,153 1,080
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-106,073]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 239,693 8,707
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, MC RESERVE............................ 239,693 8,707
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE
OPERATING FORCES
010 PRIMARY COMBAT FORCES................................................ 163,632 163,632
020 COMBAT ENHANCEMENT FORCES............................................ 1,049,170 1,049,170
030 AIR OPERATIONS TRAINING (OJT, MAINTAIN SKILLS)....................... 111,808 111,808
040 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................................. 3,743,491 408,699
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-3,334,792]
050 FACILITIES SUSTAINMENT, RESTORATION & MODERNIZATION.................. 613,875 487,264
Disaster recovery increase....................................... [340,000]
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-466,611]
060 CYBERSPACE SUSTAINMENT............................................... 238,872 10,061
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-228,811]
070 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................... 9,282,958 953,594
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-8,329,364]
080 FLYING HOUR PROGRAM.................................................. 6,544,039 2,495,266
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-4,048,773]
090 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 8,762,102 1,538,120
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-7,223,982]
100 GLOBAL C3I AND EARLY WARNING......................................... 13,863 13,863
110 OTHER COMBAT OPS SPT PROGRAMS........................................ 272,020 272,020
120 CYBERSPACE ACTIVITIES................................................ 17,657 17,657
130 TACTICAL INTEL AND OTHER SPECIAL ACTIVITIES.......................... 36,098 36,098
140 LAUNCH FACILITIES.................................................... 391 391
150 SPACE CONTROL SYSTEMS................................................ 39,990 39,990
160 US NORTHCOM/NORAD.................................................... 725 725
170 US STRATCOM.......................................................... 926 926
180 US CYBERCOM.......................................................... 35,189 35,189
190 US CENTCOM........................................................... 163,015 163,015
200 US SOCOM............................................................. 19,000 19,000
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 31,108,821 7,816,488
MOBILIZATION
240 AIRLIFT OPERATIONS................................................... 1,271,439 1,271,439
250 MOBILIZATION PREPAREDNESS............................................ 109,682 109,682
SUBTOTAL MOBILIZATION................................................ 1,381,121 1,381,121
TRAINING AND RECRUITING
260 OFFICER ACQUISITION.................................................. 200 200
270 RECRUIT TRAINING..................................................... 352 352
290 SPECIALIZED SKILL TRAINING........................................... 26,802 26,802
300 FLIGHT TRAINING...................................................... 844 844
310 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATION................................... 1,199 1,199
320 TRAINING SUPPORT..................................................... 1,320 1,320
SUBTOTAL TRAINING AND RECRUITING..................................... 30,717 30,717
ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES
380 LOGISTICS OPERATIONS................................................. 164,701 164,701
390 TECHNICAL SUPPORT ACTIVITIES......................................... 11,608 11,608
400 ADMINISTRATION....................................................... 4,814 4,814
410 SERVICEWIDE COMMUNICATIONS........................................... 145,204 145,204
420 OTHER SERVICEWIDE ACTIVITIES......................................... 98,841 98,841
460 INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT................................................ 29,890 29,890
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 52,995 52,995
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWD ACTIVITIES.................................... 508,053 508,053
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AIR FORCE............................. 33,028,712 9,736,379
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE
OPERATING FORCES
030 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................................. 518,423 24,188
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-494,235]
050 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................... 256,512 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-256,512]
060 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 420,196 5,570
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-414,626]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 1,195,131 29,758
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, AF RESERVE............................ 1,195,131 29,758
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG
OPERATING FORCES
020 MISSION SUPPORT OPERATIONS........................................... 3,666 3,666
030 DEPOT PURCHASE EQUIPMENT MAINTENANCE................................. 946,411 66,944
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-879,467]
050 CONTRACTOR LOGISTICS SUPPORT AND SYSTEM SUPPORT...................... 1,392,709 93,620
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-1,299,089]
060 BASE SUPPORT......................................................... 924,454 12,679
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-911,775]
070 CYBERSPACE SUSTAINMENT............................................... 24,742 0
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-24,742]
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 3,291,982 176,909
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE, ANG................................... 3,291,982 176,909
OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE
OPERATING FORCES
010 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF................................................ 21,866 21,866
020 JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF--CE2T2......................................... 6,634 6,634
040 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND COMBAT DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES............. 1,121,580 1,121,580
060 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND INTELLIGENCE.............................. 1,328,201 1,328,201
070 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND MAINTENANCE............................... 399,845 399,845
090 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND OPERATIONAL SUPPORT....................... 138,458 138,458
100 SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND THEATER FORCES............................ 808,729 808,729
SUBTOTAL OPERATING FORCES............................................ 3,825,313 3,825,313
ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES
180 DEFENSE CONTRACT AUDIT AGENCY........................................ 1,810 1,810
200 DEFENSE CONTRACT MANAGEMENT AGENCY................................... 21,723 21,723
230 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY................................... 81,133 81,133
240 DEFENSE INFORMATION SYSTEMS AGENCY--CYBER............................ 3,455 3,455
270 DEFENSE LEGAL SERVICES AGENCY........................................ 196,124 196,124
290 DEFENSE MEDIA ACTIVITY............................................... 14,377 14,377
310 DEFENSE SECURITY COOPERATION AGENCY.................................. 1,927,217 1,977,217
Security cooperation account, unjustified growth................. [-100,000]
Transfer from CTEF Iraq.......................................... [100,000]
Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative........................... [50,000]
380 DEFENSE THREAT REDUCTION AGENCY...................................... 317,558 317,558
410 DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EDUCATION ACTIVITY............................. 31,620 31,620
460 OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE................................... 16,666 16,666
500 WASHINGTON HEADQUARTERS SERVICES..................................... 6,331 6,331
9999 CLASSIFIED PROGRAMS.................................................. 2,005,285 1,924,785
Transfer back to base funding.................................... [-80,500]
SUBTOTAL ADMIN & SRVWIDE ACTIVITIES.................................. 4,623,299 4,592,799
TOTAL OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE, DEFENSE-WIDE........................ 8,448,612 8,418,112
TOTAL OPERATION & MAINTENANCE........................................ 133,104,216 52,548,450
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLIV--MILITARY PERSONNEL
SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4401. MILITARY PERSONNEL (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2020 Senate
Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY PERSONNEL
MILITARY PERSONNEL APPROPRIATIONS
MILITARY PERSONNEL APPROPRIATIONS..... 143,476,503 142,557,523
Historical under execution....... [-918,980]
SUBTOTAL MILITARY PERSONNEL 143,476,503 142,557,523
APPROPRIATIONS.......................
MEDICARE-ELIGIBLE RETIREE HEALTH FUND
CONTRIBUTIONS
MEDICARE-ELIGIBLE RETIREE HEALTH FUND 7,816,815 7,816,815
CONTRIBUTIONS........................
SUBTOTAL MEDICARE-ELIGIBLE RETIREE 7,816,815 7,816,815
HEALTH FUND CONTRIBUTIONS............
TOTAL MILITARY PERSONNEL.............. 151,293,318 150,374,338
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4402. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4402. MILITARY PERSONNEL FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In
Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2020 Senate
Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY PERSONNEL
MILITARY PERSONNEL APPROPRIATIONS
MILITARY PERSONNEL APPROPRIATIONS..... 4,485,808 4,485,808
SUBTOTAL MILITARY PERSONNEL 4,485,808 4,485,808
APPROPRIATIONS.......................
TOTAL MILITARY PERSONNEL.............. 4,485,808 4,485,808
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLV--OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS
SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4501. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2020 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
WORKING CAPITAL FUND
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY
010 INDUSTRIAL OPERATIONS.......... 57,467 57,467
020 SUPPLY MANAGEMENT--ARMY........ 32,130 32,130
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 89,597 89,597
ARMY..........................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, AIR FORCE
020 SUPPLIES AND MATERIALS......... 92,499 102,499
Energy optimization [10,000]
initiatives................
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 92,499 102,499
AIR FORCE.....................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DEFENSE-
WIDE
010 SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT--DEF... 49,085 49,085
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 49,085 49,085
DEFENSE-WIDE..................
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DECA
010 WORKING CAPITAL FUND, DECA..... 995,030 995,030
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 995,030 995,030
DECA..........................
WCF, DEF COUNTERINTELLIGENCE &
SECURITY AGENCY
010 DEFENSE COUNTERINTELLIGENCE AND 200,000 200,000
SECURITY AGENCY...............
SUBTOTAL WCF, DEF 200,000 200,000
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE & SECURITY
AGENCY........................
TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND..... 1,426,211 1,436,211
CHEM AGENTS & MUNITIONS
DESTRUCTION
CHEM AGENTS & MUNITIONS
DESTRUCTION
1 OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE...... 107,351 107,351
2 RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, TEST, 875,930 875,930
AND EVALUATION................
3 PROCUREMENT.................... 2,218 2,218
SUBTOTAL CHEM AGENTS & 985,499 985,499
MUNITIONS DESTRUCTION.........
TOTAL CHEM AGENTS & MUNITIONS 985,499 985,499
DESTRUCTION...................
DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG
ACTIVITIES, DEF
DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER
DRUG ACTIVITIES
010 COUNTER-NARCOTICS SUPPORT...... 581,739 581,739
SUBTOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION AND 581,739 581,739
COUNTER DRUG ACTIVITIES.......
DRUG DEMAND REDUCTION PROGRAM
020 DRUG DEMAND REDUCTION PROGRAM.. 120,922 120,922
SUBTOTAL DRUG DEMAND REDUCTION 120,922 120,922
PROGRAM.......................
NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER-DRUG
PROGRAM
030 NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER-DRUG 91,370 91,370
PROGRAM.......................
SUBTOTAL NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER- 91,370 91,370
DRUG PROGRAM..................
NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER-DRUG
SCHOOLS
040 NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER-DRUG 5,371 5,371
SCHOOLS.......................
SUBTOTAL NATIONAL GUARD COUNTER- 5,371 5,371
DRUG SCHOOLS..................
TOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR- 799,402 799,402
DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEF..........
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
010 OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE...... 359,022 359,022
020 OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE-- 1,179 1,179
CYBER.........................
030 RDT&E.......................... 2,965 2,965
040 PROCUREMENT.................... 333 333
SUBTOTAL OFFICE OF THE 363,499 363,499
INSPECTOR GENERAL.............
TOTAL OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR 363,499 363,499
GENERAL.......................
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE
010 IN-HOUSE CARE.................. 9,570,615 9,570,615
020 PRIVATE SECTOR CARE............ 15,041,006 15,052,006
Contraceptive cost-sharing. [11,000]
030 CONSOLIDATED HEALTH SUPPORT.... 1,975,536 1,975,536
040 INFORMATION MANAGEMENT......... 2,004,588 2,004,588
050 MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES.......... 333,246 333,246
060 EDUCATION AND TRAINING......... 793,810 793,810
070 BASE OPERATIONS/COMMUNICATIONS. 2,093,289 2,093,289
SUBTOTAL OPERATION & 31,812,090 31,823,090
MAINTENANCE...................
RDT&E
080 R&D RESEARCH................... 12,621 12,621
090 R&D EXPLORATRY DEVELOPMENT..... 84,266 84,266
100 R&D ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT....... 279,766 279,766
110 R&D DEMONSTRATION/VALIDATION... 128,055 128,055
120 R&D ENGINEERING DEVELOPMENT.... 143,527 143,527
130 R&D MANAGEMENT AND SUPPORT..... 67,219 67,219
140 R&D CAPABILITIES ENHANCEMENT... 16,819 16,819
SUBTOTAL RDT&E................. 732,273 732,273
PROCUREMENT
150 PROC INITIAL OUTFITTING........ 26,135 26,135
160 PROC REPLACEMENT & 225,774 225,774
MODERNIZATION.................
170 PROC JOINT OPERATIONAL MEDICINE 314 314
INFORMATION SYSTEM............
180 PROC MILITARY HEALTH SYSTEM-- 73,010 73,010
DESKTOP TO DATACENTER.........
190 PROC DOD HEALTHCARE MANAGEMENT 129,091 129,091
SYSTEM MODERNIZATION..........
SUBTOTAL PROCUREMENT........... 454,324 454,324
TOTAL DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM... 32,998,687 33,009,687
TOTAL OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS..... 36,573,298 36,594,298
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4502. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4502. OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In
Thousands of Dollars)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2020 Senate
Line Item Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
WORKING CAPITAL FUND
WORKING CAPITAL FUND, ARMY
020 SUPPLY MANAGEMENT--ARMY........ 20,100 20,100
SUBTOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND, 20,100 20,100
ARMY..........................
TOTAL WORKING CAPITAL FUND..... 20,100 20,100
DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR-DRUG
ACTIVITIES, DEF
DRUG INTERDICTION AND COUNTER
DRUG ACTIVITIES
010 COUNTER-NARCOTICS SUPPORT...... 163,596 163,596
SUBTOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION AND 163,596 163,596
COUNTER DRUG ACTIVITIES.......
TOTAL DRUG INTERDICTION & CTR- 163,596 163,596
DRUG ACTIVITIES, DEF..........
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL
010 OPERATION & MAINTENANCE........ 24,254 24,254
SUBTOTAL OFFICE OF THE 24,254 24,254
INSPECTOR GENERAL.............
TOTAL OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR 24,254 24,254
GENERAL.......................
DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM
OPERATION & MAINTENANCE
010 IN-HOUSE CARE.................. 57,459 57,459
020 PRIVATE SECTOR CARE............ 287,487 287,487
030 CONSOLIDATED HEALTH SUPPORT.... 2,800 2,800
SUBTOTAL OPERATION & 347,746 347,746
MAINTENANCE...................
TOTAL DEFENSE HEALTH PROGRAM... 347,746 347,746
COUNTER ISIS TRAIN AND EQUIP
FUND (CTEF)
COUNTER ISIS TRAIN AND EQUIP
FUND (CTEF)
010 IRAQ........................... 745,000 645,000
Transfer to DSCA Security [-100,000]
Cooperation................
020 SYRIA.......................... 300,000 300,000
SUBTOTAL COUNTER ISIS TRAIN AND 1,045,000 945,000
EQUIP FUND (CTEF).............
TOTAL COUNTER ISIS TRAIN AND 1,045,000 945,000
EQUIP FUND (CTEF).............
TOTAL OTHER AUTHORIZATIONS..... 1,600,696 1,500,696
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE XLVI--MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4601. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State/Country and FY 2020 Senate
Account Installation Project Title Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
ARMY
Alabama
Army Redstone Arsenal Aircraft and Flight 38,000 38,000
Equipment Building.
Colorado
Army Fort Carson Company Operations 71,000 71,000
Facility.
Georgia
Army Fort Gordon Cyber Instructional Fac 107,000 67,000
(Admin/Command).
Army Hunter Army Airfield Aircraft Maintenance 62,000 62,000
Hangar.
Hawaii
Army Fort Shafter Command and Control 60,000 60,000
Facility, Incr 5.
Honduras
Army Soto Cano AB Aircraft Maintenance 34,000 34,000
Hangar.
Japan
Army Kadena Air Base Vehicle Maintenance Shop. 0 15,000
Kentucky
Army Fort Campbell General Purpose 51,000 51,000
Maintenance Shop.
Army Fort Campbell Automated Infantry 7,100 7,100
Platoon Battle Course.
Army Fort Campbell Easements................ 3,200 3,200
Massachusetts
Army Soldier Systems Center Human Engineering Lab.... 50,000 50,000
Natick
Michigan
Army Detroit Arsenal Substation............... 24,000 24,000
New York
Army Fort Drum Railhead................. 0 21,000
Army Fort Drum Unmanned Aerial Vehicle 23,000 23,000
Hangar.
North Carolina
Army Fort Bragg Dining Facility.......... 12,500 12,500
Oklahoma
Army Fort Sill Adv Individual Training 73,000 73,000
Barracks Cplx, Ph2.
Pennsylvania
Army Carlisle Barracks General Instruction 98,000 98,000
Building.
South Carolina
Army Fort Jackson Reception Complex, Ph2... 54,000 54,000
Texas
Army Corpus Christi Army Powertrain Facility 86,000 86,000
Depot (Machine Shop).
Army Fort Hood Vehicle Bridge........... 0 18,500
Army Fort Hood Barracks................. 32,000 32,000
Virginia
Army Fort Belvoir Secure Operations and 60,000 60,000
Admin Facility.
Army Joint Base Langley- Adv Individual Training 55,000 55,000
Eustis Barracks Cplx, Ph4.
Washington
Army Joint Base Lewis- Information Systems 46,000 46,000
McChord Facility.
Worldwide Unspecified
Army Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 70,600 70,600
Locations Construction.
Army Unspecified Worldwide Host Nation Support...... 31,000 31,000
Locations
Army Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 94,099 94,099
Locations
Army Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Worldwide 211,000 0
Locations Construction.
........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY 1,453,499 1,256,999
......................
NAVY
Arizona
Navy MCAS Yuma Bachelor Enlisted 0 99,600
Quarters--2+2
Replacement.
Navy Yuma Hangar 95 Renovation & 90,160 90,160
Addition.
Australia
Navy Darwin Aircraft Parking Apron... 0 50,000
Bahrain Island
Navy SW Asia Electrical System Upgrade 53,360 53,360
California
Navy Camp Pendleton I MEF Consolidated 113,869 23,000
Information Center.
Navy Camp Pendleton 62 Area Mess Hall and 71,700 71,700
Consolidated Warehouse.
Navy China Lake Runway & Taxiway 64,500 64,500
Extension.
Navy Coronado Aircraft Paint Complex... 0 79,000
Navy Coronado Aircraft Paint Complex... 79,100 79,100
Navy Coronado Navy V-22 Hangar......... 86,830 86,830
Navy MCAS Miramar Child Development Center. 0 37,400
Navy MCRD San Diego PMO Facility Replacement. 0 9,900
Navy San Diego Pier 8 Replacement (Inc). 59,353 59,353
Navy Seal Beach Missile Magazines........ 0 28,000
Navy Seal Beach Ammunition Pier.......... 95,310 95,310
Navy Travis AFB Alert Force Complex...... 64,000 64,000
Connecticut
Navy New London SSN Berthing Pier 32..... 72,260 72,260
District of Columbia
Navy Naval Observatory Master Time Clocks & 75,600 75,600
Operations Fac (Inc).
Florida
Navy Jacksonville Targeting & Surveillance 32,420 32,420
Syst Prod Supp Fac.
Navy MCSF Blount Island Police Station and EOC 0 18,700
Facility Replacement.
Guam
Navy Joint Region Marianas Machine Gun Range (Inc).. 91,287 91,287
Navy Joint Region Marianas Bachelor Enlisted 164,100 20,000
Quarters H.
Navy Joint Region Marianas EOD Compound Facilities.. 61,900 61,900
Hawaii
Navy Kaneohe Bay Bachelor Enlisted 134,050 39,000
Quarters.
Navy West Loch Magazine Consolidation, 53,790 53,790
Phase 1.
Italy
Navy Sigonella Communications Station... 77,400 77,400
Japan
Navy Iwakuni VTOL Pad--South.......... 15,870 15,870
Navy Yokosuka Pier 5 (Berths 2 and 3).. 174,692 110,000
North Carolina
Navy Camp Lejeune 2nd Radio BN Complex, 25,650 25,650
Phase 2 (Inc).
Navy Camp Lejeune ACV-AAV Maintenance 11,570 11,570
Facility Upgrades.
Navy Camp Lejeune 10th Marines Himars 35,110 35,110
Complex.
Navy Camp Lejeune II MEF Operations Center 122,200 122,200
Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune 2nd MARDIV/2nd MLG Ops 60,130 60,130
Center Replacement.
Navy MCAS Cherry Point Slocum Road Physical 0 52,300
Security Compliance.
Navy MCAS Cherry Point Aircraft Maintenance 73,970 73,970
Hangar (Inc).
Navy MCAS Cherry Point F-35 Training and 53,230 53,230
Simulator Facility.
Navy MCAS Cherry Point ATC Tower & Airfield 61,340 61,340
Operations.
Navy MCAS Cherry Point Flightline Utility 51,860 51,860
Modernization (Inc).
Navy New River CH-53K Cargo Loading 11,320 11,320
Trainer.
South Carolina
Navy MCRD Parris Island Range Safety Improvements 0 37,200
and Modernization Phase
III, Chosin Range.
Utah
Navy Hill AFB D5 Missile Motor Receipt/ 50,520 50,520
Storage Fac (Inc).
Virginia
Navy Portsmouth Dry Dock Flood Protection 48,930 48,930
Improvements.
Navy Quantico Wargaming Center......... 143,350 10,000
Navy Yorktown Nmc Ordnance Facilities 0 59,000
Recapitalization, Phase
1.
Washington
Navy Bremerton Dry Dock 4 & Pier 3 51,010 51,010
Modernization.
Navy Keyport Undersea Vehicle 25,050 25,050
Maintenance Facility.
Navy Kitsap Seawolf Service Pier Cost- 0 48,000
to-Complete.
Worldwide Unspecified
Navy Unspecified Family Housing Mitigation 0 59,600
and Oversight.
Navy Unspecified Planning and Design...... 0 20,400
Navy Unspecified Planning and Design...... 0 8,000
Navy Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 81,237 81,237
Locations Construction.
Navy Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 167,715 167,715
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL NAVY 2,805,743 2,884,782
......................
AIR FORCE
Alaska
Air Force Eielson AFB F-35 AME Storage Facility 8,600 8,600
Arkansas
Air Force Little Rock AFB C-130H/J Fuselage Trainer 47,000 47,000
Facility.
Australia
Air Force Tindal APR-RAAF Tindal/Bulk 59,000 59,000
Storage Tanks.
Air Force Tindal APR--RAAF Tindal/Earth 11,600 11,600
Covered Magazine.
California
Air Force Travis AFB MMHS Allied Support...... 0 17,000
Air Force Travis AFB KC-46A Alter B181/B185/ 6,600 6,600
B187 Squad Ops/AMU.
Air Force Travis AFB KC-46A Regional 19,500 19,500
Maintenance Training
Facility.
Colorado
Air Force Peterson AFB SOCNORTH Theater 0 54,000
Operational Support
Facility.
Air Force Schriever AFB Consolidated Space 148,000 23,000
Operations Facility.
Cyprus
Air Force RAF Akrotiri New Dormitory for 1 ERS.. 27,000 27,000
Guam
Air Force Joint Region Marianas Munitions Storage Igloos 65,000 65,000
III.
Illinois
Air Force Scott AFB Joint Operations & 100,000 90,000
Mission Planning Center.
Japan
Air Force Kadena Air Base Munitions Storage........ 0 7,000
Air Force Misawa Air Base Fuel Infrastructure 0 5,300
Resiliency.
Air Force Yokota AB Fuel Receipt & 12,400 12,400
Distribution Upgrade.
Jordan
Air Force Azraq Air Traffic Control Tower 24,000 24,000
Air Force Azraq Munitions Storage Area... 42,000 42,000
Mariana Islands
Air Force Tinian Fuel Tanks W/ Pipeline/ 109,000 10,000
Hydrant System.
Air Force Tinian Airfield Development 109,000 10,000
Phase 1.
Air Force Tinian Parking Apron............ 98,000 98,000
Maryland
Air Force Joint Base Andrews Presidential Aircraft 86,000 86,000
Recap Complex Inc 3.
Massachusetts
Air Force Hanscom AFB MIT-Lincoln Lab (West Lab 135,000 65,000
CSL/MIF) Inc 2.
Missouri
Air Force Whiteman AFB Consolidated Vehicle Ops 0 27,000
and MX Facility.
Montana
Air Force Malmstrom AFB Weapons Storage and 235,000 16,000
Maintenance Facility.
Nevada
Air Force Nellis AFB 365th ISR Group Facility. 57,000 57,000
Air Force Nellis AFB F-35A Munitions Assembly 8,200 8,200
Conveyor Facility.
New Mexico
Air Force Holloman AFB NC3 Support Wrm Storage/ 0 20,000
Shipping Facility.
Air Force Kirtland AFB Combat Rescue Helicopter 15,500 15,500
Simulator (CRH) ADAL.
Air Force Kirtland AFB UH-1 Replacement Facility 22,400 22,400
North Dakota
Air Force Minot AFB Helo/TRFOps/AMUFacility.. 5,500 5,500
Ohio
Air Force Wright-Patterson AFB ADAL Intelligence Prod. 120,900 74,000
Complex (NASIC) Inc 2.
Texas
Air Force Joint Base San Antonio BMT Recruit Dormitory 8.. 110,000 17,000
Air Force Joint Base San Antonio Aquatics Tank............ 69,000 69,000
Air Force Joint Base San Antonio T-XA DAL Ground Based 9,300 9,300
Trng Sys (GBTS) Sim.
Air Force Joint Base San Antonio T-XMX Trng Sys 19,000 19,000
Centrailized Trng Fac.
United Kingdom
Air Force Royal Air Force F-35A PGM Facility....... 14,300 14,300
Lakenheath
Utah
Air Force Hill AFB GBSD Mission Integration 108,000 18,000
Facility.
Air Force Hill AFB Joint Advanced Tactical 6,500 6,500
Missile Storage Fac.
Washington
Air Force Fairchild AFB Consolidated TFI Base 31,000 31,000
Operations.
Worldwide Unspecified
Air Force Unspecified Conus Military Family Housing 0 31,200
Civilian Personnel.
Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Cost to Complete......... 0 190,000
Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 0 40,000
Air Force Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 142,148 142,148
Locations
Air Force Various Worldwide Unspecified Minor 79,682 79,682
Locations Construction.
Wyoming
Air Force F. E. Warren AFB Consolidated Helo/TRF Ops/ 18,100 18,100
AMU and Alert Fac.
........................
SUBTOTAL AIR FORCE 2,179,230 1,718,830
......................
DEFENSE-WIDE
California
Defense-Wide Beale AFB Hydrant Fuel System 33,700 33,700
Replacement.
Defense-Wide Camp Pendleton Ambul Care Center/Dental 17,700 17,700
Clinic Replacement.
Defense-Wide Mountain View--63 RSC Install Microgrid 0 9,700
Controller, 750 Kw PV,
and 750 Kwh Battery
Storage.
Defense-Wide NAWS China Lake Energy Storage System.... 0 8,950
Defense-Wide NSA Monterey Cogeneration Plant at 0 10,540
B236.
Conus Classified
Defense-Wide Classified Location Battalion Complex, Ph 3.. 82,200 82,200
Florida
Defense-Wide Eglin AFB SOF Combined Squadron Ops 16,500 16,500
Facility.
Defense-Wide Hurlburt Field SOF Maintenance Training 18,950 18,950
Facility.
Defense-Wide Hurlburt Field SOF AMU & Weapons Hangar. 72,923 72,923
Defense-Wide Hurlburt Field SOF Combined Squadron 16,513 16,513
Operations Facility.
Defense-Wide Key West SOF Watercraft 16,000 16,000
Maintenance Facility.
Germany
Defense-Wide Geilenkirchen AB Ambulatory Care Center/ 30,479 30,479
Dental Clinic.
Defense-Wide Ramstein Landstuhl Elementary 0 66,800
School.
Guam
Defense-Wide Joint Region Marianas Xray Wharf Refueling 19,200 19,200
Facility.
Defense-Wide NB Guam NSA Andersen Smart Grid 0 16,970
and ICS Infrastructure.
Hawaii
Defense-Wide Joint Base Pearl Install 500kw Covered 0 4,000
Harbor-hickam (JBPHH) Parking PV System &
Electric Vehicle
Charging Stations B479.
Defense-Wide Joint Base Pearl SOF Undersea Operational 67,700 67,700
Harbor-Hickam Training Facility.
Japan
Defense-Wide Yokosuka Kinnick High School Inc 2 130,386 10,000
Defense-Wide Yokota AB Pacific East District 20,106 20,106
Superintendent's Office.
Defense-Wide Yokota AB Bulk Storage Tanks PH1... 116,305 21,000
Louisiana
Defense-Wide JRB NAS New Orleans Distribution Switchgear.. 0 5,340
Maryland
Defense-Wide Bethesda Naval MEDCEN Addition/Altertion 96,900 96,900
Hospital Incr 3.
Defense-Wide Fort Detrick Medical Research 27,846 27,846
Acquisition Building.
Defense-Wide Fort Meade NSAW Recapitalize 426,000 426,000
Building #3 Inc 2.
Defense-Wide NSA Bethesda Chiller 3-9 Replacement.. 0 13,840
Defense-Wide South Potomac IH Water Project--CBIRF/ 0 18,460
IHEODTD/Housing.
Mississippi
Defense-Wide Columbus AFB Fuel Facilities 16,800 16,800
Replacement.
Missouri
Defense-Wide Fort Leonard Wood Hospital Replacement Incr 50,000 50,000
2.
Defense-Wide St Louis Next NGA West (N2W) 218,800 153,000
Complex Phase 2 Inc. 2.
New Mexico
Defense-Wide White Sands Missile Install Microgrid, 700kw 0 5,800
Range PV, 150 Kw Generator,
and Batteries.
North Carolina
Defense-Wide Camp Lejeune SOF Marine Raider 13,400 13,400
Regiment HQ.
Defense-Wide Fort Bragg SOF Human Platform-Force 43,000 43,000
Generation Facility.
Defense-Wide Fort Bragg SOF Assessment and 12,103 12,103
Selection Training
Complex.
Defense-Wide Fort Bragg SOF Operations Support 29,000 29,000
Bldg.
Oklahoma
Defense-Wide Tulsa IAP Fuels Storage Complex.... 18,900 18,900
Rhode Island
Defense-Wide Quonset State Airport Fuels Storage Complex 11,600 11,600
Replacement.
South Carolina
Defense-Wide Joint Base Charleston Medical Consolidated 33,300 33,300
Storage & Distrib Center.
South Dakota
Defense-Wide Ellsworth AFB Hydrant Fuel System 24,800 24,800
Replacement.
Texas
Defense-Wide Camp Swift Install Microgrid, 650 Kw 0 4,500
PV, & 500 Kw Generator.
Defense-Wide Fort Hood Install a Central Energy 0 16,500
Plant.
Virginia
Defense-Wide Dam Neck SOF Demolition Training 12,770 12,770
Compound Expansion.
Defense-Wide Def Distribution Depot Operations Center Phase 2 98,800 98,800
Richmond
Defense-Wide Joint Expeditionary SOF NSWG-10 Operations 32,600 32,600
Base Little Creek-- Support Facility.
Story
Defense-Wide Joint Expeditionary SOF NSWG2 JSOTF Ops 13,004 13,004
Base Little Creek-- Training Facility.
Story
Defense-Wide NRO Headquarters Irrigation System Upgrade 0 66
Defense-Wide Pentagon Backup Generator......... 8,670 8,670
Defense-Wide Pentagon Control Tower & Fire Day 20,132 20,132
Station.
Washington
Defense-Wide Joint Base Lewis- SOF 22 STS Operations 47,700 47,700
McChord Facility.
Defense-Wide Naval Base Kitsap Keyport Main Substation 0 23,670
Replacement.
Wisconsin
Defense-Wide Gen Mitchell IAP POL Facilities 25,900 25,900
Replacement.
Worldwide Classified
Defense-Wide Classified Location Mission Support Compound. 52,000 52,000
Worldwide Unspecified
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Defense Community 0 100,000
Infrastructure Program.
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 4,950 4,950
Locations Construction.
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 8,000 8,000
Locations Construction.
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 29,679 29,679
Locations
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 10,000 10,000
Locations Construction.
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 35,472 35,472
Locations
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 31,464 31,464
Locations Construction.
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Energy Resilience and 150,000 150,000
Locations Conserv. Invest. Prog..
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Contingency Construction. 10,000 10,000
Locations
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 3,000 3,000
Locations Construction.
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 14,400 14,400
Locations
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide ERCIP Design............. 10,000 10,000
Locations
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 3,228 3,228
Locations Construction.
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 15,000 15,000
Locations
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Exercise Related Minor 11,770 11,770
Locations Construction.
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 4,890 4,890
Locations
Defense-Wide Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 52,532 52,532
Locations
Defense-Wide Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 27,000 27,000
Locations
Defense-Wide Various Worldwide Unspecified Minor 16,736 16,736
Locations Construction.
Defense-Wide Various Worldwide Unspecified Minor 10,000 10,000
Locations Construction.
Defense-Wide Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 63,382 63,382
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL DEFENSE-WIDE 2,504,190 2,527,835
......................
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
Alabama
Army National Guard Anniston Enlisted Transient 0 34,000
Training Barracks.
Army National Guard Foley National Guard Readiness 12,000 12,000
Center.
California
Army National Guard Camp Roberts Automated Multipurpose 12,000 12,000
Machine Gun Range.
Idaho
Army National Guard Orchard Training Area Railroad Tracks.......... 29,000 29,000
Maryland
Army National Guard Havre de Grace Combined Support 12,000 12,000
Maintenance Shop.
Massachusetts
Army National Guard Camp Edwards Automated Multipurpose 9,700 9,700
Machine Gun Range.
Minnesota
Army National Guard New Ulm National Guard Vehicle 11,200 11,200
Maintenance Shop.
Mississippi
Army National Guard Camp Shelby Automated Multipurpose 8,100 8,100
Machine Gun Range.
Missouri
Army National Guard Springfield National Guard Readiness 12,000 12,000
Center.
Nebraska
Army National Guard Bellevue National Guard Readiness 29,000 29,000
Center.
New Hampshire
Army National Guard Concord National Guard Readiness 5,950 5,950
Center.
New York
Army National Guard Jamaica Armory National Guard Readiness 0 20,000
Center.
Pennsylvania
Army National Guard Moon Township Combined Support 23,000 23,000
Maintenance Shop.
Vermont
Army National Guard Camp Ethan Allen General Instruction 0 30,000
Building (Mountain
Warfare School).
Washington
Army National Guard Richland National Guard Readiness 11,400 11,400
Center.
Worldwide Unspecified
Army National Guard Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 15,000 15,000
Locations Construction.
Army National Guard Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 20,469 20,469
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY NATIONAL GUARD 210,819 294,819
......................
AIR NATIONAL GUARD
California
Air National Guard Moffett Air National Fuels/Corrosion Control 0 57,000
Guard Base (NASA) Hangar and Shops.
Georgia
Air National Guard Savannah/Hilton Head Consolidated Joint Air 24,000 24,000
IAP Dominance Hangar/Shops.
Missouri
Air National Guard Rosecrans Memorial C-130 Flight Simulator 9,500 9,500
Airport Facility.
Puerto Rico
Air National Guard Luis Munoz-Marin IAP Communications Facility.. 12,500 12,500
Air National Guard Luis Munoz-Marin IAP Maintenance Hangar....... 37,500 37,500
Wisconsin
Air National Guard Truax Field F-35 Simulator Facility.. 14,000 14,000
Air National Guard Truax Field Fighter Alert Shelters... 20,000 20,000
Worldwide Unspecified
Air National Guard Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 31,471 31,471
Locations Construction.
Air National Guard Various Worldwide Planning and Design...... 17,000 17,000
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL AIR NATIONAL GUARD 165,971 222,971
......................
ARMY RESERVE
Delaware
Army Reserve Dover AFB Army Reserve Center/BMA.. 21,000 21,000
Wisconsin
Army Reserve Fort McCoy Transient Training 25,000 25,000
Barracks.
Worldwide Unspecified
Army Reserve Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 8,928 8,928
Locations Construction.
Army Reserve Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 6,000 6,000
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY RESERVE 60,928 60,928
......................
NAVY RESERVE
Louisiana
Navy Reserve New Orleans Entry Control Facility 25,260 25,260
Upgrades.
Worldwide Unspecified
Navy Reserve Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 24,915 24,915
Locations Construction.
Navy Reserve Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 4,780 4,780
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL NAVY RESERVE 54,955 54,955
......................
AIR FORCE RESERVE
Georgia
Air Force Reserve Robins AFB Consolidated Misssion 43,000 43,000
Complex Phase 3.
Minnesota
Air Force Reserve Minneapolis-St Paul Aerial Port Facility..... 0 9,800
IAP
Worldwide Unspecified
Air Force Reserve Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design...... 4,604 4,604
Locations
Air Force Reserve Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Minor 12,146 12,146
Locations Construction.
........................
SUBTOTAL AIR FORCE RESERVE 59,750 69,550
......................
NATO SECURITY INVESTMENT PROGRAM
Worldwide Unspecified
NATO Security Investment NATO Security NATO Security Investment 144,040 144,040
Program Investment Program Program.
........................
SUBTOTAL NATO SECURITY INVESTMENT PROGRAM 144,040 144,040
......................
TOTAL MILITARY CONSTRUCTION 9,639,125 9,235,709
......................
FAMILY HOUSING
CONSTRUCTION, ARMY
Germany
Construction, Army Baumholder Family Housing 29,983 29,983
Improvements.
Korea
Construction, Army Camp Humphreys Family Housing New 83,167 83,167
Construction Incr 4.
Pennsylvania
Construction, Army Tobyhanna Army Depot Family Housing 19,000 19,000
Replacement Construction.
Worldwide Unspecified
Construction, Army Unspecified Worldwide Family Housing P & D..... 9,222 9,222
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL CONSTRUCTION, ARMY 141,372 141,372
......................
O&M, ARMY
Worldwide Unspecified
O&M, Army Unspecified Worldwide Management............... 38,898 38,898
Locations
O&M, Army Unspecified Worldwide Services................. 10,156 10,156
Locations
O&M, Army Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 24,027 24,027
Locations
O&M, Army Unspecified Worldwide Miscellaneous............ 484 484
Locations
O&M, Army Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance.............. 81,065 81,065
Locations
O&M, Army Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 55,712 55,712
Locations
O&M, Army Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 128,938 128,938
Locations
O&M, Army Unspecified Worldwide Housing Privitization 18,627 83,627
Locations Support.
........................
SUBTOTAL O&M, ARMY 357,907 422,907
......................
CONSTRUCTION, NAVY AND MARINE CORPS
Worldwide Unspecified
Construction, Navy and Unspecified Worldwide USMC DPRI/GUAM PLANNING 2,000 2,000
Marine Corps Locations AND DESIGN.
Construction, Navy and Unspecified Worldwide Construction Improvements 41,798 41,798
Marine Corps Locations
Construction, Navy and Unspecified Worldwide Planning & Design........ 3,863 3,863
Marine Corps Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL CONSTRUCTION, NAVY AND MARINE CORPS 47,661 47,661
......................
O&M, NAVY AND MARINE CORPS
Worldwide Unspecified
O&M, Navy and Marine Corps Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 63,229 63,229
Locations
O&M, Navy and Marine Corps Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 19,009 19,009
Locations
O&M, Navy and Marine Corps Unspecified Worldwide Management............... 50,122 50,122
Locations
O&M, Navy and Marine Corps Unspecified Worldwide Miscellaneous............ 151 151
Locations
O&M, Navy and Marine Corps Unspecified Worldwide Services................. 16,647 16,647
Locations
O&M, Navy and Marine Corps Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 64,126 64,126
Locations
O&M, Navy and Marine Corps Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance.............. 82,611 82,611
Locations
O&M, Navy and Marine Corps Unspecified Worldwide Housing Privatization 21,975 102,975
Locations Support.
........................
SUBTOTAL O&M, NAVY AND MARINE CORPS 317,870 398,870
......................
CONSTRUCTION, AIR FORCE
Germany
Construction, Air Force Spangdahlem AB Construct Deficit 53,584 53,584
Military Family Housing.
Worldwide Unspecified
Construction, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Construction Improvements 46,638 46,638
Locations
Construction, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Planning & Design........ 3,409 3,409
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL CONSTRUCTION, AIR FORCE 103,631 103,631
......................
O&M, AIR FORCE
Worldwide Unspecified
O&M, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Housing Privatization.... 22,593 87,593
Locations
O&M, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 42,732 42,732
Locations
O&M, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Management............... 56,022 56,022
Locations
O&M, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Services................. 7,770 7,770
Locations
O&M, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 30,283 30,283
Locations
O&M, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Miscellaneous............ 2,144 2,144
Locations
O&M, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 15,768 15,768
Locations
O&M, Air Force Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance.............. 117,704 117,704
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL O&M, AIR FORCE 295,016 360,016
......................
O&M, DEFENSE-WIDE
Worldwide Unspecified
O&M, Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 4,100 4,100
Locations
O&M, Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 82 82
Locations
O&M, Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Utilities................ 13 13
Locations
O&M, Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 12,906 12,906
Locations
O&M, Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Maintenance.............. 32 32
Locations
O&M, Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Furnishings.............. 645 645
Locations
O&M, Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide Leasing.................. 39,222 39,222
Locations
........................
SUBTOTAL O&M, DEFENSE-WIDE 57,000 57,000
......................
IMPROVEMENT FUND
Worldwide Unspecified
Improvement Fund Unspecified Worldwide Administrative Expenses-- 3,045 3,045
Locations FHIF.
........................
SUBTOTAL IMPROVEMENT FUND 3,045 3,045
......................
UNACCMP HSG IMPROVEMENT FUND
Worldwide Unspecified
Unaccmp HSG Improvement Unspecified Worldwide Administrative Expenses-- 500 500
Fund Locations UHIF.
........................
SUBTOTAL UNACCMP HSG IMPROVEMENT FUND 500 500
......................
TOTAL FAMILY HOUSING 1,324,002 1,535,002
......................
DEFENSE BASE REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE
ARMY BRAC
Worldwide Unspecified
Army BRAC Base Realignment & Base Realignment and 66,111 66,111
Closure, Army Closure.
........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY BRAC 66,111 66,111
......................
NAVY BRAC
Worldwide Unspecified
Navy BRAC Unspecified Worldwide Base Realignment & 158,349 158,349
Locations Closure.
........................
SUBTOTAL NAVY BRAC 158,349 158,349
......................
AIR FORCE BRAC
Worldwide Unspecified
Air Force BRAC Unspecified Worldwide DoD BRAC Activities--Air 54,066 54,066
Locations Force.
........................
SUBTOTAL AIR FORCE BRAC 54,066 54,066
......................
TOTAL DEFENSE BASE REALIGNMENT AND CLOSURE 278,526 278,526
......................
TOTAL MILITARY CONSTRUCTION, FAMILY HOUSING, AND BRAC 11,241,653 11,049,237
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4602. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEC. 4602. MILITARY CONSTRUCTION FOR OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS (In Thousands of Dollars)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
State or Country and FY 2020 Senate
Account Installation Project Title Request Authorized
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MILITARY CONSTRUCTION
ARMY
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
Army Guantanamo Bay Naval OCO: Communications 22,000 22,000
Station Facility.
Army Guantanamo Bay Naval OCO: High Value Detention 88,500 0
Station Facility.
Army Guantanamo Bay Naval OCO: Detention Legal 11,800 11,800
Station Office and Comms Ctr.
Worldwide Unspecified
Army Unspecified Worldwide EDI: Bulk Fuel Storage.... 36,000 36,000
Locations
Army Unspecified Worldwide EDI: Information Systems 6,200 6,200
Locations Facility.
Army Unspecified Worldwide EDI/OCO Planning and 19,498 19,498
Locations Design.
Army Unspecified Worldwide EDI: Minor Construction... 5,220 5,220
Locations
Army Unspecified Worldwide Unspecified Worldwide 9,200,000 0
Locations Construction.
.........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY 9,389,218 100,718
.......................
NAVY
North Carolina
Navy Camp Lejeune 1/8 BN HQ Replacement..... 0 20,635
Navy Camp Lejeune 22nd, 24th and 26th MEU 0 31,110
Headquarters Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune 2D Tank BN/CO HQ and 0 30,154
Armory Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune 2D TSB HQ Replacement..... 0 17,413
Navy Camp Lejeune Bachelor Enlisted Quarters 0 62,104
Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune C-12W Aircraft Maintenance 0 36,295
Hangar Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune CLB Headquarters 0 24,788
Facilities Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune Courthouse Bay Fire 0 21,336
Station Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune Environmental Management 0 11,658
Division Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune Fire Station Replacement, 0 21,931
Hadnot Point.
Navy Camp Lejeune Hadnot Point Mess Hall 0 66,023
Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune II MEF Simulation/Training 0 74,487
Center Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune LOGCOM CSP Warehouse 0 35,874
Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune LSSS Facility Replacement. 0 26,815
Navy Camp Lejeune MCAB HQ Replacement....... 0 30,109
Navy Camp Lejeune MCCSSS Log Ops School..... 0 179,617
Navy Camp Lejeune PMO/H&HS & MWHS-2 0 65,845
Headquarters Replacement.
Navy Camp Lejeune Replace NCIS Facilities... 0 22,594
Navy Camp Lejeune Replace Regimental 0 64,155
Headquarters 2DMARDIV.
Navy Camp Lejeune Replace WTBN Headquarters. 0 18,644
Navy MCAS Cherry Point BT-11 Range Operations 0 14,251
Center Replacement.
Navy MCAS Cherry Point Motor Transportation/ 0 32,785
Communication Shop
Replacement.
Navy MCAS Cherry Point Station Academic Facility/ 0 17,525
Auditorium Replacement.
Spain
Navy Rota EDI: Joint Mobility Center 46,840 46,840
Navy Rota EDI: In-Transit Munitions 9,960 9,960
Facility.
Navy Rota EDI: Small Craft Berthing 12,770 12,770
Facility.
Worldwide Unspecified
Navy Unspecified Planning & Design......... 0 50,000
Navy Unspecified Worldwide Planning and Design....... 25,000 25,000
Locations
.........................
SUBTOTAL NAVY 94,570 1,070,718
.......................
AIR FORCE
Florida
Air Force Tyndall AFB 53 WEG Hangar............. 0 96,000
Air Force Tyndall AFB 53 WEG HQ Facility........ 0 47,000
Air Force Tyndall AFB 53 WEG Subscale Drone 0 53,000
Facility.
Air Force Tyndall AFB ABM SIM................... 0 12,900
Air Force Tyndall AFB Aerospace & Operational 0 10,400
Physiology Facility.
Air Force Tyndall AFB AFCEC RDT&E Facilities and 0 195,000
Gate.
Air Force Tyndall AFB Aircraft Washrack......... 0 10,600
Air Force Tyndall AFB Civil Engineer Contracting 0 130,000
USACE Complex.
Air Force Tyndall AFB Crash Fire Rescue......... 0 17,200
Air Force Tyndall AFB Deployment Center / Flight 0 31,000
Line Dining / AAFES.
Air Force Tyndall AFB Emergency Management, EOC, 0 14,400
Alt CP.
Air Force Tyndall AFB Fire Station #2........... 0 11,000
Air Force Tyndall AFB Fire Station Silver Flag 0 5,900
#4.
Air Force Tyndall AFB FW AC Maintenance Fuel 0 28,000
Cell (Barn).
Air Force Tyndall AFB Logistics Readiness 0 102,000
Squadron Complex.
Air Force Tyndall AFB LRS Aircraft Parts & 0 29,000
Deployable Spares Storage
Facilities.
Air Force Tyndall AFB New Lodge Facilities...... 0 176,000
Air Force Tyndall AFB Operations Group/ 0 18,500
Maintenance Group HQ.
Air Force Tyndall AFB OSS / RAPCON Facility..... 0 51,000
Air Force Tyndall AFB Relocate F-22 Formal 0 150,000
Training Unit.
Air Force Tyndall AFB SFS Mobility Storage 0 2,800
Facility.
Air Force Tyndall AFB Silver Flag Facilities.... 0 35,000
Air Force Tyndall AFB Special Purpose Vehicle 0 14,000
Maintenance.
Air Force Tyndall AFB Tyndall AFB Gate Complexes 0 38,000
Iceland
Air Force Keflavik EDI-Expand Parking Apron.. 32,000 32,000
Air Force Keflavik EDI-Beddown Site Prep..... 7,000 7,000
Air Force Keflavik EDI-Airfield Upgrades-- 18,000 18,000
Dangerous Cargo Pad.
Spain
Air Force Moron EDI-Hot Cargo Pad......... 8,500 8,500
Worldwide Unspecified
Air Force Unspecified Planning & Design......... 0 247,000
Air Force Unspecified Worldwide EDI-Hot Cargo Pad......... 29,000 29,000
Locations
Air Force Unspecified Worldwide EDI-MUNITIONS STORAGE AREA 39,000 39,000
Locations
Air Force Unspecified Worldwide EDI-ECAOS DABS/FEV EMEDS 107,000 107,000
Locations Storage.
Air Force Various Worldwide EDI-P&D................... 61,438 61,438
Locations
Air Force Various Worldwide EDI-UMMC.................. 12,800 12,800
Locations
.........................
SUBTOTAL AIR FORCE 314,738 1,840,438
.......................
DEFENSE-WIDE
Germany
Defense-Wide Gemersheim EDI: Logistics 46,000 46,000
Distribution Center Annex.
North Carolina
Defense-Wide Camp Lejeune Ambulatory Care Center 0 17,821
(Camp Geiger).
Defense-Wide Camp Lejeune Ambulatory Care Center 0 27,492
(Camp Johnson).
Defense-Wide Camp Lejeune Replace MARSOC ITC Team 0 30,000
Facility.
Worldwide Unspecified
Defense-Wide Unspecified Worldwide 2808 Replenishment Fund... 0 3,600,000
Locations
.........................
SUBTOTAL DEFENSE-WIDE 46,000 3,721,313
.......................
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD
Florida
Army National Guard Panama City National Guard Readiness 0 25,000
Center.
North Carolina
Army National Guard MTA Fort Fisher Administrative Building, 0 25,000
General Purpose.
.........................
SUBTOTAL ARMY NATIONAL GUARD 50,000
.......................
TOTAL MILITARY CONSTRUCTION 9,844,526 6,783,187
.......................
TOTAL MILITARY CONSTRUCTION, FAMILY HOUSING, AND BRAC 9,844,526 6,783,187
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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 2020 Senate
Program Request Authorized
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discretionary Summary by Appropriation
Energy and Water Development and Related
Agencies
Appropriation Summary:
Energy Programs
Nuclear energy...................... 137,808 137,808
Atomic Energy Defense Activities
National nuclear security
administration:
Federal Salaries and Expenses..... 434,699 422,999
Weapons activities................ 12,408,603 12,478,403
Defense nuclear nonproliferation.. 1,993,302 1,964,202
Naval reactors.................... 1,648,396 1,648,396
Total, National nuclear security 16,485,000 16,514,000
administration.........................
Environmental and other defense
activities:
Defense environmental cleanup..... 5,506,501 5,506,501
Other defense activities.......... 1,035,339 1,032,339
Defense nuclear waste disposal 26,000 0
(90M in 270 Energy)..............
Total, Environmental & other defense 6,567,840 6,538,840
activities.............................
Total, Atomic Energy Defense Activities. 23,052,840 23,052,840
Total, Discretionary Funding............ 23,190,648 23,190,648
Nuclear Energy
Idaho sitewide safeguards and security.. 137,808 137,808
Total, Nuclear Energy................... 137,808 137,808
Federal Salaries and Expenses
Program direction....................... 434,699 422,999
Alignment with FTEs authorized........ [-11,700]
Weapons Activities
Directed stockpile work
Life extension programs and major
alterations
B61 Life extension program.......... 792,611 792,611
W76 Life extension program.......... 0 0
W76-2 Modification program.......... 10,000 10,000
W88 Alteration program.............. 304,186 304,186
W80-4 Life extension program........ 898,551 898,551
IW1................................. 0 0
W87-1 Modification Program (formerly 112,011 112,011
IW1)...............................
Total, Life extension programs and major 2,117,359 2,117,359
alterations............................
Stockpile systems
B61 Stockpile systems............... 71,232 71,232
W76 Stockpile systems............... 89,804 89,804
W78 Stockpile systems............... 81,299 81,299
W80 Stockpile systems............... 85,811 85,811
B83 Stockpile systems............... 51,543 51,543
W87 Stockpile systems............... 98,262 98,262
W88 Stockpile systems............... 157,815 157,815
Total, Stockpile systems................ 635,766 635,766
Weapons dismantlement and disposition
Operations and maintenance.......... 47,500 47,500
Stockpile services
Production support.................. 543,964 543,964
Research and development support.... 39,339 40,339
UFR list--technology maturation... [1,000]
R&D certification and safety........ 236,235 246,235
UFR list--technology maturation... [10,000]
Management, technology, and 305,000 305,000
production.........................
Total, Stockpile services............... 1,124,538 1,135,538
Strategic materials
Uranium sustainment................. 94,146 94,146
Plutonium sustainment............... 0 0
Plutonium sustainment:
Plutonium sustainment............. 691,284 691,284
Plutonium pit production project.. 21,156 21,156
Total, Plutonium sustainment:........... 712,440 712,440
Tritium sustainment................. 269,000 269,000
Domestic uranium enrichment......... 140,000 140,000
Lithium sustainment................. 28,800 28,800
Strategic materials sustainment..... 256,808 256,808
Total, Strategic materials.............. 1,501,194 1,501,194
Total, Directed stockpile work.......... 5,426,357 5,437,357
Research, development, test, and
evaluation (RDT&E)
Science
Advanced certification.............. 57,710 57,710
Primary assessment technologies..... 95,169 95,169
Dynamic materials properties........ 133,800 133,800
Advanced radiography................ 32,544 32,544
Secondary assessment technologies... 77,553 77,553
Academic alliances and partnerships. 44,625 44,625
Enhanced Capabilities for 145,160 145,160
Subcritical Experiments............
Total, Science.......................... 586,561 586,561
Engineering
Enhanced surety..................... 46,500 54,500
UFR list--technology maturation... [8,000]
Weapon systems engineering 0 0
assessment technology..............
Delivery environments (formerly 35,945 35,945
Weapon systems engineering
assessment technology).............
Nuclear survivability............... 53,932 53,932
Enhanced surveillance............... 57,747 57,747
Stockpile Responsiveness............ 39,830 80,630
Program expansion................. [40,800]
Total, Engineering...................... 233,954 282,754
Inertial confinement fusion ignition
and high yield
Ignition and other stockpile 55,649 55,649
programs...........................
Ignition............................ 0 0
Support of other stockpile programs. 0 0
Diagnostics, cryogenics and 66,128 66,128
experimental support...............
Pulsed power inertial confinement 8,571 8,571
fusion.............................
Joint program in high energy density 12,000 12,000
laboratory plasmas.................
Facility operations and target 338,247 338,247
production.........................
Total, Inertial confinement fusion and 480,595 480,595
high yield.............................
Advanced simulation and computing
Advanced simulation and computing... 789,849 789,849
Construction:
18-D-670, Exascale Class Computer 0 0
Cooling Equipment, LANL..........
18-D-620, Exascale Computing 50,000 50,000
Facility Modernization Project,
LLNL.............................
Total, Construction..................... 50,000 50,000
Total, Advanced simulation and computing 839,849 839,849
Advanced manufacturing development
Additive manufacturing.............. 18,500 18,500
Component manufacturing development. 48,410 58,410
UFR list--technology maturation... [10,000]
Process technology development...... 69,998 69,998
Total, Advanced manufacturing 136,908 146,908
development............................
Total, RDT&E............................ 2,277,867 2,336,667
Infrastructure and operations
Operating
Operations of facilities
Operations of facilities.......... 905,000 905,000
Safety and environmental operations. 119,000 119,000
Maintenance and repair of facilities 456,000 456,000
Recapitalization
Infrastructure and safety......... 447,657 447,657
Capability based investments...... 135,341 135,341
Total, Recapitalization................. 582,998 582,998
Total, Operating....................... 2,062,998 2,062,998
Construction:
19-D-670, 138kV Power Transmission 6,000 6,000
System Replacement, NNSS...........
18-D-660, Fire Station, Y-12........ 0 0
18-D-650, Tritium Production 27,000 27,000
Capability, SRS....................
18-D-680, Materials staging 0 0
facility, PX.......................
18-D-690, Lithium production 0 0
capability, Y-12...................
18-D-690, Lithium processing 32,000 32,000
facility, Y-12 (formerly Lithium
production capability).............
17-D-640, U1a Complex Enhancements 35,000 35,000
Project, NNSS......................
17-D-630, Expand Electrical 0 0
Distribution System, LLNL..........
16-D-515, Albuquerque complex 0 0
project............................
15-D-613, Emergency Operations 0 0
Center, Y-12.......................
15-D-612, Emergency Operations 5,000 5,000
Center, LLNL.......................
15-D-611, Emergency Operations 4,000 4,000
Center, SNL........................
15-D-301 HE Science & Engineering 123,000 123,000
Facility, PX.......................
07-D-220, Radioactive liquid waste 0 0
treatment facility upgrade project,
LANL...............................
07-D-220-04, Transuranic liquid 0 0
waste facility, LANL...............
06-D-141, Uranium processing 745,000 745,000
facility Y-12, Oak Ridge, TN.......
Chemistry and metallurgy research
replacement (CMRR)
04-D-125, Chemistry and metallurgy 168,444 168,444
research replacement project,
LANL.............................
04-D-125-04, RLUOB equipment 0 0
installation.....................
04-D-125-05, PF -4 equipment 0 0
installation.....................
Total, Chemistry and metallurgy research 168,444 168,444
replacement (CMRR).....................
Total, Construction..................... 1,145,444 1,145,444
Total, Infrastructure and operations.... 3,208,442 3,208,442
Secure transportation asset
Operations and equipment.............. 209,502 209,502
Program direction..................... 107,660 107,660
Total, Secure transportation asset...... 317,162 317,162
Defense nuclear security................ 0
Operations and maintenance............ 778,213 778,213
Security improvements program......... 0 0
Construction:......................... 0
17-D-710, West end protected area 0 0
reduction project, Y-12............
Total, Defense nuclear security......... 778,213 778,213
Information technology and cybersecurity 309,362 309,362
Legacy contractor pensions.............. 91,200 91,200
Subtotal, Weapons activities............ 12,408,603 12,478,403
Adjustments
Use of prior year balances............ 0 0
Total, Adjustments...................... 0 0
Total, Weapons Activities............... 12,408,603 12,478,403
Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation
Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation
Programs
Material management and minimization
HEU reactor conversion.............. 114,000 114,000
Nuclear material removal............ 32,925 32,925
Material disposition................ 186,608 186,608
Laboratory and partnership support.. 0 0
Total, Material management & 333,533 333,533
minimization...........................
Global material security
International nuclear security...... 48,839 48,839
Domestic radiological security...... 90,513 90,513
International radiological security. 60,827 60,827
Nuclear smuggling detection and 142,171 142,171
deterrence.........................
Total, Global material security......... 342,350 342,350
Nonproliferation and arms control..... 137,267 137,267
Defense nuclear nonproliferation R&D
Proliferation detection............. 304,040 284,540
Nonproliferation Stewardship [-19,500]
program strategic plan...........
Nuclear detonation detection........ 191,317 191,317
Nonproliferation fuels development.. 0 0
Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation 495,357 475,857
R&D....................................
Nonproliferation construction
U. S. Construction:
18-D-150 Surplus Plutonium 79,000 79,000
Disposition Project..............
99-D-143, Mixed Oxide (MOX) Fuel 220,000 220,000
Fabrication Facility, SRS........
Total, U. S. Construction:.............. 299,000 299,000
Total, Nonproliferation construction.... 299,000 299,000
Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation 1,607,507 1,588,007
Programs...............................
Legacy contractor pensions.............. 13,700 13,700
Nuclear counterterrorism and incident
response program
Nuclear counterterrorism and incident 0 0
response.............................
Emergency Operations.................. 35,545 25,945
Non-defense function realignment.... [-9,600]
Counterterrorism and 336,550 336,550
Counterproliferation.................
Total, Nuclear counterterrorism and
incident response
program................................. 372,095 362,495
Subtotal, Defense Nuclear 1,993,302 1,964,202
Nonproliferation.......................
Adjustments
Use of prior year balances............ 0 0
Total, Adjustments...................... 0 0
Subtotal, Defense Nuclear 1,993,302 1,964,202
Nonproliferation.......................
Rescission
Rescission of prior year balances..... 0 0
Rescission of prior year balances 0 0
(Gen. Prov.).........................
Total, Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation. 1,993,302 1,964,202
Naval Reactors
Naval reactors development.............. 531,205 531,205
Columbia-Class reactor systems 75,500 75,500
development............................
S8G Prototype refueling................. 155,000 155,000
Naval reactors operations and 553,591 553,591
infrastructure.........................
Program direction....................... 50,500 50,500
Construction:
20-D-931, KL Fuel development 23,700 23,700
laboratory...........................
19-D-930, KS Overhead Piping.......... 20,900 20,900
17-D-911, BL Fire System Upgrade...... 0 0
15-D-904, NRF Overpack Storage 0 0
Expansion 3..........................
15-D-903, KL Fire System Upgrade...... 0 0
14-D-901, Spent fuel handling 238,000 238,000
recapitalization project, NRF........
Total, Construction..................... 282,600 282,600
Transfer to NE--Advanced Test Reactor ( 0) ( 0)
(non-add)..............................
Total, Naval Reactors................... 1,648,396 1,648,396
Defense Environmental Cleanup
Closure sites:
Closure sites administration.......... 4,987 4,987
Richland:
River corridor and other cleanup
operations:
River corridor and other cleanup 139,750 139,750
operations.........................
Central plateau remediation:
Central plateau remediation......... 472,949 472,949
Total, Central plateau remediation...... 472,949 472,949
Richland community and regulatory 5,121 5,121
support..............................
Construction:
18-D-404 WESF Modifications and 11,000 11,000
Capsule Storage....................
Total, Construction..................... 11,000 11,000
Total, Richland......................... 628,820 628,820
Office of River Protection:
Waste Treatment Immobilization Plant 15,000 15,000
Commissioning........................
Rad liquid tank waste stabilization 677,460 677,460
and disposition......................
Construction:
18-D-16 Waste treatment and 640,000 640,000
immobilization plant -LBL/Direct
feed LAW.........................
15-D-409 Low activity waste 0 0
pretreatment system, ORP.........
01-D-16 D, High-level waste 30,000 30,000
facility.........................
01-D-16 E, Pretreatment Facility.. 20,000 20,000
Total, Construction..................... 690,000 690,000
ORP Low-level waste offsite disposal.. 10,000 10,000
Total, Office of River protection....... 1,392,460 1,392,460
Idaho National Laboratory:
Idaho cleanup and waste disposition... 331,354 331,354
ID Excess facilities R&D.............. 0 0
Idaho community and regulatory support 3,500 3,500
Total, Idaho National Laboratory........ 334,854 334,854
NNSA sites and Nevada off-sites
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory 1,727 1,727
LLNL Excess facilities R&D............ 128,000 128,000
Nuclear facility D & D Separations 15,300 15,300
Process Research Unit................
Nevada................................ 60,737 60,737
Sandia National Laboratories.......... 2,652 2,652
Los Alamos National Laboratory........ 195,462 195,462
Total, NNSA sites and Nevada off-sites.. 403,878 403,878
Oak Ridge Reservation:
OR Nuclear facility D & D............. 93,693 93,693
OR Excess facilities R&D.............. 0 0
U233 Disposition Program.............. 45,000 45,000
OR cleanup and waste disposition
OR cleanup and waste disposition.... 82,000 82,000
Subtotal, OR cleanup and waste 82,000 82,000
disposition............................
Construction:
17-D-401 On-site waste disposal 15,269 15,269
facility.........................
14-D-403 Outfall 200 Mercury 49,000 49,000
Treatment Facility...............
Total, Construction..................... 64,269 64,269
Total, OR cleanup and waste disposition. 146,269 146,269
OR community & regulatory support..... 4,819 4,819
OR technology development and 3,000 3,000
deployment...........................
Total, Oak Ridge Reservation............ 292,781 292,781
Savannah River Sites:
Savannah River risk management
operations:
Savannah River risk management 490,613 490,613
operations.........................
Construction:
18-D-402, Emergency Operations 6,792 6,792
Center Replacement, SR...........
Total, Savannah River risk management 497,405 497,405
operations.............................
SR community and regulatory support... 4,749 4,749
Radioactive liquid tank waste:
Radioactive liquid tank waste 797,706 797,706
stabilization and disposition......
Construction:
20-D-402 Advanced Manufacturing 50,000 50,000
Collaborative Facility (AMC).....
20-D-401 Saltstone Disposal Unit 500 500
#10, 11, 12......................
19-D-701 SR Security system 0 0
replacement......................
18-D-402,Saltstone disposal unit 51,750 51,750
#8/9.............................
17-D-402--Saltstone Disposal Unit 40,034 40,034
#7...............................
05-D-405 Salt waste processing 20,988 20,988
facility, SRS....................
Total, Construction..................... 163,272 163,272
Total, Radioactive liquid tank waste.... 960,978 960,978
Total, Savannah River Site.............. 1,463,132 1,463,132
Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
Waste Isolation Pilot Plant........... 299,088 299,088
Construction:
15-D-411 Safety significant 58,054 58,054
confinement ventilation system,
WIPP...............................
15-D-412 Exhaust shaft, WIPP........ 34,500 34,500
Total, Construction..................... 92,554 92,554
Total, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant...... 391,642 391,642
Program direction....................... 278,908 278,908
Program support......................... 12,979 12,979
Safeguards and Security................. 317,622 317,622
Technology development.................. 0 0
Use of prior year balances.............. 0 0
Subtotal, Defense environmental cleanup. 5,522,063 5,522,063
Rescission:
Rescission of prior year balances..... -15,562 -15,562
Rescission of prior year balances 0 0
(Gen. Prov.).........................
Total, Defense Environmental Cleanup.... 5,506,501 5,506,501
Other Defense Activities
Environment, health, safety and security
Environment, health, safety and 139,628 139,628
security.............................
Program direction..................... 72,881 72,881
Total, Environment, Health, safety and 212,509 212,509
security...............................
Independent enterprise assessments
Independent enterprise assessments.... 24,068 24,068
Program direction..................... 57,211 54,211
Non-defense function realignment.... [-3,000]
Total, Independent enterprise 81,279 78,279
assessments............................
Specialized security activities......... 254,578 254,578
Office of Legacy Management
Legacy management..................... 283,767 283,767
Program direction..................... 19,262 19,262
Total, Office of Legacy Management...... 303,029 303,029
Defense related administrative support
Chief financial officer............... 54,538 54,538
Chief information officer............. 124,554 124,554
Total, Defense related administrative 179,092 179,092
support................................
Office of hearings and appeals.......... 4,852 4,852
Subtotal, Other defense activities...... 1,035,339 1,032,339
Use of prior year balances (HA)......... 0 0
Total, Other Defense Activities......... 1,035,339 1,032,339
Defense Nuclear Waste Disposal
Yucca mountain and interim storage...... 26,000 0
Total, Defense Nuclear Waste............ 26,000 0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Calendar No. 114
116th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 1790
[Report No. 116-48]
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2020 for military
activities of the Department of Defense, for military construction, and
for defense activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe
military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other
purposes.
_______________________________________________________________________
June 11, 2019
Read twice and placed on the calendar